Tuesday, March 31, 2009

What is a telephone room?

As far as we can figure out, houses once had "telephone rooms" which were small rooms that were used exclusively to house a telephone and allowed people to make phone calls in private.

Some history:
The first prototype of the sound-proof phone booth was built in 1877. Mr. Watson, Alexander Graham Bell's trusty assistant, used a bunch of bed blankets around a box. He created the booth to prevent his landlady from listening in on his conversations.
(source: www.telephonetribute.com/telephonetrivia.html)

Today:
Our Telephone Room Gallery has a floorspace of four feet by two-and-a-half feet and we are guessing that it is original to the 1930 house. It contains a black Western Electric Model 554 rotary-dial wall telephone, some cupboards, shelving and a small window.

Here's Ellen and Chica in the Telephone Room Gallery (sans art - dogs and art don't mix!):


Here's another example of a telephone room:

"The main telephone for the house was kept in the telephone room, as during the 1930's telephones in full sight in living rooms were regarded as rather vulgar." www.carrickhill.sa.gov.au/house_telephone_room.html

You can still buy an original, restored Model 554 (minus the rotary-dial feature) for your own telephone room: www.oldphones.com/servlet/Detail?no=129

Lastly, some good telephone websites:
www.telephonetribute.com
www.arctos.com/dial
www.porticus.org/bell/the_bell_system_telephone_story.html

Friday, March 27, 2009

as seen in City Arts, April 2009

Congratulations to us: the April 2009 issue of Tacoma City Arts magazine features a quarter page blurb on the Telephone Room Gallery in "City Seen"! (see page 7)



"Operator? Art, Please
The world's second-smallest art gallery, the Telephone Room, has a big mission: artist-driven exhibits and programming that spark more personal conversations between artists and the public. Located in a private 1930s home, this twelve-square-foot gallery boasts a rotary phone with a cool vintage ring. Founders Heide Fernandez-Llamazares, Marty Gengenbach and Ellen Ito hope the nontraditional space will inspire artists to try something new or explore site-specific ideas. Sixteen artists participated in Hello, the inaugural exhibit, which runs through April 15. For upcoming Shrinky Dink-making with Jessica Bender, contact thetelephoneroom@gmail.com."

-- Virginia Bunker, City Arts Magazine, April 2009.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Hello. The Telephone Room calling

Hello.

The Telephone Room calling.

The Telephone Room is Tacoma's second smallest art gallery (Hello Tollbooth Gallery!) at 12 ½ square feet. The Telephone Room is located in a Dutch Colonial home in Tacoma and since 1930, its sole purpose has been to house a black rotary dial telephone. Until now...

Small is Big. The Telephone Room is small, but its mission is big: to house artist-driven exhibits and programming. Big ideas in an intimate space.

We plan to host an open house every third Wednesday of the month from 6-8 pm where everyone is welcome to visit the Telephone Room, chat with the artists, talk about art, and hang out with us, but we are also viewable by appointment. Please email us to visit outside of third Wednesday evenings!

Opening on Wednesday, February 18th, 2009.

Hello.
Inaugural exhibition featuring small work from:

Jessica Balsam

Jessica Bender

Gala Bent

Zack Bent

Marc Dombrosky

Shannon Eakins

Allison Hyde

Ellen Ito

Matt Johnson

Jeremy Mangan

Nicholas Nyland

James Porter

Elise Richman

Julie Rivera

Chris Sharp

Pei Pei Sung


See you soon!
The Telephone Room