CINE BIN: Artists Cara Tomlinson, Sean Regan and Rachel Hibbard at the Bins. IMAGE: Jenna Biggs |
“It was a feeding frenzy in there,” Paul Gervais says to the camera. In his late 60s with short, gray hair, a black bomber jacket and the voice of a longtime smoker, Gervais is waxing philosophical on his favorite place to stock up on reusable items and home-brewing equipment.
Laid out in front of you, as far as the eye can see, are more than 100 giant blue bins, arranged in orderly rows and each packed with up to 250 pounds of tattered teddy bears, T-shirts with “I Love You This Much” stretched across their well-worn fronts and coffee makers missing their pots, and maybe their cords. Welcome to Southeast Portland’s Goodwill Outlet, a.k.a. “The Bins.” One of the region’s most unusual shopping meccas, the Bins attracts a cast of international characters all here to dig through giant mountains of what some call treasures and others consider trash.
This “junk” dropped off to Goodwill and other charitable organizations is the basis for an upcoming video installation by local artists Rachel Hibbard, Sean Regan and Regan’s wife, Cara Tomlinson. The arty project, which was shot over the past several months, zooms in on the second, third and even fourth lives of goods procured at the Bins. The film tries to document the Herculean, yet still somehow Sisyphean, ways people find purpose for things that seem to have outworn their original use.
Here’s how your trash gets turned into Bins fodder: After a three- to five-week run in a local Goodwill store (there are 33 in the Pacific Northwest, which make up Goodwill Industries of the Columbia Willamette), truckloads of saleable products are carted off to this aging, fluorescent-lit, 14,300-square-foot warehouse for their last “public showing.” Employees process 80,000 pounds of stuff a day—it’s the crappiest of crap catch-alls.
So, why shoot video about trash? “One of the most interesting things about [American] culture is how much of it we discard,” Regan says. “It’s been said a million times, but it’s still shocking to see it for yourself. It’s how people are reusing goods in a practical, ecological and resourceful way.”
A found-object artist and the project’s audio-video guy, Regan says he’s seen people’s entire lives just in the objects he finds at the Bins.
This past winter, the trio of artists videotaped around 40 Bins hunters on the prowl. In a town where it seems like every artist and fashion designer is reusing something, this trio has broken the Bins down to its core elements: people, things and how people affect the place they live.
Some of these shoppers spend a good chunk of their days here. “[We’re] entrepreneurs. Every one single body that’s in there is either trying to make money or save money,” says Kenneth H. Body, a Portlander featured in the film who specializes in concert shirts, bags, purses, belts and shoes. He’s been coming to the Bins for 11 years. “I quit my day job and do this...as long as I want to do it,” he says.
“It’s kinda hard to tell how long you’ve been in there,” says Bins diver Jane Robins. “It’s like being in a casino.”
But the project isn’t what initially attracted the artists to the Bins—they’ve been shopping there for years. Southwest Portlanders Regan and Tomlinson used to make the trek to the Bins at least four times a week.
“Prices are good and you never know what you’ll find there. Curiosity keeps pulling us back,” says Regan, who has resold or rehabbed many of the electronics he’s found there. “Getting to know people, is [also] a huge aspect of the Bins...it’s [one] reason we decided to do this project.”
Beyond cheap prices (69 cents to $1.59 per pound is an average price for clothes at the Bins), Goodwill does a lot of good for our environment. According to Goodwill spokeswoman Dale Emanuel, last year 2 million residents of Oregon and Southwest Washington gave Goodwill 138 million pounds of donations. “It’s a worldwide record,” Emanuel says. That includes 14 million pounds of shoes and 60,000 pounds of vacuum cleaners. Which makes Goodwill Industries of the Columbia Willamette the No. 1 retailer and recycler of used goods in the world. “We actually teach other Goodwills how to do this,” Emanuel says.
Tomlinson and crew are planning an installation of their “findings” at the Portland Building at the end of July, full of Goodwill objects to re-create the Bins “experience.” (Then again, a DIY trip could yield you a vintage Louis Vuitton bag or mint-condition Stars Wars figurine, pricey items that have both been found at the Bins.)
Tomlinson says there’ll be drawings that map the “micro- and macro-systems” of the Bins, as well as audio and those videotaped interviews scattered throughout the space. Then again, the piece is still evolving and may change again before it makes it to its final destination. It just depends on what the trio finds on its next trip to the Bins.
SEE IT: Bin Labs will be showcased inside the Portland Building in late July. Visit the Goodwill Outlet, a.k.a. the Bins, at 1740 SE Ochoco St., Milwaukie, 230-2076. Open 8 am-8 pm Monday-Saturday, 9 am-7 pm Sunday.




BTW: Willy Week stole my PDX Cacophony Society event name "Goodwill Hunting", and used it as a headline for a sorta, but not really, related article!
Well actually Byron Beck did.
I'd like to hereby nominate him for Rogue of the Week!
He could have at least mentioned my/our event and where he stole his headline from.
< ;- p
FYI:
I organized the 1st and 2nd Annual PDX Cacophony Stumptown Lodge Goodwill Hunting Expeditions
picture evidence here:
March 2008
http://home.comcast.net/~sefritz1/gw8.htm
February 2007
http://home.comcast.net/~playaitch/gw7.htm
I was also informed that some Zoobombers did something called Goodwill Hunting GAME SHOW back in 2003. http://www.zoobomb.org/gallery/BinsWins
Great minds do think alike- Especially in Gus' home town.. I never saw the Zoobomb event! It sounds like the game show aspect may have "bin" an added attraction.
I'm Just razzing the press a bit- I don't mind a bit that he didn't interview me/us. it was the Willy Week article timing that made me a bit suspicious, though.
I confess, I've been going Goodwill Hunting with "church ladies" since about 2000. I first did the event with a group of crazy artsy-fartsy Unitarians as an event we put together to sell at a fund raising silent auction for the fellowship ... The green jello and cottage cheese with pimentos, cheeze whiz sandwiches and tomato soup with 5 martini brunches were legendary.
BTW; I heard back from Byron via e-mail today-- he blames his EDITOR for the Headline!
Find video and transcript here: http://www.quangoinc.com/bridges/creative-collaboration-deepening-the-conversation-video.php
Discussion of this video comes near the end. Here are some of Sean's thoughts:
"We all found it thought provoking and we found it emblematic of so many different things. It reveals how communities form around resources, which there are a lot. We discovered this when we talked to the people. You can see the relationships that develop when you go frequently. It is also an expression of capitalism and waste in the twenty-first century and how everything gets used."
"We found out a lot about the things that leave the Bins. It's about detail and difference, just the amount of stuff. It particularly fits in with my earlier work because it's about history. Each one of these pieces has a history and you can feel that when you go there. You see things in which you'll wonder, "Who died?" or "Why would they let go of this?". You can feel that. It's fascinating. The place mirrors biological processes in many different ways. And we found it to be a celebration of community, we wanted to celebrate the place too."
Thought this might be of interest. Enjoy, and consider this an open invitation to attend our upcoming lectures.
Tom Briggs
Content Manager // QUANGO