Goat Farm Arts Center Explained

E. Van Winkle Gin and Machine Works
Location:West Midtown, Atlanta, GA, USA
Coordinates:33.7862°N -84.4162°W
Built:1880s
Added:September 10, 1979
Refnum:79000726

The Goat Farm Arts Center is a visual and performing arts center located in West Midtown, Atlanta, Georgia. The center is housed in a 19th-century complex of industrial buildings and contains the studio space of over 300 artists. Goat Farm hosts music concerts, traditional and experimental theatrical performances, film screenings, contemporary dance performances, art exhibitions, artist residency programs, and professional ballet and contemporary dance classes. It is also home to resident performance companies gloATL, Saiah Theater, and The Collective Project.[1]

History

It was built during the 1880s, opened in 1889, and expanded in various phases through the early 1930s. It was Edward Van Winkle's third complex in Atlanta - a previous one was located in today's Luckie Marietta district. By 1898, the site specialized in cotton-related machinery, and won awards at international expositions and state fairs. In 1912, the Murray Company of Texas bought out Van Winkle and the site became known as "Murray's Mill." During World War II, the complex produced ammunition and mortars.

In the early 1970s Robert Haywood bought the site and sculptors, musicians, painters and photographers set up studios there. For a time in the early 2000s space was rented to antique dealers as "The Shops at Murray Mill",[2] [3] but the antique mall never took off. The site remained unused for many years.

On July 15, 2010, the property was sold for a reported $7 million[4] to Hallister Development, specialists in renovating historic properties. Hallister stated that it planned to preserve and boost the property as an arts-friendly community.[5] In 2008, as an alternate back up plan, Hallister Development filed a "Developments of Regional Impact" application with the Georgia Regional Transportation Authority for a project containing 426 residential units at the location, to contain 96000ft2 of office and 96000ft2 of retail.[1]

Hallister Development ultimately chose not to pursue redevelopment of the site into a residential/commercial complex. In 2009, Hallister made the decision to develop the site into a Center for the Visual and Performing Arts containing performance and exhibition halls, a cafe/library, an on-site organic farm, an education center, a 5000 square foot space dedicated to contemporary dance, and creative studios for artists.[1]

In 2010, it was used for filming in the episode "Vatos" of The Walking Dead.[6] In 2012, it was used for filming.[7]

Organization

The Goat Farm primarily explores experimental and innovative works. The Arts Center is a for-profit arts model and does not operate on public funding, donations or grants. Its non-traditional rustic auditoriums are Goodson Yard, The Rodriguez Room, The Warhorse and three exterior venues - The Village Green, Warhorse Court and The Dovetail. Ballet and contemporary dance classes are offered through resident dance troupe gloATL. Its education and career development platform, Stimulus Diffusion, connects creatives to a wide variety of educational initiatives in Atlanta. The Goat Farm Arts Center provides its performance and exhibition halls to artists through a curatorial process in which those who wish to use the space submit a proposal. Once an idea is selected, the Goat Farm invests in and works with the artists and/or performance groups to actualize the concept. All of the selected artists receive The Goat Farm's AIP (Arts Investment Package), which includes financial assistance, direct funding, production assistance, marketing assistance and rehearsal, performance, exhibition or classroom space.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Goat Farm: Urban Art Space - Atlanta INtown Paper. 1 May 2012. Atlantaintownpaper.com. 16 April 2018.
  2. Web site: E. Van Winkle Gin and Machine Works. Artery.org. 16 April 2018.
  3. Web site: Bonnie Horner | LinkedIn . https://archive.today/20121203214836/http://www.linkedin.com/pub/bonnie-horner/8/18b/518 . 3 December 2012 . dead.
  4. Web site: Hallister Gets the Goat. Archive.constantcontact.com. 16 April 2018.
  5. https://creativeloafing.com/content-170588-goat-farm-gets-sold Thomas Wheatley, "Goat Farm gets sold: Atlanta cotton gin-turned-artists’ space finds new owner"
  6. Web site: Tour Atlanta through the eyes of zombies and vampires, Access Atlanta. https://web.archive.org/web/20120406113952/http://blogs.ajc.com/radio-tv-talk/2012/04/03/tour-atlanta-through-the-eyes-of-zombies-and-vampires/. dead. 6 April 2012. Blogs.ajc.com. 16 April 2018.
  7. Web site: Myhungergames. Myhungergames.com. 16 April 2018.