Artists' Television Access: Difference between revisions

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Artists’ Television Access (ATA) was founded in 1984 by artist John Martin and Marshall Weber.  Originally a quirky art warehouse space called the Weber/Marshall Gallery located on 8th Street in the SOMA district.  Due to a fire in 1986, the gallery moved to 992 Valencia Street in San Francisco in the Mission District and was renamed the Artists’ Television Access.  It has shown underground movies, videos, and performance art in its fifty-seat (approximately) venue.
Artists’ Television Access (ATA) was founded in 1984 by artist John Martin and Marshall Weber.  Originally a quirky art warehouse space called the Weber/Marshall Gallery located on 8th Street in the SOMA district.  Due to a fire in 1986, the gallery moved to 992 Valencia Street in San Francisco in the Mission District and was renamed the Artists’ Television Access.  It has shown underground movies, videos, and performance art in its fifty-seat (approximately) venue.
[[File:ATAinside.jpg]]

Revision as of 07:22, 30 March 2015

<iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/artiststelevisionaccess" width="640" height="480" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Video by Paul Grammatico

Videographer: Diallo McLinn

File:ATAsign.jpg

Photo: Paul Grammatico

Artists’ Television Access (ATA) was founded in 1984 by artist John Martin and Marshall Weber. Originally a quirky art warehouse space called the Weber/Marshall Gallery located on 8th Street in the SOMA district. Due to a fire in 1986, the gallery moved to 992 Valencia Street in San Francisco in the Mission District and was renamed the Artists’ Television Access. It has shown underground movies, videos, and performance art in its fifty-seat (approximately) venue.

File:ATAinside.jpg