April 19, 2014
On The Edge Art Gallery loans parking lot to DeathTrapArtCar
We will notify you our friends, the press, and the general public, of the days and times artists are making art on this car so you can see for yourself how totally cool this project is, for everyone except General Motors. Please consider joining in one of many DeathTrapArtCar mini-protests.
On The Edge Art Gallery is located at 7317 El Cajon Blvd, La Mesa, CA 91942, and is easily accessible from Interstate 8.
Here's the map.
We look forward to seeing you there soon!
April 17, 2014
From The Clyde Fitch Report
A GM Chevy Cobalt becomes the DeathTrapArtCar
Posted Apr 17 2014 by Laura Axelrod inFeatured, Triple Axelrod
Kevin Six in his 2007 Chevy Cobalt. It will now become the DeathTrapArtCar.
Actor/playwright Kevin Six is angry, and he’s about to drive that message home to General Motors.
Six bought a 2007 Chevy Cobalt a few years ago. He paid $8,000 cash, thinking it was a solid used car.
That automobile is now about to become theDeathTrapArtCar, a painted protest to warn the public about General Motors.
The vehicle, along with several million others, is part of the General Motors faulty ignition recall. Other models affected include the Chevrolet HHR, Saturn Ion, Saturn Sky, Pontiac G5 and Pontiac Solstice.
General Motors acknowledges the defect has caused 13 deaths and 31 crashes. One auto safety group, however, believes that as many as303 people have died as a result of the problem. The automobile manufacturer disputes their findings.
“I gave them that money in good faith. I don’t think they dealt in good faith,” Six says. He also thinks the faulty ignition is just part of the problem.
Shortly after Six purchased his Chevy Cobalt, the dealership wrote a letter to the actor/playwright saying the car was in high demand. They invited him back to make an upgrade. At the time, he thought they were trying to make another sale by suggesting a trade-in.
In retrospect, he thinks they may have been attempting to do a preemptive recall while trying to get him to buy another car. He didn’t have the money for an upgrade.
Then things started to get funky. The dashboard lights would turn off for no reason. The radio would stop working or the headlights shut down when he put on the emergency brake.
“Those were all things that I thought, ‘Oh, I don’t know what this is. It just seems so odd.’ But it’s not enough to be worried about,” he says.
But after receiving his recall notice from General Motors about the faulty ignition switch earlier this year, Six became convinced the car had electrical problems tied in with the ignition. GM promises only to change the ignition switch, but they won’t recall the car itself.
“So I called him (the dealer) and he was just trying to sell me a new car… He said he would have to look at the Blue Book. And I’m like, there can’t be any Blue Book on this car. It’s worth zero dollars. No one is going to buy this car.”
He is probably right. It is widely known the faulty ignition defect causes the car and its air bags to shut down spontaneously. So you may be cruising down the highway at 70 mph when your car’s engine stops working. Suddenly, your power steering, power brakes and air bags are all useless.
When Six received his recall notice, the dealership didn’t have the parts so they suggested using only one key while driving the car. General Motors told owners heavy key rings could cause the car to slip into standby, making the car shut down.
“And then I thought, ‘Okay. What’s the problem really?’ And I did some research. The problem isn’t about the weight of my key…”
Indeed, he tested the key in his own car and the car doesn’t turn itself off. “I believe the problem is more to do with wiring than mechanics. But what do I know?” he asks.
The faulty ignition switch on the Chevy Cobalt, made by General Motors. (Photo by Kevin Six)
According to the New York Times, the Chevrolet Cobalt has been plagued with problems. Owners have complained about failures with the clutch, air conditioning, and power steering. They have also cited locks opening and closing, doors jamming and windows falling out. In 130 instances, General Motors was forced to buy cars back, make settlements or equal trade-ins under state lemon laws.
Six remembers previous General Motors cars that were also problematic. “Going back before my time, the Corvair was one of these cars that just gave GM fits. And my brother owned aVega. And when my Dad tried to get the Vega fixed, the dealership said, ‘Oh they gave us so much trouble. We call them Monzas now.’”
“So this is sort of the grandchild to the Corvair and the bastard daughter to the Vega,” he says.
“I don’t want the car, even if they replace the ignition,” Six laughs. “Because I don’t trust them. For 10 years they knew this problem existed and kept making the cars and kept selling the cars while people were dying.”
So what does a creative theatermaker do when he feels cheated by a large automaker? He uses his $8,000 car for an art project called theDeathTrapArtCar.
Six is inviting San Diego area artists to collaborate and paint a protest on his Chevy Cobalt. “This is a warning to people driving alongside this car. To shame General Motors into doing something about this car. And really, to draw attention to the matter.”
Thus far, he has commitments from two artists. One painter is planning on doing an Arnold Schwarzenegger ‘Total Recall’ motif. “The other… She is a calligrapher and she said, you know, ‘Nothing says screw you like screw you written out really pretty.’” He is looking for others to join them.
Six is wary of driving the vehicle. He still needs to get to work or auditions. Since his model has a stick shift, he thinks he can downshift and pull over if something goes wrong.
Since he has to travel the California freeways, the painted protest will send a message of warning to residents in San Diego and Los Angeles Counties.
He believes that if the car eventually goes back to the dealership, the artistic work will help deter the dealer from selling the vehicle yet again.
Six continues, “And you know, frankly, if they said, ‘Okay, we’ll take the car and destroy it and give you what you paid for it,’ this problem would go away for them.”
“I can’t afford to buy a new car. I can’t afford to buy a used car. I used all of my money on that car. I was hoping that it would last me… I try to keep the cars for 10 years. Did not have plans anytime soon to buy a new car.”
Laura Axelrod is a writer, playwright and actress. Her plays have been performed in New York, California and Europe. She has also contributed to The Birmingham News and AL.com. Her book reviews were distributed nationally through Newhouse News Service. A native of New England, she moved to Alabama six years ago. Read more at www.lauraaxelrod.com. You can also follow her on Twitter: @laura_axelrod.
TAGS: art, art protest, arts, Chevrolet Cobalt, Chevy Cobalt, Faulty Ignition Switch, General Motors, General Motors recall, paintCATEGORIES: Featured, Triple Axelrod
April 16, 2014
Signs up and moving
April 15, 2014
The reply to my dealership and their email to me
I am interested in hearing your offer.
I must say that I have been experiencing trouble with the car. The dashboard lights turn off for no apparent reason, the headlights sometimes turn off when I pull the emergency brake, and the turn signal does not reset.
This could be normal wear and tear but, as I suspect, it has something to do with the recall that I was made aware of only last month. I was supposed to have the trouble repaired by now but have not heard from anyone other than you. You're not trying to sell me something are you?
Because, to me, a "great deal with no headache and stress" would be akin to getting back the eight thousand dollars I gave your organization for a car that had a problem that GM (and your organization?) knew about before you sold it to me. My headache has to do with driving my car -- with only one key dangling from the ignition -- while I try to believe that it will work and not make me one of the 13 (accepted by GM) or 302 (accepted by reputable automotive publications) deaths attributed to this problem.
Is this the deal you are willing to provide me with, Randall?
If so, please let me know how I am going to receive my eight thousand dollars or what eight thousand dollar car you will give me, free and clear. I would really like to know this before I continue with my art project.
The art project will use my 2007 Chevrolet Cobalt as a gallery for artists, who will paint beautiful, moving works of art with messages. The messages are to GM for being irresponsible, and to the general public to avoid this and other cars, which may run off the road and kill them at any time. You will love it. Please visit the website I have created for it at:
DeathTrapArtCar, a place to chide General Motors
DeathTrapArtCar, a place to chide General Motors
DeathTrapArt Car, a place to chide General Motors for bad recall.
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Preview by Yahoo
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Kevin
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April 7, 2014
Justine Hince gets her pen
| Look at the size of that pen. |
We're sure you'll want to see this happening so we will make sure to upload lots of video and soon.
For more information on how you can help us chide General Motors for bad recall, visit http://deathtrapartcar.com/
April 3, 2014
First Two Artists Join DeathTrapArtCar
April 2, 2014
Call to artists: send message to GM on car
Is your art going places? Have you ever wanted your art to move at 65 miles per hour? What would you say to thousands of commuters every day?
The letter from General Motors said that the car would be fixed. But not yet. While automobile owners wait for parts, cars with the same faulty ignition were responsible for 13 deaths (said General Motors, but others in the automobile business put that number at closer to 300).
300+ preventable deaths and the car cannot be fixed for lack of parts. Instead, GM wants owners to reduce the number of keys on their rings, which they say will solve the problem. Until the faulty ignition can be replaced. Then, ostensibly, the car will be fixed better?
In the meantime the 2007 Cobalt has $0 resale value and might just turn itself (and the airbags) off while driving. The owner of this car cannot afford a new one and really thinks people should be warned that his car might just stop working and start killing people.
That's where you come in.
Because the car is worthless -- and already Caution Tape Yellow -- it is the perfect venue for sternly worded, though poignantly beautiful, messages to General Motors about their responsibility to faultless owners, passengers and commuters. The DeathTrapArtCar.com website was designed to attract artists to the project, document their progress, and showcase the art via videos and pictures of the DeathTrapArtCar as it commutes, vacations and visits large gatherings, events and functions.
If you have a masterpiece that you'd like to paint on (or otherwise permanently attach to) the fastest art gallery in the world, DeathTrapArtCar might be just for you. If you are interested, please email us with your idea and how you'd like to execute it.
Artists will be chosen soon. Thanks and here's that email address!
car@deathtrapartcar.com








