Formation | 2012 |
---|---|
Founder | Dustin Yellin |
Location | |
Website | www |
Pioneer Works is a nonprofit cultural arts center in the Red Hook neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York City that was founded by artist Dustin Yellin in 2012. [1] [2] Pioneer Works includes a large exhibition space, a garden, an artist-in-residency program, a class and lecture series, and a press, and "aim[s] to foster innovation in the performing and visual arts, music and science." [3] [4]
Constructed in 1866 to house Pioneer Iron Works, the building was originally a factory for constructing large scale machines, including railroad tracks and machinery for sugar plantations. [5] The building was burned to the ground by a devastating fire in 1881 [6] and rebuilt shortly thereafter. [5]
Artist Dustin Yellin purchased the colossal brick building in 2011 for $3.7 million. [1] Yellin's cousin Gabriel Florenz became the institution's founding artistic director, [7] and Sam Trimble served as lead architect for a 2011 renovation that added 100 windows. [1]
Yellin initially named the space "Intercourse," and it opened its doors to the public in 2012. [8] [2]
Months after much of the initial restoration was completed, Hurricane Sandy caused severe flooding and damage to the neighborhood. [9] Five feet of water flooded the space, severely damaging the ground floor; many of those living and working nearby suffered extensive losses from the storm, and the building's reconstruction had to be started over. [10] [11]
Following extensive cleanup and renovations, the space re-opened in 2013 under the name Pioneer Works. [12]
Specialists from diverse backgrounds present work in a number of different ways, from traditional lectures to films to art installations and performances. The exhibition program revolves around an expansive, main space that acts as a major exhibit hall. Musical performances are frequent and range from single performances to festivals. [13]
Housed within the facility, the residency program facilities include a 3-D printer, a powerful microscope capable of printing the viewed image, a metalworking shop, a woodworking shop, an analog photography studio, and a music studio. Visual and performing artists, writers, musicians, designers, and scientists are encouraged to share their ideas in a public presentation of the work produced over the course of the residency.
Although the fields of the arts and sciences are prevalent, courses range from circuitry design to specialized courses like lock-picking and advice on how to fake one’s own death. [12]
Nano-physicist Matthew Putman led the creation of the Pioneer Works science program, [14] which aims to dismantle institutional barriers between the arts and sciences and to fuse technology, imagination, and experimental rigor. [15] The Science Studios invites scientific minds to explore unsolved quandaries and to engage in public discourse. The Scientific Controversies program has hosted geneticist George Church, oncologist Sidhartha Mukarjee, Nobel Prize winner Rainer Weiss, and evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins. The program also provides Ph.D. researchers, programmers, physicists, biologists, and chemists with equipment for experimentation.
The nonprofit acts as a publisher through the imprint Pioneer Works Press and publishes an online magazine called Broadcast. [16]
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Red Hook is a neighborhood in western Brooklyn, New York City, United States, within the area once known as South Brooklyn. It is located on a peninsula projecting into the Upper New York Bay and is bounded by the Gowanus Expressway and the Carroll Gardens neighborhood on the northeast, Gowanus Canal on the east, and the Upper New York Bay on the west and south. A prosperous shipping and port area in the early 20th century, the area declined in the latter part of the century. Today it is home to the Red Hook Houses, the largest housing project in Brooklyn.
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