Marcia Wiley wants to make you smile. Her goal is to get you to stop and take notice of the wonder around you.
Her slogan is “transforming the mundane.” She hopes to shake up the ordinary world and highlighting the wild and extraordinary.
And, if you’re lucky, she might want to take you for a ride.
The Ballard artist is currently working on a whole different kind of project—one that’s part performance art and part taxi service.
Usually, Wiley can be found in her studio blowing colorful, unique glass cups or teaching glass camps to children and adults.
Soon, she hopes to be behind the wheel of a ’67 Checker Marathon cab.
Wiley purchased the vehicle and dreams of bringing it back to its former glory. Once restored, the cab will take a turn in a different direction.
Instead of paying for a lift, riders will be asked to tell the driver a story about their lives.
Wiley recently launched a Kickstarter campaign to make her dream a reality. Her goal is to raise $9,444 to cover the repairs needed to get the cab back on the road and to launch “Miss Direction’s Checker Cab Ride Service.”
Wiley explains that the complimentary taxi will spread “everyday magic” around Seattle.
Her adventure has roots in Burning Man, an annual festival in the desert in Nevada.
Wiley has attended the event since 2002. She is drawn to the festival for a number of reasons—the art and the community there, the atmosphere that encourages self-expression and the economy that relies entirely on gifting. She also enjoys the air of mischief and play.
“People have different names and different identities there,” Wiley said.
That’s where she created her alter ego Miss Direction. Her gifts to festival-goers included directions and fortunes.
Wiley decided to keep the gig going when she returned home to Seattle in 2005.
She would dress up in a uniform--a jacket decorated with compasses and a funky crown-- and then place a magnetic placard on her car reading “Miss Direction.”
Wiley would then go for a drive, find a woman waiting for a bus and offer her a free ride to her destination.
“In exchange, I would listen to their life stories,” Wiley said. “The point was to have this unusual experience and hopefully bring some joy to the world.”
With a newly renovated classic cab, Wiley believes she can take her service to the next level and make it an even more exciting trip. “It’s just creating a moment of delight,” she said.
The ’67 Checker Marathon also has a history. The car was originally driven in West Seattle. Then, it was sold to a family in Maple Valley with four children and a penchant for road trips.
Go get em' Miss Direction! https://tinyurl.com/checkercabKS