Vending Machine
A rundown but functional old vending machine stands alone in the Viewpoint Gallery at Plymouth College of Art. Every now and again, without warning, it springs into life - spewing out free packets of crisps for gallery visitors. The machine has been modified. It no longer functions in the conventional way - at the whim of snack-hungry students - but instead now finds itself in the control of outside forces... Its new nervous system is a networked computer. Hidden out of view and running special software, it continually scans the news on the BBC News RSS feed - commanding the machine only to release snacks when words relating to the recession make the headlines.
Whilst seemingly an act of generosity - gifting free food at moments when further doom and gloom is reported - the Vending Machine also hints towards a time in the future when our access to food may literally be determined by wider political or environmental events. We may not be able to access what we want, when we want, at the touch of a button. This dystopian vision is toyed with in an accompanying piece in collaboration with i-DAT . For the first two weeks of the exhibition at the Viewpoint Gallery, the ‘GreenScreen’ on the front of the Portland Square Building at the University of Plymouth will be used to make public-service-style announcements at the exact moments when the Vending Machine releases food. The words ‘FREE FOOD’ will appear, emblazoned in metre-high letters on the side of the building encouraging passersby to run to the gallery and claim their supplies.
The Vending Machine project is one of the outcomes of Ellie’s period of residency at Plymouth College of Art in 2009 and is on show at the college’s Viewpoint Gallery as part of her solo exhibition from 23rd April - 30th May 2009. It was programmed by Ben Dembroski in PureData and Python and uses project2891 to communicate with i-DAT in order to activate the messages on the GreenScreen. Production assistance by Jason Mills.
Exhibition History
23 April - 30 May 2009, Plymouth College of Art
9 October - 15 November 2009, Space Station Sixty-Five, London
15 March - 10 April 2010, Abandon Normal Devices, Lancaster
15 April - 27 June 2010, Glasgow Film Theatre
12 March - 2 May 2011, Watermans, London
12 August - 23 October 2011, QUAD, Derby
3 December 2011 - 11 March 2012, Oriel Mostyn, Llandudno
12 May 2012 - 18 November 2012, Rua Red, Dublin
30 November 2012 - 22 November 2013, Open Data Institute, London
3 December 2015 - 28 February 2016, Big Bang Data, Somerset House, London
Now on permenant display at the Open Data Institute, London
Further Reference
- Installation images
- Vending Machine on Twitter (2015)
- Vending Machine on Wall Street Journal
- Vending Machine on BBC2’s The Bubble
- Video of Vending Machine on Vimeo
- Plymouth College of Art residency
- Images of Viewpoint Gallery on Flickr
- i-DAT website
- Software search terms
- Ben Dembroski website
Other Projects
- High Street Casualties: Ellie Harrison’s Zombie Walk
- Dark Days
- After the Revolution, Who Will Clean Up the Mess?
- The Global Race
- Transition Community of One
- Attempt at an Inventory...
- Anti-Capitalist Aerobics
- The Other Forecast
- The Redistribution of Wealth
- The End Product
- Austerity & Anarchy
- Fair Game
- Early Warning Signs
- A Brief History of Privatisation
- The History of Revolution: Ellie Harrison’s Fireworks Display
- Press Release
- General Election Drinking Game
- Toytown
- Vending Machine
- The History of Financial Crises
- Transactions
- Know Your Thinkers & Theorists
- Angel Row Jukebox
- Self-Destruction (Building Site Ballot)
- I’ve Been Watching You
- Daily Data Display Room
- Daily Data Display Wall
- Sneezes 2003
- The Monthly Sculptures Determined by the Daily Quantification Records
- Gold Card Adventures
- Statistics Are Hot Air
- TicTac Typing & Peanut Typing
- Mass = Energy = Time
- Potential Generator
- Kinetic Cake vs Kinetic Carrot