Business & Tech
Art Gallery Takes Shape in Alternative, Recyclable Space
Mishou Sanchez talks about the thinking behind the Modern Bohemian Art Gallery, on display at Winthrop in Riverview.
Â
Necessity, the saying goes, is the mother of invention. In Mishou Sanchez' life, it also is the impetus for creating affordable, alternative spaces, as demonstrated by the Modern Bohemian Art Gallery on display at the Winthrop community in Riverivew.
There, at the Winthrop Arts Festival in late March, Sanchez talked about her drive to be at the forefront of a movement that brings affordable, portable, commercial space to complexes ideally suited to provide land on a limited basis while construction is evolving.
Find out what's happening in Bloomingdale-Riverviewfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
"Why not have a portable metal space that can exist in a limited basis that benefits both the existing businesses and the small business owner?" she asked.
At the 2013 Winthrop Arts Festival, such a space was on display, created out of metal shipping containers, in which works or art, including paintings by Sanchez, were on display. The so-called "Modern Bohemian Art Gallery" remains on site temporarily, behind the Times Building at Winthrop.
Find out what's happening in Bloomingdale-Riverviewfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
For Sanchez, the idea dates back to a thesis she finished in 2008 for a master's degree in architect at the Southern California Institute of Architecture in Los Angeles.
"My thesis was based on shipping containers, how life was becoming faster and required more portability," she said. "It morphed into rethinking retail space."
Shipping containers, crafted out of corrugated steel to be be air- and water-tight, are a green-building source, she said. "They're cheap, and they're piling up," she added.
Inside the makeshift gallery at Winthrop, Sanchez' art work was on display along with that of other artists.
"I use recycled paint from garbage dumps and I make my own paints," she said. "I mix pigments and waxes and you can make your own charcoal, too. You take willow and burn it in a paint can."
"I've been really poor, so you have to make sure your art can survive with any means possible," she said.
That thinking led to her thinking about reusing and repurposing metal containers and space.
"It started out at my house," she said. "I converted my home into a gallery because I couldn't afford retail space." That led to the concept involving shipping containers, for which Sanchez said she was a finalist for a Guggenheim Fellowship grant.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.
