California Institute of Abnormalarts explained

California Institute of Abnormalarts
Nickname:CIA
Location:11334 Burbank Boulevard, North Hollywood, California 91601
Type:Nightclub, museum
Opened:2001
Closed:2022
Owner:Carl Crew and Robert Ferguson

The California Institute of Abnormalarts - also written as the California Institute of Abnormal Arts and abbreviated as CIA - was a nightclub and sideshow museum located in North Hollywood, California. Owned and operated by actor-screenwriter Carl Crew and Robert Ferguson, the venue primarily hosted underground musical groups, performance art, movie screenings and sideshow acts including burlesque and freak shows. The club closed in July 2022.[1]

Overview

Owners Carl Crew and Robert Ferguson befriended each other while they were both working as apprentice embalmers in a Los Angeles mortuary in the 1980s.[2] [3] In 1994, the two opened the CIA as a clandestine location for underground bands and performance art, obtaining a dilapidated building in the North Hollywood district which once served as a recording studio during the 1970s.[4] [5] In the late 1990s, the CIA was raided by police and ultimately shut down for serving liquor without a license; the venue remained out of operation for three years until Crew and Ferguson re-opened it in 2001 with its current sideshow-themed aesthetic.[6]

The CIA featured an extensive collection of sideshow memorabilia that Crew and Ferguson, both avid fans and historians of the American sideshow, had collected over the years. The venue, painted with bright, garish circus colors, displayed cryptotaxidermy, pickled punks and vintage banners for sideshow attractions and over the years has featured such oddities and hoaxes as a Fiji mermaid, the skull of "the world's smallest Freemason", the severed head of Sasquatch, the severed arm of Claude de Lorraine and a fairy skeleton. The CIA's most notable attraction, however, may have been the preserved corpse of Achile Chatouilleu, an American circus performer who died in 1912 and requested his body be put on display in the clown makeup and attire he had worn throughout his life.[7] Although Crew leased the body for six months in 2002, he claims that the owners "forgot" to retrieve it and the corpse remained at the CIA in a hermetically sealed glass coffin, the body itself embalmed with arsenic. Chatouilleu's corpse was such a prominent fixture of the CIA that the LA Weekly newspaper ranked the venue in its "Best of LA 2006" list as "Best Place to Find a Dead Clown".[8]

As a music and performance venue, the CIA showcased intentionally offbeat and bizarre musical groups, as well as freak shows, performance art, puppet shows, burlesque acts, stand-up comedy, movie screenings and other sorts of unusual performances. Every month, the CIA hosted Club Microwave, which showcased chiptune and electronic music and DJs and has featured such artists as 8 Bit Weapon, ComputeHer and Trash80, among others. The CIA also regularly hosted an event called Shades and Shadows, a live reading series focusing exclusively on dark fantasy, horror and science fiction literature. Among the authors who have appeared with Shades and Shadows include Martin Pousson, Ben Loory, Lisa Morton and Steven-Elliot Altman.

The CIA has been featured on the dating shows Blind Date and EX-treme Dating, and in 2013, Crew and regular CIA performer Count Smokula showcased the venue on an episode of the Discovery Channel series Oddities.[5] [9] In 2014 and 2015, the CIA appeared on Halloween-themed episodes of the local interest shows 1st Look (KNBC) and Eye on LA (KABC-TV), respectively, both of which featured interviews with Crew and footage of the comedy punk band The Radioactive Chicken Heads performing on the venue's stage.[10] [11]

In July 2022, the club's owners announced that they were closing the venue partly due to financial struggles related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Crew explained that "People have no idea what it's like to own a club. People think you're rich, but most of those years were a struggle. We tried everything to stay open". The club sold many of its decorations, although an anonymous buyer purchased many of the more outlandish items before the sale, including the corpse of Chatouilleu.

Notable performers at CIA

The following is an incomplete list of some of the more notable bands, musicians, performers and artists who have appeared at the CIA:

Independent zombie web-series filmed at C.I.A in 2012. Actors Irwin Keyes and Ben Woolf were in the scene.

Horror punk band hosted their first reunion show in five years at the CIA in October 2013. Singer Dukey Flyswatter wrote the screenplay for 1987's Blood Diner, starring CIA co-owner Carl Crew.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2022-07-22 . Punk rock venue California Institute of Abnormal Arts shuts its doors after 30 years . 2022-08-11 . Los Angeles Times . en-US.
  2. Web site: Through Clowning . . March 25, 2002 . Lemons, Stephen.
  3. Web site: Best Place to Find a Dead Clown . . October 5, 2006 . Wagman, Diana.
  4. Web site: Clowning Around at the California Institute of Abnormalarts . August 5, 2010 . LA Bizarro . April 26, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140201193442/http://labizarro.com/2010/08/25/weird-los-angeles-museums/ . February 1, 2014 . dead .
  5. Web site: The Freak Show Fringe . RED Magazine . October 30, 2003 . Geerlings, Stephanie.
  6. Web site: California Institute of Abnormal Arts ~ 999 Eyes of Endless Dream Sideshow ~ North Hollywood . LA Taco . November 20, 2006.
  7. Web site: Freak Show Maestro . November 25, 2006 . Lemons, Stephen . Phoenix New Times.
  8. Web site: What the Hell's Been Going On in North Hollywood? . August 30, 2012 . . Whiteside, Johnny.
  9. Web site: Oddities Season 4 Episode 3: Return to Holly-Odd . TV.com.
  10. Web site: It Doesn't Get Any Weirder Than This North Hollywood Spot . September 9, 2014 . Hermann, Andy . LA Weekly.
  11. Web site: Eye on L.A. gets spooky with the best Halloween-themed spots in the city . October 17, 2015 . . Malave, Tina.