the illuminator
space type: maker, activism | neighborhood: ft. greene & all over | active since: 2012 | links: website, facebook, twitter
For many involved in the Occupy Wall Street movement, the two-month anniversary last November was a galvanizing moment. As tens of thousands of activists marched over the Brooklyn Bridge, light projections suddenly appeared on the Verizon building nearby: things like “99%” “MIC CHECK” “#occupy,” and more. I was on that march and it was absolutely electrifying to see. We screamed and clapped and chanted, and the people driving by beneath us honked and cheered out their windows. It was an incredible moment.
In the wake of that action, Mark Read, the one who pulled it off, decided that had been just the beginning. He talked it over with Ben Cohen, a longtime friend of the movement, who eventually agreed to fund the construction of a customized vehicle for mobile guerilla projections. The guy tapped to construct the unit was Chris Hackett—one of the rulers of the Brooklyn maker scene, and cofounder of the art combine Madagascar Institute. Unsurprisingly, Hackett built a formidable machine, and the Illuminator was born.
Mark put out the call and amassed a merry band of activists to bottom-line the project. The Illuminator has been a smashing success, riding through protests from OWS actions to Occupy Town Square performances, partnering with community groups like rent-strikers in Sunset Park and workers’ rights activists in Midtown, projecting slogans and pictures onto the Russian Consulate, the British Embassy, Independence Hall in Philadelphia, the Williamsburg Bridge, and on and on.
The Illuminator is at a crucial stage in their journey right now, because they’re about to lose their funding. So this is the last week of their Kickstarter campaign, which, if successful, will allow them not only to keep this van, but to build more for use around the country. You should absolutely donate to their fund, but first read my interview with some of the activists involved.
brooklyn spaces: What was the first outing
                                        and the first projection?
                                        Mark: The debut was March 3rd, for Low
                                            Lives, a virtual online performance-art project. We went all over that
                                        night: Zuccotti Park, the Whitney Museum where we projected the cheap art
                                            manifesto from the Bread and Puppet
                                            Theatre, down to Cooper Union, and then to Chase Bank.
                                    
brooklyn spaces: Do you plan the art before
                                        each action? Do you make it yourselves? Where does it come from?
                                        Lucky: We produce a lot ourselves, but the
                                        great thing about this is it really is a Occupy resource, and more than that,
                                        it’s an activist resource. We reach out to lots of groups around the city, like
                                        the Sunset Park rent-strikers and the Hot & Crusty workers, and the
                                        messaging always comes from the people we’re supporting.
                                    
brooklyn spaces: How do you decide what
                                        projects the Illuminator will get involved with?
                                        Annabelle: Well, it started with the 99%,
                                        and anything that could fit into that. We did that first projection two days
                                        after the eviction from the park.
                                        Talia: I think it has to come from a
                                        positive space, people have to be happy about it. There has to be that exciting
                                        kind of antagonism.
                                        Lucky: I think this goes back to the
                                        collective way we’re run. When we want to do something, there’s automatically a
                                        dialogue. We all come from very disparate backgrounds—I’m a biologist, Annabelle
                                        is a union researcher, and Mark does media, just to name a few—which really
                                        enriches the project, because we bring so many different perspectives.
                                    
Mark: Here’s a funny example of something we wouldn’t do. We were contacted by Woody Harrelson, and he wanted us to do some marketing for his upcoming Off-Broadway play, Bullet for Adolph. We’ve done work for hire before; we do have to keep the van in gas and parking. But what he wanted us to project was “Adolph is coming.” He was willing to pay us ten thousand dollars, which of course we could have really used, but we just couldn’t do it, it was too awful.
brooklyn spaces: Tell me about some of the
                                        site-specific projections.
                                         Lucky: When we do
                                        site-specific stuff, it’s more to do with the people who are rallying around the
                                        cause, or the cause itself. The van sort of becomes the hero, popping up and
                                        supporting causes, so when students go on an education strike, or renters go on
                                        rent strike, we’re part of those actions. There was the action with Occupy Tape, which was an action
                                            against Spectra, and we did a “Free Pussy Riot” projection on the
                                        Russian Consulate.
Lucky: When we do
                                        site-specific stuff, it’s more to do with the people who are rallying around the
                                        cause, or the cause itself. The van sort of becomes the hero, popping up and
                                        supporting causes, so when students go on an education strike, or renters go on
                                        rent strike, we’re part of those actions. There was the action with Occupy Tape, which was an action
                                            against Spectra, and we did a “Free Pussy Riot” projection on the
                                        Russian Consulate.
                                    
 Mark: I think
                                        the first site-specific one was at Atlantic Yards. There was a mic check, a
                                        call-and-response thing about what had happened with the Barclays Center, and a
                                        piece that was produced by our community partner in that case, Develop
                                            Don’t Destroy Brooklyn. The police were all over us that night and we
                                        sort of had to outwit them, which has been the case several times since. It was
                                        like a cat-and-mouse game.
Mark: I think
                                        the first site-specific one was at Atlantic Yards. There was a mic check, a
                                        call-and-response thing about what had happened with the Barclays Center, and a
                                        piece that was produced by our community partner in that case, Develop
                                            Don’t Destroy Brooklyn. The police were all over us that night and we
                                        sort of had to outwit them, which has been the case several times since. It was
                                        like a cat-and-mouse game.
brooklyn spaces: So the cops are not too
                                        fond of the Illuminator.
                                        Dan: Like with the rest of Occupy,
                                        there’s a pattern of repression. The police want to disrupt people coming
                                        together, and the Illuminator rallies people and gets them excited, so we’re the
                                        last thing they want. Often they shut us down by making things up. I got a
                                        summons for disorderly conduct that we went to court for, and they didn’t even
                                        prosecute it because they knew it was bullshit. Another time they came out with
                                        a ticket already written and then asked “How is this projector mounted?” I said,
                                        “It’s bolted to this steel bar which is welded to the frame of the vehicle.” And
                                        they were like, “Um, this is a danger to pedestrians. It might fall off.”
                                        Lucky: It’s about claiming contested space.
                                        In Zuccotti we were occupying a physical park, but the Illuminator is after the
                                        advertising space, the commercialized space above our heads and in our eye-line.
                                        So it’s predictable that that same sort of repression would happen, because
                                        we’re doing something powerful by subverting the order of things, the way
                                        society is constructed in a corporatized way.
                                    
brooklyn spaces: What’s been the most
                                        meaningful part of this project for you all?
                                        Mark: For me, getting away with things is
                                        pleasurable, and getting people excited in an action context is awesome. There’s
                                        also the pleasure of talking to strangers, having conversations about the state
                                        of affairs in this country and the world, the kinds of crises we’re facing, what
                                        it’s going to take to solve those problems. Once these young kids came up to us,
                                        totally excited, and said, “Are you guys with the revolution?” I was like, “I
                                        hope so!”
                                        Lucky: One of my favorite moments was
                                        Independence Hall in Philly, because that was totally spontaneous, and it often
                                        feels better when you don’t overwork yourself with planning and details. We were
                                        driving down to D.C. and saw Independence Hall to our left and figured, “Why
                                        not?” and went and projected “99%” onto the building. And as it happened, there
                                        were a bunch of Occupiers right there who took pictures and tweeted it all over.
                                        This is sort of a media machine, and a critique of mainstream media is that it
                                        privileges special interests in voice. Occupy has done a lot to use the power of
                                        modern technology to amplify important stories, and the Illuminator does that
                                        really well.
                                    
 Talia: For me the best is feeling like a part
                                        of this well-oiled activism machine, and in Philly it really gelled for me how
                                        powerful this is, doing that projection and then seeing our image bouncing all
                                        around the internet afterward.
 Talia: For me the best is feeling like a part
                                        of this well-oiled activism machine, and in Philly it really gelled for me how
                                        powerful this is, doing that projection and then seeing our image bouncing all
                                        around the internet afterward.
                                        Dan: It’s the most re-tweeted thing we’ve
                                        ever done, I think. But for me it’s also about the one-on-one stuff. One of my
                                        favorite Occupy chants is “Occupy will never die / Evict us, we multiply.” This
                                        is like a manifestation of that, because we can spread all over the city and
                                        even the country in a totally different way.
                                        Talia: And since the Illuminator 1.0 is
                                        going to be shut down, the idea of multiplying, of 2.0, is awesome. One van is
                                        great, but it’s limiting. A broader, more mobile fleet all around the nation?
                                        That’s really exciting. There’s this brand new energy fueled by all our ideas
                                        for what we’ll do next.
                                    
***
Like this? Read about more activism: #OWS art show, No-Space, Time’s Up, Brooklyn Free Store, Books Through Bars, Bushwick City Farms, Trees Not Trash










