a blog about photography, design, art, architecture, ephemera, found objects, pop culture, anonymous, outsider art, folk art, self-taught art, illustration, beauty, esoterica, auctions, discovery, art environments, mystery, vintage stuff and the magic that can be found in everyday things.
Sunday, December 13, 2009
Minimum Wage Machine
BLAKE FALL CONROY’S “MINIMUM WAGE MACHINE” is a penny-dispensing Rube Goldberg machine that “allows anybody to work for minimum wage.” The machine has custom electronics, a change sorter, wood, plexiglass, a motor, misc. hardware, lot’s of pennies, and measures approx. 15 x 19 x 72 inches. The minimum wage machine allows anybody to work for minimum wage.
Here’s the concept, and the way it works: turning the crank will yield one penny every 5.04 seconds, for $7.15 an hour (NY State minimum wage). That means, if you can physically turn the crank for an 8-hour day, you can earn $57.20. If you stop turning the crank, you stop receiving money. The machine’s mechanism and electronics are powered by the hand crank, and pennies are stored in a plexiglass box. Makes working for minimum wage feel pretty depressing. But the artist has an idea and is quoted as saying:
“In the future, I see possibility in a lot of these machines hooked into a grid, with people performing basic human labor for money. Perhaps a new form of renewable energy generation? A new kind of supercomputer with thousands of people performing basic calculations at minimum wage “stations” across the world? Who knows?
Via BlakeFallConroy.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
5 comments:
Quite interesting!! I like how this artist is exploring jobs/manual labour/work. I often think about how symbolic most of our jobs are.
I know, I like it to. Conceptually, you could put hundreds of thousands-or millions of people to work turning cranks all day and night 24/7 to provide electricity to our power grid. It would be a totally dehumanizing exercise to obtain your pennies- like some Orwellian horror story. If it were voluntary, we wouldn't get enough juice for a single light bulb. But if you could keep it up for 8 or more hours, you'd make a living. This artist is on to something I like... it does make you think about the jobs we do...
This is pure genius.
Would putting those on the city streets make pan-handling obsolete?
"Can you spare a quarter?"
"Go turn the crank!"
The future is here: Amazon.com mechanical turk. Unfortunately there you can work all day for less than minimum wage.
Post a Comment