At a83, a new gallery in New York's SoHo, the Risograph machine is often whirring. It seems a strange sound in the year 2020, but for gallery founders Phillip Denny, Owen Nichols and Clara Syme, this 1980s Japanese technology remains essential. The trio took over the Manhattan real estate this past winter to create a trifold space for architecture: part print shop, part gallery and part archive, it is dedicated to showing experimental designs and does so via the Riso. Architects send their work digitally to a83, and the team uses the machine—a cross between a mimeograph and a screen printer—to reproduce it on paper, making high-quality prints for installations in the gallery and to send a kind of version of the exhibition through the mail.
“We’re producing conditions in which experimental, unprofitable work can be supported in equitable and sustainable ways,” explains architecture writer Denny, noting that the projects they highlight are often conceptual, made to advance discourse in the profession rather than be built physically. When a83 opened its inaugural show, “Working Remotely,” this past July, as the New York pandemic curve had flattened and was beginning to trend downward, this process served its purpose well for social distancing. The open-call exhibit saw works by up-and-comers like New Affiliates, Young Projects and Somewhere Studio hung next to designs by more established practices like RUR Architecture. Appointments were made for in-person visits for some, and the United States Postal Service did its part delivering the show to others. Now, records of all of those projects enter a83’s archive, headed by artist and architect Nichols, who has a personal connection to the project and gallery space.