neighborhood: bushwick | space type: commercial space | active since: 2010 | links: running rebel (website, facebook);
proliferation publishing (website, facebook)
One of the reasons I started this project is that I was alarmed at how fleeting
so much of the underground can be. The people who drive the creative classes are
focused on creating, on making art and beauty and enhancing underground culture,
which tends to result in less of a focus on trivialities like leases and fire
codes and the law in general. I seem to be constantly hearing about the
unceremonious demise of so many brilliant spaces—the 123 Community
Center being forced out by their landlord, Bushwick
Project for the Arts getting evicted by the city, House of
Yes (in its original incarnation) burning down, Silent Barn
being ransacked, Monkeytown and Change You Want to See defeated
by endless rent hikes.
photo from Passion
Faction
But there are other ways for a space to come to an end. Sometimes it’s
intentional, for one reason or another, and in the best case it’s on the
creators’ own terms. So it is with 6 Charles Place. The Bushwick warehouse used
to be called Semi-Legit, and was known for underground events. Passion Faction threw dance parties
with DJ Spanky
spinning and Nicky Digital taking pix, Team
San San had an art show, there were anarchist benefits and lectures, and
plenty of musicians came through, including Nomadic War Machine, Rosa Apatrida, Shady Hawkins, Anchorites, Krunk Pony, Ash Borer, and Woe.
But those days are behind them now. Today the space is divided into two
businesses: Running Rebel
Studios and Proliferation
Publishing.
photo from Passion
Faction
Nick has been operating Running Rebel since October 2011. It’s a big, private,
very malleable space, and they’ve done a lot of different work already,
including photos for Nylon and
Inked magazines, fashion shoots
for Olcay Gulsen and Arrojo Soho, and music videos for Imaginary Friends
and Rosie Vanier.
brooklyn spaces: What made you shift from
throwing parties to running a business?
Nick: I thought we could make something
profitable, since no one can get jobs now and you have to do everything yourself
in order to survive.
brooklyn spaces: Was it hard to get it up
and running?
Nick: It was a lot of work. I renovated the
entire thing, painted the entire ceiling by hand, painted every single brick,
twice, because the first coat got so disgusting and dirty. I built a bathroom
and changing room. And I got all this equipment, including a nineteen-foot cyc
wall.
brooklyn spaces: What’s your business
philosophy?
Nick: I try to be friendly with everyone. I
don’t think that pissing people off is the right way to go about anything,
especially when you’re trying to develop relationships. I’d rather take a loss
now and have someone come back again later, rather than ripping them off and
having them hate us forever.
brooklyn spaces: Is running a photo studio
something you always planned to do?
Nick: No. I have a degree in German. But I
had the idea and ran with it. This is cool, it’s strange. It’s fine for now. I
can live, I can eat. What else do you need?
photo by Alix Piorun
And then there’s Proliferation Publishing, New York’s only twenty-four-hour print
shop, run by Adam. They use really cool old machines from the sixties and
seventies that they’ve acquired at auctions and garage sales, including one that
was used to print NYU’s diplomas for years. And they bought what probably
amounts to a lifetime supply of ink for about $60. They print everything from
take-out menus to wedding invitations to vinyl banners.
photo by Alix Piorun
brooklyn spaces: How do you know how to work
all this stuff? Did you know how to use the machines when you bought them?
Adam: No, we just bought them on impulse.
Then we found PDFs and guides and shit online and taught ourselves in our
garage. We have this one incredible troubleshooting manual written by this
hippie guy in the sixties. The book starts, “Around 1950 I was searching for
Nirvana in the woods in New Mexico.”
brooklyn spaces: How do you find your
clients?
Adam: We go and bother pizza places and
shit and we’re like “Hey we can print menus for cheaper than what you’re paying
now,” and they’re like, “Okay, cool.” And people come in to print album covers
for their bands, business cards, political posters, stuff like that.
brooklyn spaces: What are your goals for the
future?
Adam: I want to do books eventually, but
not right now. We’ve got to get a book binder and a paper cutter first. We’re
also going to start offering photo-printing services, so people can shoot photos
at Running Rebel and then print them here. This could be a full-time gig, and it
probably will be eventually. But we’re in it for the long haul, so we’re taking
our time.
photo by Alix Piorun
Both Adam and Nick were kind enough to offer discounts for Brooklyn Spaces
readers. At Running Rebel they’ll give you a full-day weekday photo shoot for
$300, and at Proliferation Publishing you can get 1,000 business cards or
stickers for $75. Go support Bushwick small businesses! Email them at runningrebelstudios@gmail.com
or adam@proliferationpublishing.com.
***
Like this? Read about other print shops & photo studios: Acme
Studio, Gowanus
Print Lab, Bushwick
Print Studio, Werdink, Factory
Brooklyn, Bond
Street Studio