Secret Mall Apartment (2024) Movie Script
1
Our other top local story on Eyewitness
News at Noon.
This is an incredible tale.
Artists set up an apartment
inside Providence Place Mall,
going undetected for years.
We were listening to the radio and this ad
came on for the Providence Place Mall.
It was this woman, she was a mom,
and she was talking about how great her
life was about to become because it was
going to be so convenient for her to get
everything that she needed for her kids,
for herself, if only she could live there.
I just had this idea, oh, we should live
in the mall.
Live at the mall, like, it seemed like a
very absurd fantasy and a great way to
plow through all of the negativity that
had been built up for years in the loss of
our homes and the homes of, like,
hundreds of people.
And so Adriana and Andrew
and Jay and myself decided
that we would go live
there for at least one week.
It was more of a game of survival.
Who was going to get kicked out from security
and who was going to last the longest?
I think we were making bets about it.
I definitely thought that I was going to
live there the longest.
I think my mind, I was like, oh,
we need to document.
And I'm like, oh, we need a sketchbook.
And Mike's instinct on the document was
like, all right, we all need to have a
point and shoot camera and be able to do
video.
We had a little camera called a Pentax
Optio S4i.
It is incredibly low res and the audio is
terrible.
It's not designed for video.
Interestingly, it fit inside an Altoids
can.
In my hand, that camera
disappears, which meant that
I could walk through the
mall with my arm like this.
That sounds silly, but I would forget it
was there.
It was a fair bit of the food court.
It was trying on clothes.
You know, funny kind of teenage mall hang
existence.
We ate all the leftover food at the food
court.
We saw like almost every movie at the
movie theater, which was awesome.
But as the sun set, we
started to internalize the
dilemma we put ourselves
in, which is we have no plan.
Where are we going to sleep?
Jay and Andrew found a four foot by four
foot column in the parking garage that had
an opening that they could sneak up inside
of.
I was in a really small space,
unable to stretch out.
I believe I slept in my jacket with my
knees kind of curled up to my chest.
I've been camping in some
way, shape or form since I was
a small kid and I've had a
lot of miserable nights out.
And this is in the pantheon of worst.
The place that Adriana and I find is based
on my memory of the mall's construction.
When the mall was being
built, I saw a space that
I could not figure out
what it would be used for.
It was a nowhere space and I saw them
store construction materials on it.
And I just sort of made a mental note
about it.
I proposed that perhaps
the nowhere space, as
it were, would give
us shelter for the night.
And we went looking for that
anomaly in the architecture and
we snuck ourselves in there
and we took out our flashlights.
And we kept poking around and it struck me
that the nowhere space, as it were,
must be up here somewhere.
And we were able to push ourselves up
I-beams.
And there it was.
And it was safe and secure.
We're completely off the radar.
We weren't even entirely sure where we
were in the mall.
But there was... the debris of
construction was still there.
You know, four years later after the mall
had opened, it was dirty.
It was truly abandoned.
And we were like, oh, this is great!
Mike had been like, come see the space I
found.
And so, like, we all went
down and into the bowels
and saw the, like,
cavern that he had found.
Looking around at all
the clues, it's like, no
one's been in here
since they built the mall.
It started the conversation immediately
about, like, wait, this is a lot of space.
Maybe we have a responsibility to do
something with it.
It was sort of agreed pretty quickly that
the couch was the most important thing.
We're going to the mall, we're going to
eat.
We'll have receipts from eating.
This proves nothing...
Right, we could say we're
in the process of moving...
we wanted to get something to eat.
We went to the mall.
The reason for the plan is, if we do
corner the mall, we're gonna eat.
get caught to keep our
story straight, that's all.
So, we just need to move it to this one
door, which sets off the alarm.
And there is a security camera,
but it's not pointed in our direction,
which is excellent.
And um, yeah, we're just sort of waiting
out the security office since we can see it
[ Door alarm buzzing ]
Any time I went to a hearing at City Hall
for a new real estate development,
this term of underutilized space kept
coming up.
It was almost like it was a
moral obligation on the part
of the developers to tap
into this underutilized space.
It was almost like a crime.
We must extend our progress, and it must
fill in every gap and crevice in the city
until there's a seamless development.
And so this was, like, a funny way of,
like, itching back at that, of,
like, well, we found some space.
We need to develop this underutilized
space.
And I remember having this funny, jokey
conversation about being micro-developers.
You know, that seemed really funny to us,
that we would become developers,
but just for 750 square feet.
We put a bunch of ideas into the table,
some of them were absolutely ridiculous.
You know, even about opening up our own
store for, like, how would anybody visit it?
And we're like, we can just build a
condominium, like, right here.
And, like, the couch is the thing that
sort of made it a home immediately.
Providence had one time been one of the
wealthiest cities in the United States.
And after World War II, an inexorable
decline began to happen.
Providence seemed
little more than a parking
lot by day and an
abandoned city by night.
Serious decline soon created an
uninviting, neglected environment.
It wasn't until in the mid-1980s,
late 1980s, that the idea of a mall became
the centerpiece of the whole Providence
Renaissance.
You wanted retail to come back.
You wanted performing and visual arts.
You wanted all the things that Providence
had been known for.
All of those things that would
make Providence a destination,
and not just a drive-through
to another major city.
The Providence Place Mall
was considered to be a major
new engine to help the
revitalization effort take place.
The city had began to lose its retailing
sales to the surrounding suburban areas.
But the mall did not happen overnight.
It took years and multiple administrations
in order for this to occur.
It was a major building.
While the mall was
being built, I really
started to internalize
its impact on the city.
Because all of a sudden, I literally
couldn't see the city anymore.
Look at this giant...
Look at this thing.
It's totally overpowering.
Looks like something out of a science
fiction movie.
You've got the state house.
You can't even see it anymore.
They've practically buried it.
I mean, it was no small task to move the
rivers and to move the railroad tracks.
But I think it began to show that things
were happening.
I remember the preview event, and everybody
coming from all parts of New England.
It wasn't even just Rhode Island.
This is a large mall.
Am I correct?
Oh, definitely.
You know, three and a half million square
feet.
You don't get this type of mall in any
city and everything.
It's very unique.
It makes this a destination city.
So having this big mall
that represented a big
investment, it was
kind of like a new face.
For Providence, I think
that was more probably
something that was aligned
with what politicians wanted.
But not necessarily for the communities,
especially the adjacent communities.
We all hated the mall when it went up,
right?
Nobody wanted that to happen.
It was infuriating.
Instead of putting the money into downtown
in general and supporting the businesses
that were already here, they built that
monstrosity.
We hated it.
And then as they started to sort of shore
up the side facing our neighborhood,
I realized like, wait, there's no
entrances for us.
This whole thing faces the east side.
It wasn't designed to be used by the
people from this neighborhood.
In a way, it's like drawing a boundary in
between the premium Providence and then
just like, you know, the unattractive,
kind of historically excluded Providence.
The stores, some stores, it's like the
prices are like kind of outrageous.
But for some people, I
guess they can afford it.
Me, personally.
This mall will attract a
better clientele of people.
It's gonna basically cater to the
people that have a little more money.
The poor people in Providence
can't afford to go to these stores.
No.
I've been there. I know.
I can't go to these stores.
By the time the mall opened, there was a
sense that more changes were coming our way.
And there was a sense of impending doom.
Even before the Providence
Place Mall was complete,
developers were getting ready
to build Providence Marketplace.
Even while scaffolding still scales the
Providence Place Mall, another huge
project is in the works.
The Providence Place
Mall opened August of 1999.
And shortly after, a developer came to the
mills spaces that we were living in and
put a proposal out that perhaps the best
way to serve this neighborhood was to
knock down every single
mill in a 13-acre area and
replace it with a strip
mall and a supermarket.
So one of those buildings they wanted to
knock down was Fort Thunder.
So behind the mall, we see the skeleton of
the Industrial Revolution.
It is mill building after mill building.
And in the middle of all this mill
building mess is called Eagle Square.
And in the heart of Eagle Square was a
place called Fort Thunder.
And I was very fortunate to live there for
a couple years.
Well, Fort Thunder was a mill space.
It lasted, I think, from 95 to like 2001.
It started out with four of us renting
this space.
My band, Lightning Bolt, needed a place of
practice.
And we wanted to have shows.
The history of that area,
the history of Olneyville, is a
really specific history that you'll
see throughout New England.
There were these factories.
People would live in the neighborhoods.
And then when the manufacturing sector was
destroyed in the United States,
it destroyed these neighborhoods.
So if you were going to Fort Thunder for
the first time, it was scary.
It was sort of like this secret playhouse
for a while.
They just wanted to have fun.
They wanted to create.
They wanted to have their own world there.
You know, museums were like crypts,
graveyards for art.
And our house was like a living art
creature that we lived within.
I think it was like emboldening in a way
to have this kind of like wild,
untamed space.
Just like living this really loud,
literally like very loud.
So living in Fort Thunder is that sense of
no routine, but a great sense of purpose.
And then, you know, within the year of
that super heyday, a developer came in.
People started getting kicked out and the
city just started looking at that area.
These developers saw a great opportunity
for themselves because they knew that they
could buy these buildings and knock them
down.
Come back July 2nd.
The joint better be empty.
Make sure you're out of here and that the
joint's empty.
I'm not fucking around.
The developer was just
looking at it as if it was any
old parcel that could
become a suburban strip mall.
I mean, it's just an algorithm.
And they're like, oh, there's
room for a supermarket
here because the
property value is so cheap.
All we have to do is just knock down all
these buildings.
There was no outreach to
the community to talk about like
rent control and how
under-resourced the community was.
It's okay.
Like change happens.
Like there's nothing inherently wrong or
evil about it.
But there was no effort to bring people
along.
And I think that in a way, Fort Thunder
was like the first strike.
And I think the real
estate developers were just
starting to understand that
there was so much to exploit.
We'll take a motion to
close the hearing,
and allow everyone to speak
that's signed up to speak.
Michael Townsend?
Over the course of the chaos
in the last year and a half
everybody who lived in the area
has been slowly pushed out.
And now, I just want to give a heads up
to the concept of responsibility for these buildings
as far as who have responsibility for it.
When the Eagle Square fiasco was
unfolding, the mall becomes this sort of
cultural enemy.
It becomes a sort of ogre in the cave that
the townsfolk are afraid of.
They're not sure how big it is,
but they just know it's nasty.
And so that tension just
boils over as soon as an actual
person comes in and says, I'm
going to knock down your home.
People being evicted, people losing their
spaces, people getting kicked out,
people getting priced out.
It's just sort of something kind of
happening.
The mall comes, totally remakes your
neighborhood.
You adjust.
It doesn't adjust to you.
You adjust to it.
And it was impossible to not see the
apartment project through that lens.
Yeah, just go quickly.
It won't set up at once.
Yeah, we can go straight from the moon to
our house.
Brilliant.
By this stage, the
group of people invited
into the space had
grown from four to eight.
And occasionally, a few of us would sleep
there.
But for the most part, it was a fantastic
place to just meet and hang out.
The food court was closed, so please,
people, enjoy what you can.
The mall project, I think, it emerged
fairly organically.
The main person who really started the
project and who had the initial idea was Mike.
It wasn't as though Mike sat down and was
like, I got to assemble a super group of
people in order to,
like, create this artist
collective that will be
a public-facing thing.
As with other projects that
Mike has done, he wanted
to involve the people
who were in his life in it.
He wanted to make it a group project.
Michael was a thread that connected
everybody.
A lot of folks he met through his time
teaching, and so they were students,
former students of his.
He and Adriana were
married, and then the
two of us were in this
grad program together.
Everyone was sort of very driven, but
we were all real sort of nerdy and weird.
That group felt really at home.
We all felt really fun together.
That just sounds like such a magic thing,
to take a space from the mall.
Like, it seems like you shouldn't be able
to pull it off.
So trying to pull it off, it feels like
somebody needs to do it.
This was our group project, and it was,
like, a secret, right?
And it was a secret pact.
The big rule was to not bring people from
outside.
So it was intended to be a fairly
exclusive club, I suppose.
So there's this core team of eight
artists.
That is essentially the brain
trust for the creation of it,
and the curation of it, and the
knowledge of the mall space.
Look at that.
It's got the instant history going on.
Oh, and the shelves are glass.
Oh, that's nice. Do these open?
Wait, what is that?
It's plastic.
Oh, my God.
Isn't it?
No, no, no. Look, this is cast.
Wait.
It's not wood. It's plastic.
We can't have this in our house.
Oh, man.
That is hot.
And it's really shoddily made, but I
mean, it has the illusion of grandeur.
Yeah.
It kinda sucks that I'm more
excited about this apartment
than it's like the one I'll be moving into.
You know, there's art that you see and you
enjoy, and it entertains you.
And then there's art that impacts you.
And that's the kind of piece this was.
It had an impact that was both emotional
and psychological and is not easily
described, which is my favorite kind of
art.
My friend was like, hey, you got to go see
this.
There's like underneath the train tracks,
there's actually like this like weird,
creepy art exhibit that like felt like it
was a mystery and who made it.
So I actually had no idea at the time
anything about why it was there.
You opened up a hatch and climbed down
into the was like a sewer grate,
basically, and then kind of traverse these
few tunnels.
And then it opened up into a bigger open
space, super wet, dank.
But then there were
these sculptures of human
bodies suspended all
throughout the space.
And you could walk through and sort of
interact with them on your own terms.
There's no signage.
There's nobody telling you anything about
what you're experiencing.
There's one day when I
spent a really long time looking
for it, and I couldn't
figure out how to get into it.
But I never, and I never figured it out.
I think you had to like go between the
train tracks.
I'm not even sure actually where the
entrance to the tunnel is now.
I think that the body
tunnel, you could call it a
stunt, you could call it
an installation art piece.
What makes it art for me is that it asked
me to imagine a setting for art that was
not the setting that I had been told art
happened in.
I'm not sure when I put two and two
together that it was Mike's piece.
I think that probably came much later.
But like, I just remember,
you know, that was like one
of my favorite secret spots
in Providence to take people.
And I think Michael was very discreet
about it.
I don't think he was promoting it.
Him finding that tunnel
was, I think, an offshoot of just
like all of us exploring
just whatever we could find.
But where we were mostly just exploring
stuff, Michael was sort of putting his
artistic practice like into
those spaces, like putting
things in the spaces and
messing around with the spaces.
And he's always been an inspiration.
I went to the RISD summer program and Mike
was my drawing teacher.
He did something very rare and very
unusual, which was that he expected you to
have a genuine personal connection to the
work that you made.
It was a way of living, not some sort of
produced object that can be seen,
you know, in a museum, something like
that.
Most of us, myself,
certainly came to that
program thinking art is
a thing you do on paper.
And Mike exploded our understanding of
what art is or could be.
So it was the start of a decade of life
that has had a massive impact on me.
Mike was like a super
involved teacher, like different
than any teacher I had had
up until that point, for sure.
He kind of approached art
in a different way definitely
than anything like I'd
been exposed to before.
Where it was kind of like, what do you
actually want to make and why?
What Michael was able to introduce to me,
which was so powerful at that age,
was that I could
actually just look inside
myself and find things
that were worth sharing.
So yes, like that class with Mike helped
to galvanize me to find my way to publicly
engaged work.
For Mike, the difference between art and
life is very hard to discern.
Art and life are two very porous things
for him.
And so he thinks of art projects as being
so deeply incorporated into his life.
And that's something
you probably will hear from
other people, this life
as art, art as life thing.
And that's something that like,
as a young person, it was super impactful
to see somebody living in a way that felt
like all of it was the art.
The secret apartment was the art.
The teaching was the art.
The interacting with other people was the
art.
All the stuff together is what makes life
meaningful.
And I think that's like, something I've
been trying to do since I was a teenager.
So the secret apartment, nestled down in
here, kind of floating above the train
tracks, kind of tucked in between the
backside of all the stores.
We had a couple of different ways of
getting in.
Our exterior entrance was basically right
alongside the train tracks.
There was a gap in between a couple of
walls that would allow you to get into the
bowels of the building pretty much.
And we were able to shimmy along some
walls to get access to where the space was.
Additionally, we could get into the same
zone of the mall where the secret
apartment was, basically from any emergency
exit door on this side of the building.
That would lead you into a
serpentine bunch of staircases
and hallways somewhere
along that serpentine path.
There were a couple of different ways we
could access the secret apartment.
Because this building is made of a bunch
of really odd shapes.
I mean, you can see, like, the way that
the angle follows the river and the way
that that curve follows
the highway, the building
has a bunch of weird
intersecting shapes.
So I think the space that we discovered
was really a negative space in between two
planes of the building, which created sort
of a triangle in between two parts of the
building, which is where the secret
apartment was.
The food court is this sort of third level
up here.
And the bathrooms, I think our most
frequently used bathroom was on the first
floor, sort of like the main retail drag
of the mall.
There were bathrooms on each floor.
I feel like we used the
ones on the first floor
the most because they
were closest to the entrance.
So the secret apartment
being down in here, we
can have a look at it
by taking this roof off.
And we
can pull that out.
So there's Andrew, James, Jay,
myself, Emily, Greta, Adriana,
and Michael all hanging out in the space
together.
So additionally, just for fun,
hidden in here is the Optio S5i.
Amazingly, still works.
Just needed a charge of the battery.
I can probably sneak a little picture of
the apartment or two if it'll focus.
Once we wanted to really make this an
apartment that was ours, as opposed to
just a room in the mall, we decided we
needed to make it so we had access to it
without having other people have access to
it.
So the apartment in the
mall had this big gaping
space that looked
down into a storage area.
You would come up this
steep metal staircase and
you would just be
looking into the apartment.
So there was a real necessity to build a
wall there.
Building a wall was going to be the thing
that made it even more invisible in the
sense that, like, another cinder block
wall with another door just becomes
another thing that if
anyone walks through
the space, they're not
going to bat an eye at.
So many cinder blocks, like, that would
be a... Yeah, even just that one wall...
carrying up at a time.
Four or five.
A lot of a lot.
Obviously the main feat of that whole thing
was just moving that many cinder blocks.
I think, you know, we calculated it was
like, you know, four and a half or five
thousand pounds of cinder block.
So that was, you know, a couple of tons.
The issue of bringing things in here is
obviously the hot one.
Because, like...
That's our only liability.
Right, you have to do it over...
and over... and
over... and over again.
From the time we popped the trunk, to the
time all the cinder blocks,
we're literally through the doors of a
minute and a half.
How long does that alarm sound?
Two minutes exactly.
It's a psychological deterrent.
And apparently nothing else.
In regards to security, we're thinking
about it all the time.
There are constant presence in our mind.
But it's important to
emphasize that there's no, no
part of me that has any
interest in duping security.
I don't...
I don't feel any thrill in that.
They have a job to do.
I respect that job.
I also just want to do my job.
We're heading off.
All right.
Yeah, we'll see you in like ten minutes.
Alright, bye.
There was no way to prepare for it.
Like, we didn't know what circumstances
would trigger us being caught.
We had no idea who would approach us or in
what level of hostility it would be.
We just would be ready to explain
ourselves in whatever moment unfolded.
Now, I have, up until that point,
a career in explaining myself.
My work as an artist means
that I am constantly explaining
my presence to police
officers, to city officials.
It is a space I feel very comfortable in.
You know, we were on a multi-leg journey
coming from Home Depot.
You know, we got these cinder blocks at
Home Depot and now we're going to the mall.
Does it change anything we're doing?
No, it doesn't change a thing.
Because we had the good excuse.
Yeah.
vv
Conviction.
Eye contact.
I guess we should just...
We're fine.
So yeah, it's kind of amazing.
I told the security guard that we had gone
to Home Depot, filled the car with cinder
blocks, come to the mall,
had done some shopping,
and came back to a
car that could not move.
So, we had arranged to move the cinder
blocks down the stairwell to an awaiting
friend's truck.
And he led us on our way.
And I know that has a lot to do with just
who we were.
like, a shield of white
privilege around us.
Black and brown people in the same space,
doing illegal things, or doing even not
illegal things, are not
treated that way and would
not be treated with the
same deference as we were.
My fear of the police is not the same.
I'm not worried about risk to my body and
life.
You know, simultaneously to this,
I was working with Mike on tape art,
which is Mike's sort of organization that
will go around and do public murals,
do temporary public murals made out of
masking tape.
One of the more notable
ones was going to Hasbro
Children's Hospital and
making murals there.
I first became aware of tape art and heard
about Michael through probably some artist
friends, that there
was some guy out there
who was using tape
and drawing on the wall.
And I thought, I don't know, this is, sounds
quirky and kooky, and what does he do?
I mean, how is this going to appeal to
kids?
So, I had a lot of questions.
Tape art is a unique process.
I don't know any other artists,
frankly, who were doing tape art.
Michael was the first one I met,
and I've never met anybody since.
I think I was fascinated by the
uniqueness.
So, the more I
watched him, the more I
realized that, you know,
he was truly a master.
The patient's immediate
reaction is, first
of all, they're very
open to something new.
And it was, again, a little odd.
It wasn't somebody coming in with drawing
paper and a brush or crayons.
It was somebody
coming in with five rolls of
blue tape on his arm
and swinging them around.
And then the kid would often say,
you know, what's going on?
What are you going to do with that tape?
And Michael would take it from there.
Michael did have a crew of people.
You know, what they drew, the mice and the
horses and the mermaids.
It was that they were
able to engage the child in
conversation about, what
do you want on your wall?
So that when Michael and his team walked
into the room, he didn't come in with an
idea of what he was going to do.
He let the child lead him.
And when possible, of course, if the
patient was mobile, they'd engage the
patient in actually helping him to create
the mural.
But now the patient is involved in a
creative activity and has a responsibility
to seeing what's happening on the wall of
his room and changing his environment.
Having a sense of control.
So I think that the patient just got lost.
Could be for 15 minutes and it could have
been, you know, for a couple of hours.
Michael was coming in
at least once a week and
he was one of the
first people that I hired.
So I would say he was, yeah, he was here
for at least 15 years.
Funding was tough, but free lunch was
provided.
If they came in the morning, they could
stay for lunch.
If they came in the afternoon,
they could come early.
And we always provided a free lunch for
them.
And I think they were pretty grateful for
that, because I don't think many of them,
I don't think they ate during the day.
I think one of the first questions kids
and staff and families always asked,
what's going to happen to this mural now
that's on the wall?
And Michael always made
it very clear that there was
an impermanence and it was
really for the here and now.
And he said, you know, we'll create a new
one tomorrow.
Think of something new that we could do.
So Michael had an interesting beginning.
Because his father was in
the Marine Corps, we lived in
eight different places before
he was seven years old.
I think it made him very open-minded.
I think Michael takes in all kinds of
people, all kinds of social situations.
So basically, I think that's what's made
him someone who's at home anywhere.
So let's get you this one, and this one,
the blue one.
So basically, it's like a form of,
like, tempered graffiti.
And it gives you a lot of freedom.
So I was brought up in a military family.
Both my parents were in the military,
and their parents were in the military,
and I believe their parents were in the
military.
So my brother and I were the first ones to
sort of break that lineage.
In Mike's case, I don't want
to speak for him, but it just
was never, never seemed
like it would be a good fit for him.
He was far too creative growing up,
and I think a military career would have
restricted his level of creativity that
just abounded.
No words or letters are the only rule.
Good luck.
Let's work on that together.
Make sure you got that one technique down.
Don't pull it.
Just let it hang.
And very gently.
That looks really good.
Yeah, keep going, keep going.
Michael as a person is all about involving
people in a collaborative process of art.
And I've seen that in a lot of cases,
that he's just a very selfless person.
And that is something really, yeah, that
is something really special about Michael.
Yeah.
So the cynic might
say that you're not going
to make the world a
better place with your art.
But like maybe you're not
gonna make the entire world a
little better, but maybe you'll
make one person's life better.
And then somebody else's life better.
It becomes the ripples in the pond effect.
So the main priorities in my career have
always been making art and teaching art
and trying to use that art to have
positive impacts on other people's lives.
There's not a lot of money in that.
I work in a nonprofit museum.
Michael is an artist.
We are not swimming in money, either of
us.
And Michael does, he takes it,
sometimes he doesn't take it seriously and
I've gotten upset.
Like he will text me
pictures of his bank account
that has 41 cents and
he thinks that's funny.
And I see the text and I'm like,
this is not funny.
And I've had to talk to
him about like, could you
please not send me this
when you have like a dollar?
This is not, like this doesn't make me
laugh personally.
This is our next ode to...
our relationship with this
large monstrosity.
Is to go in there and actually
consciously and very carefully
develop the space so that it's a...
It represents an
actual domestic living space.
Before Week I The Mall,
we hated that place.
Like we just, we didn't,
the mall was,
we genuinely disliked it.
We felt the disdain for it as a place.
And as a place that had affected
our lives in a very, very deep way.
That's funny because to me it's just a mall.
Well, to me it's not a mall.
And a lot of that has to do with the
evolution of this space over here.
Because that space over there had
my favorite building in Providence.
Now it is gone.
If you can talk about the
idea that there was or is
a gentrification
that's happening here?
It's pretty easy to finger this
building as the beginning of that.
So you like this thing now?
I love the place now.
As a member of the city,
I acknowledge its existence.
And, uh, the way that it
acknowledges us is by just
leaving us alone and
letting us move in.
We are no different than
like a barnacle on a whale.
The whale is designed.
The barnacle attaches itself.
The whale doesn't care.
So let's count full bricks first.
So we have...
- 48.
- Yeah.
So we need 72 and we have 48.
So it's like four more runs
with cinder blocks.
Fuck.
Okay.
So let's make this as thick as we can.
After we had a little run in with
security, that encounter forced us to
rethink how we're bringing
the cinder blocks in.
And we're like, well, we
have a private entrance.
So the entrance we had used to initially
discover the space in the first place
became the way that we
bring the cinder blocks in.
I think good day's work right there.
I say we leave these cinder blocks
here for now...
because we got plenty over there to start
building with.
We just got to get ourselves set up.
Yeah, let's go over there and chill out. Yeah.
What you're seeing here is...
Oh, they're all sort of marked.
Oh, that's Better Living... The Children's Hospital.
And where's Alfred P. Murrah?
Children's Hospital.
Museum of Art...
- National Memorial. There it is.
- Yeah, there it is.
So at the same time the core group of
eight of us were working in the apartment
in the mall, we also took a trip
collectively to go to Oklahoma City for
the 10th anniversary of the Alpha Pimura
Federal Building bombing.
Mike was there doing tape art in Oklahoma
City when that happened and made a mural.
I think he was the only non-medical
personnel allowed in the home base and
made a mural for basically the sole
audience of the first responders.
Folks seem to like the idea of it being an
optimism mural.
That's more about individuals being able
to have freedom and flight and maybe
through the help of other
people they can achieve that.
Like that wall right there...
That is downtown Oklahoma City.
We have a great place to stay.
We have a great wall.
The wall is check-out.
That looks amazing.
So we planned a trip back to
OKC like on the anniversary
of the bombing to kind of do
more work with the community.
Special care is a facility.
They have 14 cases of autism.
And, you know, lots of kids with cerebral palsy.
And I set up just a rolling schedule,
and the classes just roll to us.
The group of us spent a full week there
working at like a memorial site and doing
projects in schools.
Basically like a little elite strike force
team of empathetic artists.
I don't think that artists are obliged to
go out and do good works,
or to try to pretend that,
making art has to sort of like
save the world or feed the children
or do any kind of like, you know,
nice crunchy thing that people might want.
But if you can and if there's an
opportunity, why not?
You have the chance to use the skill that
you have to do something good.
And also, you know, I do
really believe that art and
aesthetic experience are
good in and of themselves.
That they're not means to anything,
but that they make life better.
If anyone's interested,
you can do this.
If you want to work in a hospital, in a hallway with
you know just like, hospital kids
this is an opportunity to do it.
So...
anyone wants to do that?
Sounds great.
It's funny.
I imagine when people
heard like the one
snippet of there was
an apartment in the mall.
It's not the first thing that they think
people would be using it for is kind of
planning and discussing things around these
big public art projects that we were doing.
The effort of making these things is a...
something that really really gets...
Like, hits people.
I've seen many an adult cry looking
at what we've made so far.
I know the majority of that is based on
the fact that it is September 11th,
but the artwork has an impact on just citizens.
Like, everyone being a survivor of September 11th.
The central project in our life was the
September 11th Memorial.
It was all-consuming.
We had made the decision to draw 500
portraits, life-size, simple silhouettes,
of every fireman and
every airline passenger
that passed away at
the World Trade Center.
Okay.
There is Saraceni.
Number 38, heart one.
He's here.
We're gonna walk to the other side of this
square right here and put a figure,
um, Mr. Russell.
It's gonna be about a block that
direction.
Mike had drawn these four large hearts
over the island of Manhattan.
And we would basically go down to New
York.
We'd follow that path
and just find locations
on that to try and do
a drawing of a figure.
And we'd document it.
And then this, like, web memorial,
we'd go back and make sort of,
like, a web page showcasing that
documentation.
Portraits of people who died on September
11th along the path of four hearts.
So, like, walking those paths and drawing,
I think, every block a person.
And those were all temporary drawings.
You know, you're in public.
You're in the streets of Manhattan.
You're trying to go quick.
We almost never had permission to make the
work.
So you're trying to not get busted.
If you got busted, you could just remove
the mural.
The tape isn't permanent.
But as far as tape art goes, kind of an
intense scenario.
You're trying to honor the circumstance,
the people you're representing,
and the seriousness of it all.
But you're also interacting
with people in the public who
are curious to know what
you're doing or if it's illegal.
Yeah, it was like a great drawing
challenge.
See these four hearts here?
Yes.
These four hearts span the entirety of
Manhattan.
One, two, three, four.
Yep.
And right now, we are working on part one.
So we're right now right about here.
And these hearts, if you were to connect
the dots between all these figures that
we're drawing, you would be drawing out
these fantastically large hearts.
Wow.
We would hop in the car in Mike's Toyota
and drive to New York to do drawings over
the course of a couple of days.
With a goal, some section of a heart.
And then, with the documentation,
we would head back to Providence,
where we would compile the next set of
collages.
And then once a good window presented
itself to head back to New York,
we'd hop back in the car and get to it.
It took a long time.
Years.
First, this project, when it started,
we thought maybe two, three years,
stretched out to five years.
All of these efforts pretty much,
like, was all volunteer.
The HOPE project was completely
self-funded.
I mean, I know that Mike's
every bit of money that he
made went directly back into
paying for the HOPE project.
Mostly the paying for it was, you know,
all of our labor was completely volunteer.
But for me, just thinking about meaningful
things I've done in my life, that's
something I look at as really,
truly meaningful artwork.
I'm not sure, but the
project that we made, to
be honest, I don't even
know how it exists now.
I'm not sure if it even exists to this
day.
The apartment was the side project to the
other staff.
The HOPE project, Oklahoma City projects,
the work at the hospital, that was,
I believe, our focus as a team.
You know, the mall
project felt like a way for us
to have maybe more fun
than thinking about tragedy.
Which, for a couple years, we were, like,
really thinking about tragedy all the time.
[ Door alarm buzzing in the distance ]
God damn it.
Remember that thing I was telling
you about, about not putting your
tools on the thing or it might fall in?
It just happened.
Yes, it just happened.
Lame!
[ Door alarm buzzing in the distance ]
It's gonna be an awful
day when that door opens.
I know, I know.
The only thing the makes
it better is our door.
Yeah.
And then it's gonna be a really
awful day when our door opens.
Once you have your own wall,
then you get your own door.
And then you have your own lock,
and then you get your own key.
So, our whole team had a key to an
apartment in the mall.
Holy smoke.
So, what I didn't realize when I was
initially looking at these photos,
this step down here that's happening
in the cinder blocks, I was, like, weird.
Yeah, poor craftsmanship.
Because you had built it.
Right.
Ah.
But that brings, like, a
certain degree of charm.
So, with the couch, you
can tell it's a pretty big
couch from the amount of
people that are fitting on it.
Sectional.
Oh, it's a sectional.
Yeah.
Can you draw for me,
roughly, like, the floor plan
or just the orientation
of walls and stuff as you?
So, this is our front door.
This is our back door.
Whoa.
We had a couch here.
We had our entertainment system on a
little tiny table with a TV.
And there was a dresser out here.
Rugs.
Lamps.
You didn't have outlets, did you?
No.
But we had the extension cord.
- Here.
- Okay.
- Down.
- Oh, my God.
One story.
Into... over here.
The door is there.
The couch is basically here.
The little table is basically here.
Mm-hmm.
We walked to the...
That puts the...
That puts the China cabinet here.
Okay.
Getting it to look right.
Like, this is too distressed.
No. No, no. It's not. That's not.
That's brick.
That's closer.
Closer.
That's it!
That's what it looked like!
Yeah, with the folks from Providence who
are helping on this project, it was pretty
easy for me to rope them in because I just
said, remember that time.
Those people lived at the mall.
How would you like to rebuild that room?
You know, we're working with a tight
budget, but everyone's really excited
about the project, so we're doing the best
we can.
I think everyone was sort of willing to
pitch in and just being a little scrappier.
There's a lot of free items that we're
running around and picking up.
We're basically doing what these guys did.
You know, the way that they were finding
their furniture was often times at
Salvation Army or things that they were
finding on the side of the road.
And we're doing a sort of expedited
version of that.
I think more than anything, I want Michael
and Adriana and Andrew and Colin,
whoever else, to walk into the space
knowing that it's just a recreation for
a documentary, but having it sort
of evoke the memory of the space.
What?
Bring your own precious items,
choose a shadow box.
A shadow box will help make a unique keepsake.
This might be something
we need for our space.
Wait a second.
Hey, Glenn.
I have some people who
want to do the shadow box.
If you could meet them at
Design Studio.
All right. So you guys brought some stuff?
Some of us brought stuff.
Where are you guys from?
You don't know?
Here.
Around here.
All right. So I guess the
general idea is that you get
a shadow box, buy a shadow box from here.
And you guys can assemble it
and I'll help you out.
My name is Glenn.
I graduated from RISD.
Oh.
With a master's in sculpture.
And I teach at Brown.
So I was hired at Pottery Barn to do
shipping receiving.
The company was trying
to promote shadow boxes.
So they wanted to do a workshop.
So I did it.
So when they came in, they were really
excited and jovial.
And they were like, we're into this.
They sort of explained who they were,
what kind of art they made, that they were
from Eagle Square and
that they got kicked out.
I had been to Eagle Square.
So I knew kind of the situation.
You know, we had this connection going.
And then they started to tell me,
you know, slowly kind of leaked out.
And then I will share with you cause it's of note
is in our explorations of the mall,
we have found some extraordinary large and
abandoned spaces and
we've been slowly, methodically moving in.
And don't pass this on, obviously,
We have a fully furnished apartment.
In here?
In the mall.
Really? That's hilarious.
So you're basically home.
Yeah.
In some way.
Yeah. No. We're home in
a very real way, unfortunately.
It was pretty clear from
the beginning that they wanted
to know more
information about the mall.
And I was there inside about that.
We can't figure out how to get into the
tower.
Oh, really?
I have no idea.
I bet you have to figure it out.
Like, is there any place you can
actually go and just take a shower?
Can you get mail delivered
to you here?
I think we need a post office box.
Here?
Yeah.
And then you'd have to rent
space in order to get one.
You might.
If we can get mail to come
here, then we've done it.
Once we can get mail here, man...
Then we can have all our junk mail
sent here from the mall to the mall.
Right.
I really like it.
Damn, that's really good.
I like it.
Yeah.
Thanks.
Good job.
Yeah, thanks for your material and time.
Well, come down sometime and
show me where the place is.
If we get discovered...
Yeah.
What is your sense of...
What would happen?
They'd probably want back pay for rent.
Yeah, we have a location problem.
Alright...
Have a great day.
Alright, thank you very much. Thank you.
So, after they left, you
know, of course, there
were all the questions
from the other employees.
You know, what's this about?
And I just told them
it was an art project.
Here we go...
So, this is our home.
This door also has a
lock, just like our door did.
And, um, it's locked.
So, I can't go in the apartment.
This is the weird thing
about the mall apartment,
is that it makes you
feel really relaxed.
It's this paradox, right?
It's a little prison-like,
because there's
this cement wall and
there's no natural light.
And you could be discovered at any moment.
There's this weird sense of freedom where
no one's gonna bother you.
You're not gonna be late for anything.
It's just this really
quiet refuge, in a way.
You're on, like, the
inside-out version of a
building that you're never
supposed to experience.
Um, and so, it's like being
in the belly of a beast.
In some ways, we had this raw black box.
It was a bit of a space station,
self-imposed prison cell.
There was no windows.
There's no light.
And it was about this desire to cultivate
it and make it more human.
Sleeping in the apartment was,
I think, really cold, usually.
And we had, like, some sleeping bags,
at least in the winter.
It was definitely really hot in the
summer, too.
And incredibly dark.
Slept on this couch a lot.
Probably the most, for me,
the most nights in a row would
have been four or five or
something like that, I think.
We had tried different,
like, sleeping arrangements.
But I remember Mike and I
doing this on this couch a lot.
The head-to-foot sleeping.
And this hutch, I'm
just gonna look for it.
It feels so real.
It definitely, it had a real waffle maker.
So we could make waffles in the mall
apartment.
So I had this vision of staging
this set of domestic bliss.
Gorgeous, very
bourgeois, even within the
dusty, grimy cinder
block of that apartment.
Oh, my gosh.
The cinder block, yeah.
It was, um...
It was dustier.
It was always giving off.
It was always generating kind of like a
fine mist of cement.
So much of what the mall sells us is this
performance of a consumer lifestyle.
And so the mall apartment was this
opportunity to have this set almost where
we could play out the unrealistic and
unattainable fantasies of the mall.
And the joke would be, you know what?
Oh, you love just beautifying things?
Like, so do we.
Wait a second.
The mail carrier will be
available at the mail room for
accountable mail and parcels.
Where's the mail room?
I don't know, but it's a really good
question to ask.
This is too good.
Well, it would just be nice to
be able to receive mail here.
If we could do that, that would
be a gigantic accomplishment.
It would just save us a lot of stress.
If we were able to receive a bill, we
could use it as like proof of residency.
Yeah.
During the time that the apartment in the
mall was being built, I was married to
Adriana.
And she had a front
row seat to a lot of lunacy.
Right now I'm unsettled because
we have all that stuff in there
but it's not really...
it's not really finished, in a sense.
- I mean, it'll never feel like that.
- Yeah.
It needs to reach a certain state
of finished and then we can
keep upping the ante when
we feel the inclination, the time.
The only problem I have is that
I know Saturday is mall time.
It's just like, I want to spend my
Saturday working on our house.
Right, right.
You know, because our house
doesn't have a floor and...
there's a lot of things
that need to be done.
As egotistical as it sounds, it's something
I just really, really, really want to do.
Like it moves me, and being here moves me,
setting up the space moves me.
You need these kinds of projects
to be who you are and to survive,
and I completely understand that.
But the other part of it is that I
don't need those projects to survive.
and I'm not you and that's okay.
But...
we do...
have a commitment to a partnership where
we're working towards the same goals.
We're doing different things, but
we're working towards the same thing.
and...
I'm not sure if the mall project is
threatening those goals in any sense.
I mean it's very interesting that
you've phrased going down this path.
You know that it is this
battle between these two homes.
Cause it has been very much "home" and
our goal is pushing more and more "home".
I want a fucking home.
I want a home, but I
don't want it in the mall.
I wanna buy things from the mall
for my home, then bring it home.
We wanna buy things in the mall and bring them
into the home here.
I know, but why are you
going to spend money on that?
You know, it's very much
a home in a lot of ways.
We're making a physical home, but the
act of making it constantly partners
me up with people that I really like.
So...
that's an important part of it.
for me.
There was some part of me that knew this
was not a good relationship.
And then I was able to realize that it was
not the right thing for me.
Yeah.
This illustrates one of the
core dilemmas of driving yourself
towards an art project that
you really deeply believe in.
Because sometimes it's
truly in the face of all reason.
Why are you spending
all of that time there?
Why are you doing that
September 11th project?
Why... there's no... where's
the reward in any of this?
What's your end game?
Valid questions.
At this time, the apartment is starting to
transform into something else.
It's evolving again.
It had started as a response to
development projects in our neighborhood.
And within a couple of years,
it looks like a domestic space,
but it's completely
isolated from the world.
And sometimes when you're in that space,
you felt like you were on the stage of a
sitcom TV show.
And I think kind of
because of that feeling,
we just stopped filming
ourselves all together.
And then...
We had had this break-in...
They were two guys, young guys,
maybe 20, 21, something like that,
who were new security guards at the mall.
I think they were just going
through every door, and they
came upon the door that
they did not have the key to.
So they just kicked the door down.
So Colin and I entered into the apartment to
try to figure out what's happened.
Our door's been broken in.
But when we enter into the apartment,
we can quickly assess that someone else
has been spending
time there, and it's not us.
And there's evidence of
entertainment dispersed throughout.
But things have also been stolen.
Our PlayStation, weirdly enough,
was the thing that was gone.
And then there were some other of our
personal effects that were gone.
We had some framed pictures and stuff to
make it feel a little homier.
Those were the things that were gone.
I think they took the
PlayStation because it had all
of our save dates for the
games we were playing on it.
So that's just a record of all the visits
in the last couple of months.
And they took our photo album because it
had just photographs of us.
It was very clearly who
lived in this apartment.
Busted.
Job well done.
Bravo.
We've been in this space for four years.
And there's this underlying dread that
we're going to get caught at any time.
And after we were broken
into, we just stopped
going to that space
during the day altogether.
And then I screwed up.
I had a friend visiting from out of town.
And I thought to myself, I'll bring her to
see the space.
And I went during the day!!!
I disrespected our own
rules and it blew up in my face.
All right.
But this is our secret apartment.
We've been slowly building
this over the last four years.
Moving in pieces of
furniture and slowly building it
up to try to make it a fully
domestic space to live in.
Are you allowed to be here?
Technically, no.
We've been doing it all on the sly.
And within a couple of days,
the wood floors will be in.
And we'll be one step closer.
How did you get this up here?
That is...
[ Police type radio squelching from afar ]
Yeah, so between the sound of the
walkie-talkie and seeing that doorknob
turn, everything just goes into slow-mo.
And it's one of those
times when you can process
a lot of scenarios in a
very short period of time.
One of the possibilities is just to get
out of there.
Book it.
Grab your friend,
head towards the secret
passage, and that's
where you're in trouble.
Because you're asking
them to dive into a place
that's like pitch dark, full
of ledges and I-beams.
They're probably not going to make it.
Another idea that struck me was,
they were entering into my home.
So I should just invite them in....
as guests.
Treat them like royalty.
And maybe they would
treat me well in return.
Hello, gentlemen, it's good to see you.
Ah!
Ah!
Too long.
You.
You, sir.
That probably wasn't going to work.
Another possibility that went through my
mind is that this isn't security at all.
That maybe this is
just a cool person with a
walkie-talkie on the
other side of that door.
Walkie-talkies.
Yes!
Radio Shack.
Sweet!
But, after seeing those three guys step
through that door in their business suits,
I knew it was over.
I remember stepping right
up and saying, surprise!
Do you know who I am?
We know who you are.
You're going to need to follow us.
Our other top local story on
Eyewitness News at Noon.
This is an incredible tale.
A local artist has apparently had some
living space in the Providence Place Mall.
In all, eight artists were in and out of
that loft area.
But there was one man who admitted that he
lived there.
And now he's facing trespassing charges.
And he's also banned from the premises.
In a mall with 24-hour security,
Michael Townsend was able to build a fully
livable apartment, and he used it for
nearly four years.
Townsend was arrested and charged with
trespassing.
A judge sentenced to
him to six months probation
and ordered him to pay
court costs and restitution.
When we discovered it.
A spokesman for the mall said the hidden
space would be sealed up immediately.
Townsend's original charges...
Townsend's been barred from coming to the
mall permanently.
Townsend was released this morning,
spending just one night in jail.
His only regret is that it ended too soon.
In the next year, he planned on expanding
the apartment and building an extra
bedroom, a kitchen, and a bathroom,
all with running water.
When asked if the apartment was a work of
art or just a place to live, Townsend told
us that for him, there's
no line between art and life.
Bryan Cranston, NBC News Providence.
So I was told by representatives of the mall
that they took down our cinder block wall,
and then moved all the cinder blocks
to rebuild a new wall to block off the
entrance we had used to
enter in all of those years.
Far as I know, no one's
ever been in there again.
With our secret apartment in the mall, there
wasn't any sense of it being permanent.
We're just going to keep building it until
we reach that crescendo moment and then...
make it disappear.
So what is it?
What is it?
Is it a work of art?
Is it a social experiment?
Is it trespassing?
Is it a prank?
It's maybe all of these things.
It was this idea of
reinventing everyday life
and making of everyday
life an artistic project.
It talks about gentrification.
It talks about capitalism and
everything being co-modified.
It's the perfect site
to address issues of like...
ownership, of capital,
of private versus public.
It was like this alternate universe.
It's like within the real world.
It's a crossover between installation art
and performance art.
I think it was a combo of
like mischief and like snark.
It seemed like a big presentational show
because they don't like malls.
It felt like, meh, whatever.
I don't really get it, I will admit,
which is Michael finds that hilarious.
You know, it's I try to understand why
this was an art project and the deeper
um, messaging he was trying to get
across by occupying unoccupied space.
And like, I've heard it, I've heard it,
but I just don't really get why it's art.
I'm not sure if it moves over
to the area of being artistic.
I think this is just his
creative mind trying
to express itself in
every possible way.
Isn't that art?
Damn it.
I've kept this key on my keychain the
entire time.
Yep, this is the key.
Which used to have flames on it,
but it doesn't anymore.
Well, it's here on my keychain.
Um... yeah...
I have no idea if the
door is still there, so
I sometimes refer to it
as my key to nowhere.
Here is my key.
It's got what's left of an
American flag and an eagle on it.
You can kind of see, like, a little bit of
the flames left in there.
Uh, but pretty well worn.
That was the key.
SECRET MALL APARTMENOther than Micael Tonsend, none of the the other 7 participants of
the secret apartment were ever identified. This is the first time
they have all come forward.Each is still currently an artist or working in the arts.
Micheal Townsend is still doing tape art in Providence.
He lives in a former mill building, down the street from
the Providence Place Mall. He is still banned there.
The Providence Place Mall has struggled greatly in recent years.
In 2022, after the mall's owners defaulted on thier mortage,
they anounced that they were considering putting residential
apartments into the mall complex.
Jeremy Workman - Director/Producer
Sub by hamonwheat72
Our other top local story on Eyewitness
News at Noon.
This is an incredible tale.
Artists set up an apartment
inside Providence Place Mall,
going undetected for years.
We were listening to the radio and this ad
came on for the Providence Place Mall.
It was this woman, she was a mom,
and she was talking about how great her
life was about to become because it was
going to be so convenient for her to get
everything that she needed for her kids,
for herself, if only she could live there.
I just had this idea, oh, we should live
in the mall.
Live at the mall, like, it seemed like a
very absurd fantasy and a great way to
plow through all of the negativity that
had been built up for years in the loss of
our homes and the homes of, like,
hundreds of people.
And so Adriana and Andrew
and Jay and myself decided
that we would go live
there for at least one week.
It was more of a game of survival.
Who was going to get kicked out from security
and who was going to last the longest?
I think we were making bets about it.
I definitely thought that I was going to
live there the longest.
I think my mind, I was like, oh,
we need to document.
And I'm like, oh, we need a sketchbook.
And Mike's instinct on the document was
like, all right, we all need to have a
point and shoot camera and be able to do
video.
We had a little camera called a Pentax
Optio S4i.
It is incredibly low res and the audio is
terrible.
It's not designed for video.
Interestingly, it fit inside an Altoids
can.
In my hand, that camera
disappears, which meant that
I could walk through the
mall with my arm like this.
That sounds silly, but I would forget it
was there.
It was a fair bit of the food court.
It was trying on clothes.
You know, funny kind of teenage mall hang
existence.
We ate all the leftover food at the food
court.
We saw like almost every movie at the
movie theater, which was awesome.
But as the sun set, we
started to internalize the
dilemma we put ourselves
in, which is we have no plan.
Where are we going to sleep?
Jay and Andrew found a four foot by four
foot column in the parking garage that had
an opening that they could sneak up inside
of.
I was in a really small space,
unable to stretch out.
I believe I slept in my jacket with my
knees kind of curled up to my chest.
I've been camping in some
way, shape or form since I was
a small kid and I've had a
lot of miserable nights out.
And this is in the pantheon of worst.
The place that Adriana and I find is based
on my memory of the mall's construction.
When the mall was being
built, I saw a space that
I could not figure out
what it would be used for.
It was a nowhere space and I saw them
store construction materials on it.
And I just sort of made a mental note
about it.
I proposed that perhaps
the nowhere space, as
it were, would give
us shelter for the night.
And we went looking for that
anomaly in the architecture and
we snuck ourselves in there
and we took out our flashlights.
And we kept poking around and it struck me
that the nowhere space, as it were,
must be up here somewhere.
And we were able to push ourselves up
I-beams.
And there it was.
And it was safe and secure.
We're completely off the radar.
We weren't even entirely sure where we
were in the mall.
But there was... the debris of
construction was still there.
You know, four years later after the mall
had opened, it was dirty.
It was truly abandoned.
And we were like, oh, this is great!
Mike had been like, come see the space I
found.
And so, like, we all went
down and into the bowels
and saw the, like,
cavern that he had found.
Looking around at all
the clues, it's like, no
one's been in here
since they built the mall.
It started the conversation immediately
about, like, wait, this is a lot of space.
Maybe we have a responsibility to do
something with it.
It was sort of agreed pretty quickly that
the couch was the most important thing.
We're going to the mall, we're going to
eat.
We'll have receipts from eating.
This proves nothing...
Right, we could say we're
in the process of moving...
we wanted to get something to eat.
We went to the mall.
The reason for the plan is, if we do
corner the mall, we're gonna eat.
get caught to keep our
story straight, that's all.
So, we just need to move it to this one
door, which sets off the alarm.
And there is a security camera,
but it's not pointed in our direction,
which is excellent.
And um, yeah, we're just sort of waiting
out the security office since we can see it
[ Door alarm buzzing ]
Any time I went to a hearing at City Hall
for a new real estate development,
this term of underutilized space kept
coming up.
It was almost like it was a
moral obligation on the part
of the developers to tap
into this underutilized space.
It was almost like a crime.
We must extend our progress, and it must
fill in every gap and crevice in the city
until there's a seamless development.
And so this was, like, a funny way of,
like, itching back at that, of,
like, well, we found some space.
We need to develop this underutilized
space.
And I remember having this funny, jokey
conversation about being micro-developers.
You know, that seemed really funny to us,
that we would become developers,
but just for 750 square feet.
We put a bunch of ideas into the table,
some of them were absolutely ridiculous.
You know, even about opening up our own
store for, like, how would anybody visit it?
And we're like, we can just build a
condominium, like, right here.
And, like, the couch is the thing that
sort of made it a home immediately.
Providence had one time been one of the
wealthiest cities in the United States.
And after World War II, an inexorable
decline began to happen.
Providence seemed
little more than a parking
lot by day and an
abandoned city by night.
Serious decline soon created an
uninviting, neglected environment.
It wasn't until in the mid-1980s,
late 1980s, that the idea of a mall became
the centerpiece of the whole Providence
Renaissance.
You wanted retail to come back.
You wanted performing and visual arts.
You wanted all the things that Providence
had been known for.
All of those things that would
make Providence a destination,
and not just a drive-through
to another major city.
The Providence Place Mall
was considered to be a major
new engine to help the
revitalization effort take place.
The city had began to lose its retailing
sales to the surrounding suburban areas.
But the mall did not happen overnight.
It took years and multiple administrations
in order for this to occur.
It was a major building.
While the mall was
being built, I really
started to internalize
its impact on the city.
Because all of a sudden, I literally
couldn't see the city anymore.
Look at this giant...
Look at this thing.
It's totally overpowering.
Looks like something out of a science
fiction movie.
You've got the state house.
You can't even see it anymore.
They've practically buried it.
I mean, it was no small task to move the
rivers and to move the railroad tracks.
But I think it began to show that things
were happening.
I remember the preview event, and everybody
coming from all parts of New England.
It wasn't even just Rhode Island.
This is a large mall.
Am I correct?
Oh, definitely.
You know, three and a half million square
feet.
You don't get this type of mall in any
city and everything.
It's very unique.
It makes this a destination city.
So having this big mall
that represented a big
investment, it was
kind of like a new face.
For Providence, I think
that was more probably
something that was aligned
with what politicians wanted.
But not necessarily for the communities,
especially the adjacent communities.
We all hated the mall when it went up,
right?
Nobody wanted that to happen.
It was infuriating.
Instead of putting the money into downtown
in general and supporting the businesses
that were already here, they built that
monstrosity.
We hated it.
And then as they started to sort of shore
up the side facing our neighborhood,
I realized like, wait, there's no
entrances for us.
This whole thing faces the east side.
It wasn't designed to be used by the
people from this neighborhood.
In a way, it's like drawing a boundary in
between the premium Providence and then
just like, you know, the unattractive,
kind of historically excluded Providence.
The stores, some stores, it's like the
prices are like kind of outrageous.
But for some people, I
guess they can afford it.
Me, personally.
This mall will attract a
better clientele of people.
It's gonna basically cater to the
people that have a little more money.
The poor people in Providence
can't afford to go to these stores.
No.
I've been there. I know.
I can't go to these stores.
By the time the mall opened, there was a
sense that more changes were coming our way.
And there was a sense of impending doom.
Even before the Providence
Place Mall was complete,
developers were getting ready
to build Providence Marketplace.
Even while scaffolding still scales the
Providence Place Mall, another huge
project is in the works.
The Providence Place
Mall opened August of 1999.
And shortly after, a developer came to the
mills spaces that we were living in and
put a proposal out that perhaps the best
way to serve this neighborhood was to
knock down every single
mill in a 13-acre area and
replace it with a strip
mall and a supermarket.
So one of those buildings they wanted to
knock down was Fort Thunder.
So behind the mall, we see the skeleton of
the Industrial Revolution.
It is mill building after mill building.
And in the middle of all this mill
building mess is called Eagle Square.
And in the heart of Eagle Square was a
place called Fort Thunder.
And I was very fortunate to live there for
a couple years.
Well, Fort Thunder was a mill space.
It lasted, I think, from 95 to like 2001.
It started out with four of us renting
this space.
My band, Lightning Bolt, needed a place of
practice.
And we wanted to have shows.
The history of that area,
the history of Olneyville, is a
really specific history that you'll
see throughout New England.
There were these factories.
People would live in the neighborhoods.
And then when the manufacturing sector was
destroyed in the United States,
it destroyed these neighborhoods.
So if you were going to Fort Thunder for
the first time, it was scary.
It was sort of like this secret playhouse
for a while.
They just wanted to have fun.
They wanted to create.
They wanted to have their own world there.
You know, museums were like crypts,
graveyards for art.
And our house was like a living art
creature that we lived within.
I think it was like emboldening in a way
to have this kind of like wild,
untamed space.
Just like living this really loud,
literally like very loud.
So living in Fort Thunder is that sense of
no routine, but a great sense of purpose.
And then, you know, within the year of
that super heyday, a developer came in.
People started getting kicked out and the
city just started looking at that area.
These developers saw a great opportunity
for themselves because they knew that they
could buy these buildings and knock them
down.
Come back July 2nd.
The joint better be empty.
Make sure you're out of here and that the
joint's empty.
I'm not fucking around.
The developer was just
looking at it as if it was any
old parcel that could
become a suburban strip mall.
I mean, it's just an algorithm.
And they're like, oh, there's
room for a supermarket
here because the
property value is so cheap.
All we have to do is just knock down all
these buildings.
There was no outreach to
the community to talk about like
rent control and how
under-resourced the community was.
It's okay.
Like change happens.
Like there's nothing inherently wrong or
evil about it.
But there was no effort to bring people
along.
And I think that in a way, Fort Thunder
was like the first strike.
And I think the real
estate developers were just
starting to understand that
there was so much to exploit.
We'll take a motion to
close the hearing,
and allow everyone to speak
that's signed up to speak.
Michael Townsend?
Over the course of the chaos
in the last year and a half
everybody who lived in the area
has been slowly pushed out.
And now, I just want to give a heads up
to the concept of responsibility for these buildings
as far as who have responsibility for it.
When the Eagle Square fiasco was
unfolding, the mall becomes this sort of
cultural enemy.
It becomes a sort of ogre in the cave that
the townsfolk are afraid of.
They're not sure how big it is,
but they just know it's nasty.
And so that tension just
boils over as soon as an actual
person comes in and says, I'm
going to knock down your home.
People being evicted, people losing their
spaces, people getting kicked out,
people getting priced out.
It's just sort of something kind of
happening.
The mall comes, totally remakes your
neighborhood.
You adjust.
It doesn't adjust to you.
You adjust to it.
And it was impossible to not see the
apartment project through that lens.
Yeah, just go quickly.
It won't set up at once.
Yeah, we can go straight from the moon to
our house.
Brilliant.
By this stage, the
group of people invited
into the space had
grown from four to eight.
And occasionally, a few of us would sleep
there.
But for the most part, it was a fantastic
place to just meet and hang out.
The food court was closed, so please,
people, enjoy what you can.
The mall project, I think, it emerged
fairly organically.
The main person who really started the
project and who had the initial idea was Mike.
It wasn't as though Mike sat down and was
like, I got to assemble a super group of
people in order to,
like, create this artist
collective that will be
a public-facing thing.
As with other projects that
Mike has done, he wanted
to involve the people
who were in his life in it.
He wanted to make it a group project.
Michael was a thread that connected
everybody.
A lot of folks he met through his time
teaching, and so they were students,
former students of his.
He and Adriana were
married, and then the
two of us were in this
grad program together.
Everyone was sort of very driven, but
we were all real sort of nerdy and weird.
That group felt really at home.
We all felt really fun together.
That just sounds like such a magic thing,
to take a space from the mall.
Like, it seems like you shouldn't be able
to pull it off.
So trying to pull it off, it feels like
somebody needs to do it.
This was our group project, and it was,
like, a secret, right?
And it was a secret pact.
The big rule was to not bring people from
outside.
So it was intended to be a fairly
exclusive club, I suppose.
So there's this core team of eight
artists.
That is essentially the brain
trust for the creation of it,
and the curation of it, and the
knowledge of the mall space.
Look at that.
It's got the instant history going on.
Oh, and the shelves are glass.
Oh, that's nice. Do these open?
Wait, what is that?
It's plastic.
Oh, my God.
Isn't it?
No, no, no. Look, this is cast.
Wait.
It's not wood. It's plastic.
We can't have this in our house.
Oh, man.
That is hot.
And it's really shoddily made, but I
mean, it has the illusion of grandeur.
Yeah.
It kinda sucks that I'm more
excited about this apartment
than it's like the one I'll be moving into.
You know, there's art that you see and you
enjoy, and it entertains you.
And then there's art that impacts you.
And that's the kind of piece this was.
It had an impact that was both emotional
and psychological and is not easily
described, which is my favorite kind of
art.
My friend was like, hey, you got to go see
this.
There's like underneath the train tracks,
there's actually like this like weird,
creepy art exhibit that like felt like it
was a mystery and who made it.
So I actually had no idea at the time
anything about why it was there.
You opened up a hatch and climbed down
into the was like a sewer grate,
basically, and then kind of traverse these
few tunnels.
And then it opened up into a bigger open
space, super wet, dank.
But then there were
these sculptures of human
bodies suspended all
throughout the space.
And you could walk through and sort of
interact with them on your own terms.
There's no signage.
There's nobody telling you anything about
what you're experiencing.
There's one day when I
spent a really long time looking
for it, and I couldn't
figure out how to get into it.
But I never, and I never figured it out.
I think you had to like go between the
train tracks.
I'm not even sure actually where the
entrance to the tunnel is now.
I think that the body
tunnel, you could call it a
stunt, you could call it
an installation art piece.
What makes it art for me is that it asked
me to imagine a setting for art that was
not the setting that I had been told art
happened in.
I'm not sure when I put two and two
together that it was Mike's piece.
I think that probably came much later.
But like, I just remember,
you know, that was like one
of my favorite secret spots
in Providence to take people.
And I think Michael was very discreet
about it.
I don't think he was promoting it.
Him finding that tunnel
was, I think, an offshoot of just
like all of us exploring
just whatever we could find.
But where we were mostly just exploring
stuff, Michael was sort of putting his
artistic practice like into
those spaces, like putting
things in the spaces and
messing around with the spaces.
And he's always been an inspiration.
I went to the RISD summer program and Mike
was my drawing teacher.
He did something very rare and very
unusual, which was that he expected you to
have a genuine personal connection to the
work that you made.
It was a way of living, not some sort of
produced object that can be seen,
you know, in a museum, something like
that.
Most of us, myself,
certainly came to that
program thinking art is
a thing you do on paper.
And Mike exploded our understanding of
what art is or could be.
So it was the start of a decade of life
that has had a massive impact on me.
Mike was like a super
involved teacher, like different
than any teacher I had had
up until that point, for sure.
He kind of approached art
in a different way definitely
than anything like I'd
been exposed to before.
Where it was kind of like, what do you
actually want to make and why?
What Michael was able to introduce to me,
which was so powerful at that age,
was that I could
actually just look inside
myself and find things
that were worth sharing.
So yes, like that class with Mike helped
to galvanize me to find my way to publicly
engaged work.
For Mike, the difference between art and
life is very hard to discern.
Art and life are two very porous things
for him.
And so he thinks of art projects as being
so deeply incorporated into his life.
And that's something
you probably will hear from
other people, this life
as art, art as life thing.
And that's something that like,
as a young person, it was super impactful
to see somebody living in a way that felt
like all of it was the art.
The secret apartment was the art.
The teaching was the art.
The interacting with other people was the
art.
All the stuff together is what makes life
meaningful.
And I think that's like, something I've
been trying to do since I was a teenager.
So the secret apartment, nestled down in
here, kind of floating above the train
tracks, kind of tucked in between the
backside of all the stores.
We had a couple of different ways of
getting in.
Our exterior entrance was basically right
alongside the train tracks.
There was a gap in between a couple of
walls that would allow you to get into the
bowels of the building pretty much.
And we were able to shimmy along some
walls to get access to where the space was.
Additionally, we could get into the same
zone of the mall where the secret
apartment was, basically from any emergency
exit door on this side of the building.
That would lead you into a
serpentine bunch of staircases
and hallways somewhere
along that serpentine path.
There were a couple of different ways we
could access the secret apartment.
Because this building is made of a bunch
of really odd shapes.
I mean, you can see, like, the way that
the angle follows the river and the way
that that curve follows
the highway, the building
has a bunch of weird
intersecting shapes.
So I think the space that we discovered
was really a negative space in between two
planes of the building, which created sort
of a triangle in between two parts of the
building, which is where the secret
apartment was.
The food court is this sort of third level
up here.
And the bathrooms, I think our most
frequently used bathroom was on the first
floor, sort of like the main retail drag
of the mall.
There were bathrooms on each floor.
I feel like we used the
ones on the first floor
the most because they
were closest to the entrance.
So the secret apartment
being down in here, we
can have a look at it
by taking this roof off.
And we
can pull that out.
So there's Andrew, James, Jay,
myself, Emily, Greta, Adriana,
and Michael all hanging out in the space
together.
So additionally, just for fun,
hidden in here is the Optio S5i.
Amazingly, still works.
Just needed a charge of the battery.
I can probably sneak a little picture of
the apartment or two if it'll focus.
Once we wanted to really make this an
apartment that was ours, as opposed to
just a room in the mall, we decided we
needed to make it so we had access to it
without having other people have access to
it.
So the apartment in the
mall had this big gaping
space that looked
down into a storage area.
You would come up this
steep metal staircase and
you would just be
looking into the apartment.
So there was a real necessity to build a
wall there.
Building a wall was going to be the thing
that made it even more invisible in the
sense that, like, another cinder block
wall with another door just becomes
another thing that if
anyone walks through
the space, they're not
going to bat an eye at.
So many cinder blocks, like, that would
be a... Yeah, even just that one wall...
carrying up at a time.
Four or five.
A lot of a lot.
Obviously the main feat of that whole thing
was just moving that many cinder blocks.
I think, you know, we calculated it was
like, you know, four and a half or five
thousand pounds of cinder block.
So that was, you know, a couple of tons.
The issue of bringing things in here is
obviously the hot one.
Because, like...
That's our only liability.
Right, you have to do it over...
and over... and
over... and over again.
From the time we popped the trunk, to the
time all the cinder blocks,
we're literally through the doors of a
minute and a half.
How long does that alarm sound?
Two minutes exactly.
It's a psychological deterrent.
And apparently nothing else.
In regards to security, we're thinking
about it all the time.
There are constant presence in our mind.
But it's important to
emphasize that there's no, no
part of me that has any
interest in duping security.
I don't...
I don't feel any thrill in that.
They have a job to do.
I respect that job.
I also just want to do my job.
We're heading off.
All right.
Yeah, we'll see you in like ten minutes.
Alright, bye.
There was no way to prepare for it.
Like, we didn't know what circumstances
would trigger us being caught.
We had no idea who would approach us or in
what level of hostility it would be.
We just would be ready to explain
ourselves in whatever moment unfolded.
Now, I have, up until that point,
a career in explaining myself.
My work as an artist means
that I am constantly explaining
my presence to police
officers, to city officials.
It is a space I feel very comfortable in.
You know, we were on a multi-leg journey
coming from Home Depot.
You know, we got these cinder blocks at
Home Depot and now we're going to the mall.
Does it change anything we're doing?
No, it doesn't change a thing.
Because we had the good excuse.
Yeah.
vv
Conviction.
Eye contact.
I guess we should just...
We're fine.
So yeah, it's kind of amazing.
I told the security guard that we had gone
to Home Depot, filled the car with cinder
blocks, come to the mall,
had done some shopping,
and came back to a
car that could not move.
So, we had arranged to move the cinder
blocks down the stairwell to an awaiting
friend's truck.
And he led us on our way.
And I know that has a lot to do with just
who we were.
like, a shield of white
privilege around us.
Black and brown people in the same space,
doing illegal things, or doing even not
illegal things, are not
treated that way and would
not be treated with the
same deference as we were.
My fear of the police is not the same.
I'm not worried about risk to my body and
life.
You know, simultaneously to this,
I was working with Mike on tape art,
which is Mike's sort of organization that
will go around and do public murals,
do temporary public murals made out of
masking tape.
One of the more notable
ones was going to Hasbro
Children's Hospital and
making murals there.
I first became aware of tape art and heard
about Michael through probably some artist
friends, that there
was some guy out there
who was using tape
and drawing on the wall.
And I thought, I don't know, this is, sounds
quirky and kooky, and what does he do?
I mean, how is this going to appeal to
kids?
So, I had a lot of questions.
Tape art is a unique process.
I don't know any other artists,
frankly, who were doing tape art.
Michael was the first one I met,
and I've never met anybody since.
I think I was fascinated by the
uniqueness.
So, the more I
watched him, the more I
realized that, you know,
he was truly a master.
The patient's immediate
reaction is, first
of all, they're very
open to something new.
And it was, again, a little odd.
It wasn't somebody coming in with drawing
paper and a brush or crayons.
It was somebody
coming in with five rolls of
blue tape on his arm
and swinging them around.
And then the kid would often say,
you know, what's going on?
What are you going to do with that tape?
And Michael would take it from there.
Michael did have a crew of people.
You know, what they drew, the mice and the
horses and the mermaids.
It was that they were
able to engage the child in
conversation about, what
do you want on your wall?
So that when Michael and his team walked
into the room, he didn't come in with an
idea of what he was going to do.
He let the child lead him.
And when possible, of course, if the
patient was mobile, they'd engage the
patient in actually helping him to create
the mural.
But now the patient is involved in a
creative activity and has a responsibility
to seeing what's happening on the wall of
his room and changing his environment.
Having a sense of control.
So I think that the patient just got lost.
Could be for 15 minutes and it could have
been, you know, for a couple of hours.
Michael was coming in
at least once a week and
he was one of the
first people that I hired.
So I would say he was, yeah, he was here
for at least 15 years.
Funding was tough, but free lunch was
provided.
If they came in the morning, they could
stay for lunch.
If they came in the afternoon,
they could come early.
And we always provided a free lunch for
them.
And I think they were pretty grateful for
that, because I don't think many of them,
I don't think they ate during the day.
I think one of the first questions kids
and staff and families always asked,
what's going to happen to this mural now
that's on the wall?
And Michael always made
it very clear that there was
an impermanence and it was
really for the here and now.
And he said, you know, we'll create a new
one tomorrow.
Think of something new that we could do.
So Michael had an interesting beginning.
Because his father was in
the Marine Corps, we lived in
eight different places before
he was seven years old.
I think it made him very open-minded.
I think Michael takes in all kinds of
people, all kinds of social situations.
So basically, I think that's what's made
him someone who's at home anywhere.
So let's get you this one, and this one,
the blue one.
So basically, it's like a form of,
like, tempered graffiti.
And it gives you a lot of freedom.
So I was brought up in a military family.
Both my parents were in the military,
and their parents were in the military,
and I believe their parents were in the
military.
So my brother and I were the first ones to
sort of break that lineage.
In Mike's case, I don't want
to speak for him, but it just
was never, never seemed
like it would be a good fit for him.
He was far too creative growing up,
and I think a military career would have
restricted his level of creativity that
just abounded.
No words or letters are the only rule.
Good luck.
Let's work on that together.
Make sure you got that one technique down.
Don't pull it.
Just let it hang.
And very gently.
That looks really good.
Yeah, keep going, keep going.
Michael as a person is all about involving
people in a collaborative process of art.
And I've seen that in a lot of cases,
that he's just a very selfless person.
And that is something really, yeah, that
is something really special about Michael.
Yeah.
So the cynic might
say that you're not going
to make the world a
better place with your art.
But like maybe you're not
gonna make the entire world a
little better, but maybe you'll
make one person's life better.
And then somebody else's life better.
It becomes the ripples in the pond effect.
So the main priorities in my career have
always been making art and teaching art
and trying to use that art to have
positive impacts on other people's lives.
There's not a lot of money in that.
I work in a nonprofit museum.
Michael is an artist.
We are not swimming in money, either of
us.
And Michael does, he takes it,
sometimes he doesn't take it seriously and
I've gotten upset.
Like he will text me
pictures of his bank account
that has 41 cents and
he thinks that's funny.
And I see the text and I'm like,
this is not funny.
And I've had to talk to
him about like, could you
please not send me this
when you have like a dollar?
This is not, like this doesn't make me
laugh personally.
This is our next ode to...
our relationship with this
large monstrosity.
Is to go in there and actually
consciously and very carefully
develop the space so that it's a...
It represents an
actual domestic living space.
Before Week I The Mall,
we hated that place.
Like we just, we didn't,
the mall was,
we genuinely disliked it.
We felt the disdain for it as a place.
And as a place that had affected
our lives in a very, very deep way.
That's funny because to me it's just a mall.
Well, to me it's not a mall.
And a lot of that has to do with the
evolution of this space over here.
Because that space over there had
my favorite building in Providence.
Now it is gone.
If you can talk about the
idea that there was or is
a gentrification
that's happening here?
It's pretty easy to finger this
building as the beginning of that.
So you like this thing now?
I love the place now.
As a member of the city,
I acknowledge its existence.
And, uh, the way that it
acknowledges us is by just
leaving us alone and
letting us move in.
We are no different than
like a barnacle on a whale.
The whale is designed.
The barnacle attaches itself.
The whale doesn't care.
So let's count full bricks first.
So we have...
- 48.
- Yeah.
So we need 72 and we have 48.
So it's like four more runs
with cinder blocks.
Fuck.
Okay.
So let's make this as thick as we can.
After we had a little run in with
security, that encounter forced us to
rethink how we're bringing
the cinder blocks in.
And we're like, well, we
have a private entrance.
So the entrance we had used to initially
discover the space in the first place
became the way that we
bring the cinder blocks in.
I think good day's work right there.
I say we leave these cinder blocks
here for now...
because we got plenty over there to start
building with.
We just got to get ourselves set up.
Yeah, let's go over there and chill out. Yeah.
What you're seeing here is...
Oh, they're all sort of marked.
Oh, that's Better Living... The Children's Hospital.
And where's Alfred P. Murrah?
Children's Hospital.
Museum of Art...
- National Memorial. There it is.
- Yeah, there it is.
So at the same time the core group of
eight of us were working in the apartment
in the mall, we also took a trip
collectively to go to Oklahoma City for
the 10th anniversary of the Alpha Pimura
Federal Building bombing.
Mike was there doing tape art in Oklahoma
City when that happened and made a mural.
I think he was the only non-medical
personnel allowed in the home base and
made a mural for basically the sole
audience of the first responders.
Folks seem to like the idea of it being an
optimism mural.
That's more about individuals being able
to have freedom and flight and maybe
through the help of other
people they can achieve that.
Like that wall right there...
That is downtown Oklahoma City.
We have a great place to stay.
We have a great wall.
The wall is check-out.
That looks amazing.
So we planned a trip back to
OKC like on the anniversary
of the bombing to kind of do
more work with the community.
Special care is a facility.
They have 14 cases of autism.
And, you know, lots of kids with cerebral palsy.
And I set up just a rolling schedule,
and the classes just roll to us.
The group of us spent a full week there
working at like a memorial site and doing
projects in schools.
Basically like a little elite strike force
team of empathetic artists.
I don't think that artists are obliged to
go out and do good works,
or to try to pretend that,
making art has to sort of like
save the world or feed the children
or do any kind of like, you know,
nice crunchy thing that people might want.
But if you can and if there's an
opportunity, why not?
You have the chance to use the skill that
you have to do something good.
And also, you know, I do
really believe that art and
aesthetic experience are
good in and of themselves.
That they're not means to anything,
but that they make life better.
If anyone's interested,
you can do this.
If you want to work in a hospital, in a hallway with
you know just like, hospital kids
this is an opportunity to do it.
So...
anyone wants to do that?
Sounds great.
It's funny.
I imagine when people
heard like the one
snippet of there was
an apartment in the mall.
It's not the first thing that they think
people would be using it for is kind of
planning and discussing things around these
big public art projects that we were doing.
The effort of making these things is a...
something that really really gets...
Like, hits people.
I've seen many an adult cry looking
at what we've made so far.
I know the majority of that is based on
the fact that it is September 11th,
but the artwork has an impact on just citizens.
Like, everyone being a survivor of September 11th.
The central project in our life was the
September 11th Memorial.
It was all-consuming.
We had made the decision to draw 500
portraits, life-size, simple silhouettes,
of every fireman and
every airline passenger
that passed away at
the World Trade Center.
Okay.
There is Saraceni.
Number 38, heart one.
He's here.
We're gonna walk to the other side of this
square right here and put a figure,
um, Mr. Russell.
It's gonna be about a block that
direction.
Mike had drawn these four large hearts
over the island of Manhattan.
And we would basically go down to New
York.
We'd follow that path
and just find locations
on that to try and do
a drawing of a figure.
And we'd document it.
And then this, like, web memorial,
we'd go back and make sort of,
like, a web page showcasing that
documentation.
Portraits of people who died on September
11th along the path of four hearts.
So, like, walking those paths and drawing,
I think, every block a person.
And those were all temporary drawings.
You know, you're in public.
You're in the streets of Manhattan.
You're trying to go quick.
We almost never had permission to make the
work.
So you're trying to not get busted.
If you got busted, you could just remove
the mural.
The tape isn't permanent.
But as far as tape art goes, kind of an
intense scenario.
You're trying to honor the circumstance,
the people you're representing,
and the seriousness of it all.
But you're also interacting
with people in the public who
are curious to know what
you're doing or if it's illegal.
Yeah, it was like a great drawing
challenge.
See these four hearts here?
Yes.
These four hearts span the entirety of
Manhattan.
One, two, three, four.
Yep.
And right now, we are working on part one.
So we're right now right about here.
And these hearts, if you were to connect
the dots between all these figures that
we're drawing, you would be drawing out
these fantastically large hearts.
Wow.
We would hop in the car in Mike's Toyota
and drive to New York to do drawings over
the course of a couple of days.
With a goal, some section of a heart.
And then, with the documentation,
we would head back to Providence,
where we would compile the next set of
collages.
And then once a good window presented
itself to head back to New York,
we'd hop back in the car and get to it.
It took a long time.
Years.
First, this project, when it started,
we thought maybe two, three years,
stretched out to five years.
All of these efforts pretty much,
like, was all volunteer.
The HOPE project was completely
self-funded.
I mean, I know that Mike's
every bit of money that he
made went directly back into
paying for the HOPE project.
Mostly the paying for it was, you know,
all of our labor was completely volunteer.
But for me, just thinking about meaningful
things I've done in my life, that's
something I look at as really,
truly meaningful artwork.
I'm not sure, but the
project that we made, to
be honest, I don't even
know how it exists now.
I'm not sure if it even exists to this
day.
The apartment was the side project to the
other staff.
The HOPE project, Oklahoma City projects,
the work at the hospital, that was,
I believe, our focus as a team.
You know, the mall
project felt like a way for us
to have maybe more fun
than thinking about tragedy.
Which, for a couple years, we were, like,
really thinking about tragedy all the time.
[ Door alarm buzzing in the distance ]
God damn it.
Remember that thing I was telling
you about, about not putting your
tools on the thing or it might fall in?
It just happened.
Yes, it just happened.
Lame!
[ Door alarm buzzing in the distance ]
It's gonna be an awful
day when that door opens.
I know, I know.
The only thing the makes
it better is our door.
Yeah.
And then it's gonna be a really
awful day when our door opens.
Once you have your own wall,
then you get your own door.
And then you have your own lock,
and then you get your own key.
So, our whole team had a key to an
apartment in the mall.
Holy smoke.
So, what I didn't realize when I was
initially looking at these photos,
this step down here that's happening
in the cinder blocks, I was, like, weird.
Yeah, poor craftsmanship.
Because you had built it.
Right.
Ah.
But that brings, like, a
certain degree of charm.
So, with the couch, you
can tell it's a pretty big
couch from the amount of
people that are fitting on it.
Sectional.
Oh, it's a sectional.
Yeah.
Can you draw for me,
roughly, like, the floor plan
or just the orientation
of walls and stuff as you?
So, this is our front door.
This is our back door.
Whoa.
We had a couch here.
We had our entertainment system on a
little tiny table with a TV.
And there was a dresser out here.
Rugs.
Lamps.
You didn't have outlets, did you?
No.
But we had the extension cord.
- Here.
- Okay.
- Down.
- Oh, my God.
One story.
Into... over here.
The door is there.
The couch is basically here.
The little table is basically here.
Mm-hmm.
We walked to the...
That puts the...
That puts the China cabinet here.
Okay.
Getting it to look right.
Like, this is too distressed.
No. No, no. It's not. That's not.
That's brick.
That's closer.
Closer.
That's it!
That's what it looked like!
Yeah, with the folks from Providence who
are helping on this project, it was pretty
easy for me to rope them in because I just
said, remember that time.
Those people lived at the mall.
How would you like to rebuild that room?
You know, we're working with a tight
budget, but everyone's really excited
about the project, so we're doing the best
we can.
I think everyone was sort of willing to
pitch in and just being a little scrappier.
There's a lot of free items that we're
running around and picking up.
We're basically doing what these guys did.
You know, the way that they were finding
their furniture was often times at
Salvation Army or things that they were
finding on the side of the road.
And we're doing a sort of expedited
version of that.
I think more than anything, I want Michael
and Adriana and Andrew and Colin,
whoever else, to walk into the space
knowing that it's just a recreation for
a documentary, but having it sort
of evoke the memory of the space.
What?
Bring your own precious items,
choose a shadow box.
A shadow box will help make a unique keepsake.
This might be something
we need for our space.
Wait a second.
Hey, Glenn.
I have some people who
want to do the shadow box.
If you could meet them at
Design Studio.
All right. So you guys brought some stuff?
Some of us brought stuff.
Where are you guys from?
You don't know?
Here.
Around here.
All right. So I guess the
general idea is that you get
a shadow box, buy a shadow box from here.
And you guys can assemble it
and I'll help you out.
My name is Glenn.
I graduated from RISD.
Oh.
With a master's in sculpture.
And I teach at Brown.
So I was hired at Pottery Barn to do
shipping receiving.
The company was trying
to promote shadow boxes.
So they wanted to do a workshop.
So I did it.
So when they came in, they were really
excited and jovial.
And they were like, we're into this.
They sort of explained who they were,
what kind of art they made, that they were
from Eagle Square and
that they got kicked out.
I had been to Eagle Square.
So I knew kind of the situation.
You know, we had this connection going.
And then they started to tell me,
you know, slowly kind of leaked out.
And then I will share with you cause it's of note
is in our explorations of the mall,
we have found some extraordinary large and
abandoned spaces and
we've been slowly, methodically moving in.
And don't pass this on, obviously,
We have a fully furnished apartment.
In here?
In the mall.
Really? That's hilarious.
So you're basically home.
Yeah.
In some way.
Yeah. No. We're home in
a very real way, unfortunately.
It was pretty clear from
the beginning that they wanted
to know more
information about the mall.
And I was there inside about that.
We can't figure out how to get into the
tower.
Oh, really?
I have no idea.
I bet you have to figure it out.
Like, is there any place you can
actually go and just take a shower?
Can you get mail delivered
to you here?
I think we need a post office box.
Here?
Yeah.
And then you'd have to rent
space in order to get one.
You might.
If we can get mail to come
here, then we've done it.
Once we can get mail here, man...
Then we can have all our junk mail
sent here from the mall to the mall.
Right.
I really like it.
Damn, that's really good.
I like it.
Yeah.
Thanks.
Good job.
Yeah, thanks for your material and time.
Well, come down sometime and
show me where the place is.
If we get discovered...
Yeah.
What is your sense of...
What would happen?
They'd probably want back pay for rent.
Yeah, we have a location problem.
Alright...
Have a great day.
Alright, thank you very much. Thank you.
So, after they left, you
know, of course, there
were all the questions
from the other employees.
You know, what's this about?
And I just told them
it was an art project.
Here we go...
So, this is our home.
This door also has a
lock, just like our door did.
And, um, it's locked.
So, I can't go in the apartment.
This is the weird thing
about the mall apartment,
is that it makes you
feel really relaxed.
It's this paradox, right?
It's a little prison-like,
because there's
this cement wall and
there's no natural light.
And you could be discovered at any moment.
There's this weird sense of freedom where
no one's gonna bother you.
You're not gonna be late for anything.
It's just this really
quiet refuge, in a way.
You're on, like, the
inside-out version of a
building that you're never
supposed to experience.
Um, and so, it's like being
in the belly of a beast.
In some ways, we had this raw black box.
It was a bit of a space station,
self-imposed prison cell.
There was no windows.
There's no light.
And it was about this desire to cultivate
it and make it more human.
Sleeping in the apartment was,
I think, really cold, usually.
And we had, like, some sleeping bags,
at least in the winter.
It was definitely really hot in the
summer, too.
And incredibly dark.
Slept on this couch a lot.
Probably the most, for me,
the most nights in a row would
have been four or five or
something like that, I think.
We had tried different,
like, sleeping arrangements.
But I remember Mike and I
doing this on this couch a lot.
The head-to-foot sleeping.
And this hutch, I'm
just gonna look for it.
It feels so real.
It definitely, it had a real waffle maker.
So we could make waffles in the mall
apartment.
So I had this vision of staging
this set of domestic bliss.
Gorgeous, very
bourgeois, even within the
dusty, grimy cinder
block of that apartment.
Oh, my gosh.
The cinder block, yeah.
It was, um...
It was dustier.
It was always giving off.
It was always generating kind of like a
fine mist of cement.
So much of what the mall sells us is this
performance of a consumer lifestyle.
And so the mall apartment was this
opportunity to have this set almost where
we could play out the unrealistic and
unattainable fantasies of the mall.
And the joke would be, you know what?
Oh, you love just beautifying things?
Like, so do we.
Wait a second.
The mail carrier will be
available at the mail room for
accountable mail and parcels.
Where's the mail room?
I don't know, but it's a really good
question to ask.
This is too good.
Well, it would just be nice to
be able to receive mail here.
If we could do that, that would
be a gigantic accomplishment.
It would just save us a lot of stress.
If we were able to receive a bill, we
could use it as like proof of residency.
Yeah.
During the time that the apartment in the
mall was being built, I was married to
Adriana.
And she had a front
row seat to a lot of lunacy.
Right now I'm unsettled because
we have all that stuff in there
but it's not really...
it's not really finished, in a sense.
- I mean, it'll never feel like that.
- Yeah.
It needs to reach a certain state
of finished and then we can
keep upping the ante when
we feel the inclination, the time.
The only problem I have is that
I know Saturday is mall time.
It's just like, I want to spend my
Saturday working on our house.
Right, right.
You know, because our house
doesn't have a floor and...
there's a lot of things
that need to be done.
As egotistical as it sounds, it's something
I just really, really, really want to do.
Like it moves me, and being here moves me,
setting up the space moves me.
You need these kinds of projects
to be who you are and to survive,
and I completely understand that.
But the other part of it is that I
don't need those projects to survive.
and I'm not you and that's okay.
But...
we do...
have a commitment to a partnership where
we're working towards the same goals.
We're doing different things, but
we're working towards the same thing.
and...
I'm not sure if the mall project is
threatening those goals in any sense.
I mean it's very interesting that
you've phrased going down this path.
You know that it is this
battle between these two homes.
Cause it has been very much "home" and
our goal is pushing more and more "home".
I want a fucking home.
I want a home, but I
don't want it in the mall.
I wanna buy things from the mall
for my home, then bring it home.
We wanna buy things in the mall and bring them
into the home here.
I know, but why are you
going to spend money on that?
You know, it's very much
a home in a lot of ways.
We're making a physical home, but the
act of making it constantly partners
me up with people that I really like.
So...
that's an important part of it.
for me.
There was some part of me that knew this
was not a good relationship.
And then I was able to realize that it was
not the right thing for me.
Yeah.
This illustrates one of the
core dilemmas of driving yourself
towards an art project that
you really deeply believe in.
Because sometimes it's
truly in the face of all reason.
Why are you spending
all of that time there?
Why are you doing that
September 11th project?
Why... there's no... where's
the reward in any of this?
What's your end game?
Valid questions.
At this time, the apartment is starting to
transform into something else.
It's evolving again.
It had started as a response to
development projects in our neighborhood.
And within a couple of years,
it looks like a domestic space,
but it's completely
isolated from the world.
And sometimes when you're in that space,
you felt like you were on the stage of a
sitcom TV show.
And I think kind of
because of that feeling,
we just stopped filming
ourselves all together.
And then...
We had had this break-in...
They were two guys, young guys,
maybe 20, 21, something like that,
who were new security guards at the mall.
I think they were just going
through every door, and they
came upon the door that
they did not have the key to.
So they just kicked the door down.
So Colin and I entered into the apartment to
try to figure out what's happened.
Our door's been broken in.
But when we enter into the apartment,
we can quickly assess that someone else
has been spending
time there, and it's not us.
And there's evidence of
entertainment dispersed throughout.
But things have also been stolen.
Our PlayStation, weirdly enough,
was the thing that was gone.
And then there were some other of our
personal effects that were gone.
We had some framed pictures and stuff to
make it feel a little homier.
Those were the things that were gone.
I think they took the
PlayStation because it had all
of our save dates for the
games we were playing on it.
So that's just a record of all the visits
in the last couple of months.
And they took our photo album because it
had just photographs of us.
It was very clearly who
lived in this apartment.
Busted.
Job well done.
Bravo.
We've been in this space for four years.
And there's this underlying dread that
we're going to get caught at any time.
And after we were broken
into, we just stopped
going to that space
during the day altogether.
And then I screwed up.
I had a friend visiting from out of town.
And I thought to myself, I'll bring her to
see the space.
And I went during the day!!!
I disrespected our own
rules and it blew up in my face.
All right.
But this is our secret apartment.
We've been slowly building
this over the last four years.
Moving in pieces of
furniture and slowly building it
up to try to make it a fully
domestic space to live in.
Are you allowed to be here?
Technically, no.
We've been doing it all on the sly.
And within a couple of days,
the wood floors will be in.
And we'll be one step closer.
How did you get this up here?
That is...
[ Police type radio squelching from afar ]
Yeah, so between the sound of the
walkie-talkie and seeing that doorknob
turn, everything just goes into slow-mo.
And it's one of those
times when you can process
a lot of scenarios in a
very short period of time.
One of the possibilities is just to get
out of there.
Book it.
Grab your friend,
head towards the secret
passage, and that's
where you're in trouble.
Because you're asking
them to dive into a place
that's like pitch dark, full
of ledges and I-beams.
They're probably not going to make it.
Another idea that struck me was,
they were entering into my home.
So I should just invite them in....
as guests.
Treat them like royalty.
And maybe they would
treat me well in return.
Hello, gentlemen, it's good to see you.
Ah!
Ah!
Too long.
You.
You, sir.
That probably wasn't going to work.
Another possibility that went through my
mind is that this isn't security at all.
That maybe this is
just a cool person with a
walkie-talkie on the
other side of that door.
Walkie-talkies.
Yes!
Radio Shack.
Sweet!
But, after seeing those three guys step
through that door in their business suits,
I knew it was over.
I remember stepping right
up and saying, surprise!
Do you know who I am?
We know who you are.
You're going to need to follow us.
Our other top local story on
Eyewitness News at Noon.
This is an incredible tale.
A local artist has apparently had some
living space in the Providence Place Mall.
In all, eight artists were in and out of
that loft area.
But there was one man who admitted that he
lived there.
And now he's facing trespassing charges.
And he's also banned from the premises.
In a mall with 24-hour security,
Michael Townsend was able to build a fully
livable apartment, and he used it for
nearly four years.
Townsend was arrested and charged with
trespassing.
A judge sentenced to
him to six months probation
and ordered him to pay
court costs and restitution.
When we discovered it.
A spokesman for the mall said the hidden
space would be sealed up immediately.
Townsend's original charges...
Townsend's been barred from coming to the
mall permanently.
Townsend was released this morning,
spending just one night in jail.
His only regret is that it ended too soon.
In the next year, he planned on expanding
the apartment and building an extra
bedroom, a kitchen, and a bathroom,
all with running water.
When asked if the apartment was a work of
art or just a place to live, Townsend told
us that for him, there's
no line between art and life.
Bryan Cranston, NBC News Providence.
So I was told by representatives of the mall
that they took down our cinder block wall,
and then moved all the cinder blocks
to rebuild a new wall to block off the
entrance we had used to
enter in all of those years.
Far as I know, no one's
ever been in there again.
With our secret apartment in the mall, there
wasn't any sense of it being permanent.
We're just going to keep building it until
we reach that crescendo moment and then...
make it disappear.
So what is it?
What is it?
Is it a work of art?
Is it a social experiment?
Is it trespassing?
Is it a prank?
It's maybe all of these things.
It was this idea of
reinventing everyday life
and making of everyday
life an artistic project.
It talks about gentrification.
It talks about capitalism and
everything being co-modified.
It's the perfect site
to address issues of like...
ownership, of capital,
of private versus public.
It was like this alternate universe.
It's like within the real world.
It's a crossover between installation art
and performance art.
I think it was a combo of
like mischief and like snark.
It seemed like a big presentational show
because they don't like malls.
It felt like, meh, whatever.
I don't really get it, I will admit,
which is Michael finds that hilarious.
You know, it's I try to understand why
this was an art project and the deeper
um, messaging he was trying to get
across by occupying unoccupied space.
And like, I've heard it, I've heard it,
but I just don't really get why it's art.
I'm not sure if it moves over
to the area of being artistic.
I think this is just his
creative mind trying
to express itself in
every possible way.
Isn't that art?
Damn it.
I've kept this key on my keychain the
entire time.
Yep, this is the key.
Which used to have flames on it,
but it doesn't anymore.
Well, it's here on my keychain.
Um... yeah...
I have no idea if the
door is still there, so
I sometimes refer to it
as my key to nowhere.
Here is my key.
It's got what's left of an
American flag and an eagle on it.
You can kind of see, like, a little bit of
the flames left in there.
Uh, but pretty well worn.
That was the key.
SECRET MALL APARTMENOther than Micael Tonsend, none of the the other 7 participants of
the secret apartment were ever identified. This is the first time
they have all come forward.Each is still currently an artist or working in the arts.
Micheal Townsend is still doing tape art in Providence.
He lives in a former mill building, down the street from
the Providence Place Mall. He is still banned there.
The Providence Place Mall has struggled greatly in recent years.
In 2022, after the mall's owners defaulted on thier mortage,
they anounced that they were considering putting residential
apartments into the mall complex.
Jeremy Workman - Director/Producer
Sub by hamonwheat72