Several approaches to accomplish this are available. Below are a few of the possibilities.
Using an array
From a list
Replace the last line of code in the question with the following.
a.fromlist([int(val) for val in stdin.read().split()])
Now:
>>> a
array('i', [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6])
Con: does not preserve 2d structure (see comments).
From a generator
Note: this option is incorporated from comments by eryksun.
A more efficient way to do this is to use a generator instead of the list. Replace the last two lines of the code in the question with:
a = array('i', (int(val) for row in stdin for val in row.split()))
This produces the same result as the option above, but avoids creating the intermediate list.
Using a NumPy array
If you want the preserve the 2d structure, you could use a NumPy array. Here's the whole example:
from StringIO import StringIO
import numpy as np
# fake stdin
stdin = StringIO("""1 2
3 4
5 6""")
a = np.loadtxt(stdin, dtype=np.int)
Now:
>>> a
array([[1, 2],
[3, 4],
[5, 6]])
Using standard lists
It is not clear from the question if a Python list is acceptable. If it is, one way to accomplish the goal is replace the last two lines of the code in the question with the following.
a = [map(int, row.split()) for row in stdin]
After running this, we have:
>>> a
[[1, 2], [3, 4], [5, 6]]