June 26, 2008

The House That Borf Built is Closing

2008_0626_bobbyfischermemorialbldg.jpgHome to guerrilla art exhibits as well as the city's most famous art guerrilla, the Bobby Fisher Memorial Building at 1644 North Capitol Street NW is coming to a close, after tenants and landlord failed to renegotiate a lease.

The dozen-member collective known as the Borf Brigade that runs the DIY community arts center, as well as their regent, John Tsombikos (aka Borf), have been unable to negotiate a lease renewal with Joe Scheve, the property's owner. Until now, the group has enjoyed a free stay in exchange for renovations and repairs. But when it came time to renew the one-year lease on the building, the group encountered some unexpected hurdles — such as a demand that they pay up.

"[The landlord]'s decided to charge rent while we're trying to get $20,000 worth of repairs done," says Marissa Botelho, a member of the Borf Brigade. Sheve did not return phone calls for this story.

The last event that the group has planned for the space, a feminist art show called "Girlish Ways", opens Saturday and runs through the weekend — possibly longer.

"We don't have a final exit date," says Botelho. "We'll rent a generator for the weekend and that will be that."

Photo by dbking

In the year that the former bakery and consignment shop has been under the stewardship of Tsombikos (whose father is a contractor), it has seen fairly extensive renovations. Tsombikos built supports in the basement and put down flooring, laid drywall over exposed concrete walls, and installed ramps and other structures throughout the space.

"It's been a difficult relationship with the landlord," says Botelho. "The agreement we had come to was we were going to renovate the space and our rent would be free while we were renovating the space. It was a beneficial relationship for both of us — it was previously abandoned, so it wasn't hurting him that we were hiring out plumbers and electricians."

"The owner is not kicking us out," Borf Brigader Chuck Burgundy wrote in an email. Rather, Scheve insisted on terms that the group considered odious, including signing a 5-year lease with a clause that would waive the group's right to a 30-day notice before eviction.

"We had a nonprofit lawyer draw up a lease, but [Scheve] rejected it because it was too long. His lawyer had a one-paragraph five-year lease that he wanted us to sign," says Botelho. "We saw that as unrealistic and wouldn't protect either side."

The soi-disant Borf Brigade — a rotating cast numbering between 6 and 12 — understand the building as something of a 2.0 to Borf's mission, a temporary autonomous zone to promote civil disobedience, urban pranksterism, and artists who encourage same. Entertainment, too: popular pop act Matt & Kim played a gig there.

In the years since Borf covered the capital with his signature, his communications have grown more complex. Not unlike tactics favored by al Qaeda, the Borf Brigade have released video communiques to explain their mission and address their enemies. (We are two years into "Operation: Twist and Shout," for example.) LED Throwies have displaced wheatpasted signs and spraypaint graffiti. The Borf Brigade even hacked a building (with some help).

2008_0626_LaurenRiceNaturesBounty.JPGBy comparison, "Girlish Ways" is more domesticated. A group show featuring 12 women artists, most of whom live in the District, "Girlish Ways" is a fairly straightforward showing of installation, photography, and video art. One installation made from commercial and decorative materials by Lauren Price, a recent MFA graduate from American University, features subtle repetitions of the color scale, revealing a painterly ambition (pictured left). An impressive feat for a small-scale show, it wouldn't be out of place in the city's more formal exhibition halls and galleries.

Recent discussions within the Borf Brigade suggest an altogether different sort of maturity in the works for the Bobby Fisher Memorial group: nonprofit status.

The Borf Brigade has scouted new locations, including a set of four warehouse buildings at Rhode Island Ave. and 9th St NW, whose owners hope to sell all of them as a package deal for $1.1 million, according to Botelho. (Scheve, on the other hand, hopes to make $1.25 million on the present Bobby Fisher Memorial Building location.) With a new building would come some new features, for example, a screenprinting shop and an effort at legal legitimacy.

Says Botelho, "John [Tsombikos] has recently become more interested in owning real estate."

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Comments (20) [rss]

I don't know "art" but I know what I hate. And I hate Borf. You clowns picked the wrong day to go Borfing.

Locked and loaded. Express elevator to Hell....GOING DOWN!

 

Borf fans don't understand the concept of paying rent?

I am shocked. Shocked.

You want to build temples to self-absorbed, pimple-faced dorks that caused a lot of people (mostly landlords and other property owners) a lot of $$ and hell, go ahead. But don't then go bitching about the rent.

 

"John [Tsombikos] has recently become more interested in owning real estate."

Once his purchase has been made ... prepare your spray cans DC. Eye for an eye?

 

""[The landlord]'s decided to charge rent while we're trying to get $20,000 worth of repairs done," says Marissa Botelho, a member of the Borf Brigade."

It's called "triple-net". Just wait for your portion of the owner's tax bill.

Dilettantes.

 

Add me to the list of those who are unimpressed, to say the least, with Borf and his cohorts.

 

Dear Borf:

Get a job.


Sincerely,

The Arts Community

 

great to hear that mr. tsombikos is selling out.

sell-out!

sell-out!

sell-out!

sell-out!

guess that means that the NCMS people are going to have to look for another art-based institution for bloomingdale/eckington's revival...

 

i'm actually sad this is closing. i liked the direction they were taking. and as a neighbor to the building, i appreciated them livening up north capitol a bit.


 

This place was one of the few DIY art, music etc spaces in the city. I saw bands here that wouldn't be able to get a gig elsewhere. Regardless of their politics, it sucks that another cool venue that allowed for weird/unknown acts to perform is shut down. For a city of this size, DC has very few such spaces, and those are disappearing (ex Warehouse next door). I hope these guys can find a way to reopen somewhere else.

 

damn straight mike.

 


As another neighbor of the BORF building, I am very sad to see it go as well. These kids took over a space that no one wanted, that everyone neglected and began a transformation. I don't understand all the cranky vitriol of these crotchety commenters - Does your Starbucks jones go that deep? Does the DIY ethic harsh your mellow that badly? Personally, as a nearby property owner, I welcomed their presence. And given the molasses pace at which non-corporate sponsored change actually occurs in DC, I have zero problem with rent-free neighbors who bring independent arts to the community.

 

this is awful news.

i hope this doesn't affect sunday afternoon's show with the ergs! and weston.

this space is a great idea, and dc is really lacking places for truly independent artists to express themselves.

all of the music venues around here seem to be more interested in putting on indie/brit-pop dance parties than showcasing local diy talent.

 

@kneel: It looks like the ergs! and Weston are still playing on Sunday, though the people I spoke to weren't responsible for the music lineup at the space and did not know whether they would have the generator throughout the day on Sunday. An acoustic set was mentioned as a possibility.

I for one think it would be great if Weston ran through Got Beat Up on acoustic guitars.

—Kriston

 

Commenters 2-7 (fuck knows what the hell Monekyrotica is getting at) are confusing the building w/ BORF the graf guy. AFAIK none of the kids involved with running the space were involved with anything BORF did. Not sure whatever made any of you think that they were except for the name-association and your lazy assumptions.

Anyway, I'll miss the big time. I haven't seen spirit like that since the 80s

 

sexy fitsum: i live down the street from the borf building. i'm not confusing it with the douchy kid from great falls, va.

i was commenting on the fact that borf wants to buy real estate. says so right there in the last quote of this story. he always railed against the system and the man in his rants, and now he's going to join the system.

good for him if he's planning on undermining society from within, i wish him well. still is worth a laugh though.

kriston: should the potential warehouses be at 9th and rhode island NE, not NW? don't seem to be too many warehouses on the corner in NW...

 

Regardless of what one thinks of Borf, the Bobby Fischer Memorial Building provided a valuable DIY space - and a welcoming DIY space - following the closing of the Warehouse next door. Significant improvements have been made to the building, and I for one would rather have a usable space than another abandoned building on East Capitol.

And Kriston, ITA. I got a new shirt!

 

I'm actually kind of sad by this.

I hate seeing places like this go.

Hope they can find another spot! :D

*tips hat*

 

Note that it's Bobby Fisher, as in Borf, not Bobby Fischer, as in the antisemitic chessmaster.

 

"AFAIK none of the kids involved with running the space were involved with anything BORF did. Not sure whatever made any of you think that they were except for the name-association and your lazy assumptions."

This, from Wikipedia...."In a video shown on July 29, 2006, the Borf Brigade, a group claiming responsibility for the graffiti spree, asserted that capitalism and the culture of aesthetics created the alienation and feelings of worthlessness that caused a 16-year-old to commit suicide. The group said they used other peoples' property to commemorate and pay homage to their deceased friend."

And, uh, isn't this Tsombikos guy actually Borf?

 

this sucks. there aren't enough such venues in dc.

 
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