Constructed over a six month period in the twilight hours, with the aid of a headlamp and a sack of tools. ...and the Gods made Blue seemingly appeared overnight.

...AND THE GODS MADE BLUE - 2009
Brunswick, Victoria, Australia



Solid blue painted blocks, representing space, intruded from every window, penetrating through every wall.
A simulated labyrinth of solidified space consumed the house.

...AND THE GODS MADE BLUE - 2009
Brunswick, Victoria, Australia



...and the Gods made Blue was promoted with one text message.
I sent this to friends, who then forwarded it on.

...AND THE GODS MADE BLUE - 2009
Brunswick, Victoria, Australia


Concluding the opening, people could sneak into the house until it was demolished.
Photo credit Lukas Berk

...AND THE GODS MADE BLUE - 2009
Brunswick, Victoria, Australia



I heard all sorts of stories; house parties relocating to the 'Blue House'. People were having bizarre encounters with strangers inside, one woman even seen a ghost. Photo credit Lukas Berk

...AND THE GODS MADE BLUE - 2009
Brunswick, Victoria, Australia


Although people left surprises in the 'Blue House' no one destroyed the intrusions.

...AND THE GODS MADE BLUE - 2009
Brunswick, Victoria, Australia




Dissecting the door way.

...AND THE GODS MADE BLUE - 2009
Brunswick, Victoria, Australia





Oven and intrusion.

...AND THE GODS MADE BLUE - 2009
Brunswick, Victoria, Australia





Intrusions and windows at the front of the house.
Photo credit: Alistair Mew

...AND THE GODS MADE BLUE - 2009
Brunswick, Victoria, Australia




Intersecting intrusions.
Photo Credit: Alistair Mew

...AND THE GODS MADE BLUE - 2009
Brunswick, Victoria, Australia



Construction.
Photo Credit: Alistair Mew

...AND THE GODS MADE BLUE - 2009
Brunswick, Victoria, Australia



Map of 18 Henty St, with intrusions.

...AND THE GODS MADE BLUE - 2009
Brunswick, Victoria, Australia


From the 30th of July 2009. 18 Henty St, Brunswick, Victoria, Australia. 

and the Gods made Blue (ATGMB) was a rogue project created in an abandoned Melbourne home. For six months, from 9pm to 2am, I crept into a derelict house and constructed ATGMB, an exercise in animating monochromatic painting. The house was preserved by the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT) as it was awaiting demolition, giving me time to complete the project. I built structures from every window in the house, projecting each window’s shape through the entire home, cutting through walls in the process. I then stretched material over these frames and painted the forms blue, creating a simulated labyrinth of solidified space.


Text from Un Magazine 3.2 2009

What’s he Building in there? A Manipulated Cosmic Occurrence.

Momentarily unfettered by the burdens of use and economic production, ruined buildings constitute voids in an urban fabric subject to ever-increasing regulation and control. They are thus potentially, if fleetingly, productive dystopias in which decay and disuse mobilise against the universalising ‘progress’ of globalisation. It was into one such void that Adam Douglass recently intruded. Douglass’s self-dubbed ‘intrusions’ are long, monochrome canvases that originate in external openings (doors, windows, even toilets) and bisect rooms before crashing into or through the walls, like blocks of solid or negative light flooding in. 

Somewhat startlingly, however, this isn’t the grey wintry light of Brunswick but the diffuse blue of sunny Southern California. ‘Malibu Blue’, to be precise, named for the eponymous beach town and mecca of late-1950s and ‘60s American youth culture. The intense colour brings with it a tenor of wistful, utopic naïveté: think Endless Summer, Cosmic Children, The Beach Boys… Yet Malibu Blue® also reveals the flipside of the cultural recall it initiates to be its own inevitable reification and recoding, with consequences that extend far beyond its local origins: think Chevrolet Malibu, Malibu Barbie, Two and a Half Men

The ambivalent light cast by the intrusions produces a similarly ambivalent spatial experience. While some parts of the house have been obliterated by large expanses of uniform nothingness, elsewhere a cigarette and salt-shaker, or old snapshots and receipts, are foregrounded in the exact places they were left by the owner. The clearly unsettling history of the house is rendered already and increasingly unknowable, but nonetheless insistently particular. 

A precarious assemblage is revealed: wistful naïveté checked by alienation; the homogenisation of space checked by the particularity of place; and the amnesia of ‘progress’ checked by lived memories, however compromised these may be. By maintaining this tension inside a ruinous void at the very heart of Brunswick’s radical regentrification, and against the backdrop of an unquantifiable global financial crisis for which there is seemingly zero accountability, Douglass’s installation provides a rare, timely but fugitive place to imagine what our alternatives might be.

Ryan Johnston (art history lecturer, University of Melbourne)

 

It was 10 ‘o’clock when the banging started again. Fuck it! I’m going to see what’s going on. Lauren rolled over to go back to sleep, and I quietly slipped out of bed. The place next door had been empty for about four months, after Pete had sold it to a developer. It was due to be demolished, but while the application was held up at VCAT it had sunk even further into decay. It was hard to imagine even a homeless person finding it appealing and what sort of homeless person starts a bloody midnight Renovation Rescue? The banging began weeks ago, 11pm until about 2am. Having a smoke and a beer after a double shift, I’d ponder what on earth would make that kind of noise  —someone pulling the copper pipes out? Three weeks later, Lauren was making a convincing case for calling the police. 

The beers I had earlier must have added to my bravado because, without thinking, I put on my black jacket and a beanie, and grabbed a big stick from the front yard. I snuck quietly down the side of no. 18, seeking cover within a tall fuchsia shrub, while I contemplated my next move. There was no banging just the sound of metal scraping on concrete, and someone moving towards me. Suddenly my stick didn’t seem so big. 

Clint (neighbour)