The Art Exhibit So Damn Big They Needed a Three-Acre Factory

Meteors crashing. Cars flipping. Kubrick homage. Let's review.

March 10, 2017 9:00 am EST

Most of us lean towards order, schedules and rational(ized) decisions.

But a little chaos never hurt anybody.

Enter: The 14th Factory, a spankin’ new and unmistakably chaotic interactive art exhibit so big it’s hidden in an abandoned warehouse north of DTLA.

14th factory (5 images)

The 14th Factory is the vision of conceptual artist Simon Birch. He’s working with 16 other artists for an interwoven experience that includes video installations, performances and visuals that span from pint-sized to the entire factory floor.

To wit: a meteor crashing to earth in a freeze frame explosion, a car flipping over itself and a giant replica of The Barmecide Feast that was featured in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Tickets are on sale now for the March 11th opening, and the show runs through the end of April. You’ll notice from the map that it’s north of downtown, so maybe explore a little more mayhem in Highland Park afterward.

Go ahead. Live a little.

Meet your guide

Reuben Brody

Reuben Brody

Reuben is the former LA editor of InsideHook. He now works as a therapist and freelance journalist.
More from Reuben Brody »

The InsideHook Newsletter.

News, advice and insights for the most interesting person in the room.