STEPHEN MALLON: Next Stop Atlantic
September 8, 2010
Stephen Mallon’s  photographs of the New York City Transit Authority’s artificial reef  building project make me craaazy. There is something about access to  this kind of madness that gets me all kinds of excited. It’s visceral,  for sure. But more that that, it’s that beyond the sheer physical  response to these images, my mind starts spinning trying to get a grip  on the context for these images. Subway Cars = Barrier Reefs? This must  be 2010.
How did you get involved with the NYC Transit Authority’s artificial reef building project?
I had shot around Bayonne in the past and was looking for a location for  a portrait shoot that had a nice industrial background.  As we were  scouting I spotted Weeks 297 (the number of the barge) parked there with  a bunch of old subway cars stacked on top of it.  I had read about the  red birds being retired in the ocean but wasn’t aware that the program  was still ongoing.  The gate to Weeks Marine’s yard was open so I drove  in and got the contact info for the yard manager who introduced me to  Jason  who was the senior manager on the project.  Fortunately for me he  is a fan of photography and so after showing him my existing work on  the recycling industry he told me to come on down!
Please talk about the issues of innovations in salvation and industrial waste as they pertain to this project.
The MTA  doesn’t sell any of the subway cars to the general public or  to anyone that they are not sure on how they are going to be deposed  of.  You can’t scrap these cars without doing an asbestos abatement but  that isn’t an issue underwater.  The tourism boards along the east coast  purchased  the subway cars ( not sure how much, I heard different  numbers from FREE to $300 a car, min one barge + SHIPPING which is quite  expensive!)  to help the sports fishing and to create interesting  locations to go diving to.
What were the emotional and intellectual challenges of working on this project ?
Learning not to try to review images on a rocking crew boat!  You do  need to be very safety conscious on these sites, there was a moment  after shooting where one of the MTA guys told me “You know those cables  can break right?”  Just after I had been directly under it taking  a  pretty picture of the underbelly.  Some New Yorkers are a little freaked  out seeing these images, I think because they have spent so many hours  holding on to the polls in the middle of these cars so  your third  eye  can put you back in the car and then you see a kind of Titanicesque  moment of the water washing in instead of the commuters at the next  stop.
What did you find to be the most powerful and provocative aspect of this project ?
Remember how i was talking  about my heartbeat and the bulldozer?  Now  imagine what its like watching the bulldozer tossed into the ocean like a  toy in the bathtub!  Its the largest splash photography i have done to  date, sports action with no athletics, just unique moments of each  subway car going down.  Sometimes  knowing that you got the moment,  sometimes praying to the photo gods that you did get it, sometimes going   SHIT  missed it!!!!!
How does this project fit into your larger “American Reclamation” work ?
It’s a chapter in the project.  There was originally only about 5 images  shot of the subway cars but after really positive response from Communication Arts  (got into the photo annual in 2009!) and during the VERGE art fair in  Miami, the directors at Front Room Gallery and I thought it would be  good to go back and explore some more photography of the subject.
STEPHEN MALLON: NEXT STOP ATLANTIC
Friday, September 10 from 7–9pm
Front Room Gallery, 147 Roebling Street, Brooklyn
Exhibition continues through October 3
Friday, September 10 from 7–9pm
Front Room Gallery, 147 Roebling Street, Brooklyn
Exhibition continues through October 3
 
 
 
 
 
 
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