14th Annual CANstruction Competition

November 20, 2006

Fourteen years ago the Society of Design Administration created CANstruction, a philanthropic competition for architects, designers and engineers. The challenge is deceptively simple: these creative professionals must transform cans of food into sculptures and constructions.

The nutritious entries were assembled on site at the New York Design Center, a building devoted to interior designers and furniture showrooms. From November 9 through 22, the exhibit was open to the public during normal business hours; the entry fee was a single can of food.

At the end of the exhibition, the structures were disassembled; this year, one piece, a Mobius strip, collapsed during the competition. The packages of food (generally about 100,000 cans) are donated to the Food Bank for New York City, which distributes it to feed New York’s hungry.


Space Shuttle by National Reprographics Posted by Picasa


Subway Car Interior by Guy Nordenson Posted by Picasa


Trojan Horse by Arup Posted by Picasa


Tango Dancer by Thornton Tomasetti Posted by Picasa


Rabbit in Hat by Robert Silman Associates Posted by Picasa


Campfire by Leslie E. Robertson Associates Posted by Picasa


Lion by Perkins + Will Posted by Picasa


Candy Apple with Bite Taken by Pei Cobb Freed Posted by Picasa


Dragon by Robert A.M. Stern Posted by Picasa


Sushi with Chopsticks by DeSimone Consulting Posted by Picasa


Empty Can by Helpurn Architects Posted by Picasa


Frog by diDomenico + Partners Posted by Picasa


Can as Skyline by Fradkin & McAlpin Assoc. Posted by Picasa


Sea Serpent by HOK Architects Posted by Picasa


Piggy Bank by R.M. Kliment & Frances Halsband Posted by Picasa


Typewriter by Coburn Architecture Posted by Picasa


Apple with Sliced Wedge by Handel Architects Posted by Picasa


Crocodile by Arquitectonica Posted by Picasa


Lady Bug by Ferguson & Samamian Posted by Picasa


Hand Cradling Can by Ted Moudis Posted by Picasa


Monopoly by Mancini Duffy Posted by Picasa


Lion & Lamb by Butler Rogers Baskett Posted by Picasa


Connect Four Game by Magnusson Architecture Posted by Picasa


Snail on Leaf by GACE PLLC Posted by Picasa


Whale Tail by Weidlinger Associates Posted by Picasa


Can with Electric Can Opener by Bovis Lend Lease Posted by Picasa


Sombrero by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill Posted by Picasa


Frog by STV Posted by Picasa


Cornucopia by Earth Tech Posted by Picasa


Ant at a Picnic by Severud Associates Posted by Picasa


Dripping Faucet by Gensler Posted by Picasa


Earth Viewed from the Moon by Beyer Blinder Belle Posted by Picasa


Lady Bug by Urbitran Group Posted by Picasa


Leaning Tower of Pisa & Italian Flag by Dattner Architects Posted by Picasa


Bobsled on Track by Gilsanz Murray Steficek Posted by Picasa


Can with Can Opener by Conant Architects Posted by Picasa


Sushi Platter by NELSON Posted by Picasa


Dragon & Castle by Perkins Eastman Posted by Picasa


Grand Piano by ads Engineers Posted by Picasa


Remains of Mobius Strip by Platt Byard Dovell White Posted by Picasa

  • Canstruction
  • Society for Design Administration New York Chapter
  • SDANYC Canstruction 2006
  • NYC Canstruction Rules
  • Images From Past Canstruction Competitions
  • Food Bank For New York City

  • Spring Awakening on Broadway

    November 19, 2006

    I love the theater but rarely attend Broadway shows.

    Why? Well, have you seen the prices of tickets lately?

    Thinking about going to Beauty and the Beast? Orchestra and front mezzanine seats — if you can find them — will cost you about $132 each. Dying to watch the Lion King? One ticket now sells for $135. Want to see the award-winning Jersey Boys? You’ll have to wait until March and pay about $150 for a seat.

    So when I had the opportunity to see a new musical on Broadway, I jumped at the chance. I ran to the theatre without even pausing to read reviews or learn anything about the show and frankly, I’m glad I did. I just saw Spring Awakening with no preconceptions or expectations and from the opening scene, I was completely enthralled.

    This rock musical is based on a 19-century German play of the same name that was so controversial, it was banned from the stage for more than 70 years. In this adaptation by singer/songwriter Duncan Sheik and playwright Steven Sater, a dozen small town teenagers struggle towards maturity, trying to make sense of the conflicting messages they receive from the repressive, dictatorial adults in their lives and the urgent, confusing stirrings within their own bodies.

    It sounds like a typical, stale coming-of-age story, but Spring Awakening is fresh, vibrant, exciting, intense and still packs the power to shock. This isn’t a show for the kids or blue-haired Aunt Hilda, but I can’t remember the last time any theatrical performance kept me on the edge of my seat the way this one did. And the music … I never thought I’d walk out of a theatre humming tunes about incest, abuse, rape, abortion and suicide, but I did, I did, I did.


    Spring Awakening poster Posted by Picasa

  • Spring Awakening
  • Spring Awakening Music Video
  • New York Times review
  • New Yorker review
  • Michael Musto Interviews Duncan Sheik
  • Apple Store Soho

  • The Sign on Miller’s Famous Restaurant

    November 19, 2006

    This sign is posted on the door of Miller’s Famous Restaurant at the corner of New Utrecht Avenue and 56th Street in Brooklyn. I didn’t see anyone littering, smoking, spitting or playing a radio near the entrance, so I guess the sign must be working.


    Sign on Miller’s door Posted by Picasa

  • Miller’s Famous Restaurant

  • Christmas Fair at “Little Denmark in the Big Apple”

    November 18, 2006

    Housed in a landmark brownstone in historic Brooklyn Heights, the Danish Seamen’s Church is both a house of worship and cultural center for New York’s Danish community.

    The church, which was founded in 1878 by Danish minister Rasmus Andersen, has been in its current location for nearly half a century. This Lutheran congregation’s name comes from one of the church’s primary missions: caring for the thousands of Danish seafarers who come to New York each year. Model ships are displayed in the chapel; an engraved brass ship’s bell is near the door.

    This is the only church the Americas where Danish-language church services are held every Sunday. In addition, the congregation, which refers to itself as “Little Denmark in the Big Apple,” supports a variety of clubs and activities, offers Danish lessons and hosts visiting Danish politicians, musicians, artists and celebrities.

    The biggest event on the church’s calendar is the annual two-day Christmas Fair, which draws such a large crowd that the greater part of the festivities are held a block away at the neighboring Zion German Evangelical Lutheran Church.

    This year’s Fair, held November 17th and 18th, included Danish Christmas ornaments, arts, crafts, products, food and drink. This was a day to enjoy Denmark’s glorious pastry, open-faced sandwiches (smørrebrød), hot dogs, beer and babies.


    Church exterior Posted by Picasa


    Ship’s bell inside the sanctuary Posted by Picasa


    Girl on the stairway Posted by Picasa


    Girl in striped top Posted by Picasa


    Baby in red fleece Posted by Picasa


    Baby tooth Posted by Picasa


    Brothers Posted by Picasa


    Danish hot dogs Posted by Picasa

  • Danish Seamen’s Church
  • Zion German Evangelical Lutheran Church
  • Danish Seaman’s Church Festival

  • The Grand Tour

    November 10, 2006

    “Most real New Yorkers wouldn’t be caught dead on a tour bus or walking around with a group of tourists.”
    — Margot Adler

    Once upon a time I wanted to visit an historic spot located far outside the city. Although it was possible to make the trip using public transportation, doing so appeared to be extremely complicated and time consuming. With all the transfers and waiting involved, just getting there and back would have taken up most of the day, leaving little time to actually see the place.

    However, while researching transportation alternatives, I learned that a few private companies offered one-day guided excursions. The price was about twice that of public transportation, but the tour sounded great — instead of spending most of the day in train stations, I’d have hours to explore my destination, plus a knowledgeable guide. Although I’d never been on a guided tour (and didn’t know anyone under retirement age who had), it appeared to be my best option, so I went ahead and bought a ticket.

    The distance involved required us to board the bus early in the day for what was advertised as a four-hour drive. Two hours later the bus pulled into a particularly charmless roadside restaurant and souvenir shop while the guide explained that, for our convenience, we were now going to stop for an hour.

    We finally arrived more than five hours after leaving the city. As soon as we stepped into the parking lot, our guide announced that we must stay together; she didn’t want anyone wandering off during the tour. As she hustled us from spot to spot, reeling off names, dates and numbers, along with frequent shrill admonitions that we “stay together!,” we soon realized that quite a bit of the information she spouted differed from the accounts most of us had learned in school. When a few members of the group questioned her version of the facts, she grew querulous and strident, insisting that she knew what she was talking about, “Or I wouldn’t have this job, would I?”

    An hour after we arrived, the guide announced that we were going to have lunch and led us to a small caféteria where the food was inedible and the prices shockingly high. We stayed there for more than an hour, returned to the site for a brief visit, and were then herded back onto the bus. The return trip to the city included another extended stay at the souvenir stand we’d visited in the morning. A more experienced traveler attributed the forced stops for our convenience to the tour company having a financial interest in the place.

    As it turned out, we who participated in the outing would have been better served had we traveled on our own and carried good guidebooks. After that waste of time and money, I vowed to avoid all guided tours.

    Then, today, I ran into Justin Ferate, who changed my mind about what a tour could be. Justin, a charming, erudite, hyperkinetic storyteller, leads walking tours around New York, including a free, weekly excursion in midtown Manhattan dubbed The Grand Tour.

    Today I joined the crowd following Ferrate while he led a Grand Tour. Although it begins near Grand Central Terminal, this isn’t simply a walk through the famed train station; it is a jaunt around the storied neighborhood with a man who is clearly in love with his subject.

    He regaled his audience with a narrative that effortlessly wove together stories and trivia about subjects as diverse as the Chicago World’s Fair of 1893, how to buy a great cheesecake, the delicate sensibilities of Victorian traveling women, Barbra Streisand’s unsuccessful attempt to buy an apartment on Fifth Avenue, the history of Spanish tile-making, instructions on making an egg cream, fine points of Greek mythology, the architecture of modern airports and the best cleanser for removing tobacco stains from a painted ceiling.

    Of course, the tour appeals to the out-of-towners who make up most of the crowd, but the depth and breadth of Ferate’s knowledge, combined with his rapid-fire professorial/comedic style, is guaranteed to impress even know-it-all real New Yorkers, including me.

    If you ever find yourself in midtown on a Friday afternoon, do yourself a favor and join one of Ferate’s excursions. Um, did I mention that the Grand Tour is free?


    Dapper tour guide Justin Ferate Posted by Picasa

  • Justin Ferate
  • Margot Adler interviews Justin Ferate
  • Grand Central Terminal
  • Grand Central Partnership
  • Altria Group, Inc.

  • Election Day

    November 7, 2006

    I’m fairly diligent about voting. In fact, I can’t remember the last time I missed a major election. Back in September, during New York’s primary, I asked one of the people working at the polls how she got her job. She told me that it was simple; she went to the Board of Elections Web site, downloaded an application and mailed it in.

    It sounded easy enough and looked like an interesting way to spend the day, helping my fellow Brooklynites fulfill their civic duty, so I decided to apply. About a month and a half after submitting my application, I received a post card telling me to report for work at a polling place in South Brooklyn. The card told me the location, the time (5:30 a.m.) and instructed me to “wear my badge.”

    Badge? What badge? I contacted the Board of Elections and was told not to worry, they’d give me a badge when I reported for work. I asked about training; I was sure that the Web site had said something about going to a class. Don’t worry, they said, someone will show you what to do when you get there.

    With that shaky assurance, this morning I grabbed an umbrella, a nutrition bar (it was too early to make breakfast), the postcard and headed out the door just before 5:00. It was still dark. My first surprise occurred when I realized that although there are quite a few delis between home and the polling place, none of them were open at that hour. I’d have to report for duty without any caffeine in my system.

    The polling place was located inside an elementary school. Workers (all of whom appeared to know what they were doing) scrambled to have everything in place so that voting could commence promptly at the stroke of six. About a dozen large gray mechanical voting machines, similar to old-fashioned telephone booths, were arranged the length of one wall. In front of each booth was a folding table and two folding chairs; another folding chair stood next to the booth.

    Each table was covered in papers as workers arranged them into neat piles of affidavits, voters bills of rights, paper ballots and other important forms. Each booth and table was assigned a number. Large-type sample ballots translated into four languages were taped to the walls.

    There weren’t enough pens to go around. There weren’t enough badges. Worst of all, there was no coffee. But promptly at 6:00 the doors swung open and the voters began to come in. Early morning was the busiest time of the day. The rush ended around 9:00, the time that most people were at work.

    This was the procedure: Each voter stepped up to a table, told the worker his or her name and waited while it was found in the registry book. The worker assigned a three-digit number to each voter (001, 002, etc.) and wrote it and the number of the booth into the registry. The voter then signed the book and received a small white slip of paper, about the size of a credit card, upon which the worker had copied all the numbers. Holding the bit of paper, the voter took a few steps forward, handed the slip to another poll worker, and stepped into the booth.

    The worker sitting next to the booth pulled a large lever. The booth’s long gray curtains closed and a white bulb atop the machine lit up. The voter inside the booth clicked the levers for the candidates of their choice, then moved a large red lever which recorded the vote, turned off the white light and opened the curtains. During the height of the morning rush one of the levers got stuck but the workers grunted and yanked, pushed and pulled. Eventually it came free and the democratic process continued.

    Most of the workers were cordial and chatty. Some seemed to misunderstand the rules; one demanded identification from each voter, even though it was not required. Some disappeared for hours at a time, others spent a good portion of the day outside smoking, a few squabbled, one spent all day obsessing about his next feed (he fussed about breakfast, then lunch, then dinner) and several put their heads down on the tables and napped.

    At one point during the day a news crew showed up and shot some footage that never made it onto the air. No one notable came in to cast their vote and, much to my surprise, even though there are many students living near the polling place, very, very few showed up.

    At 9:00 p.m. the doors were finally locked. My table had served a little over 200 people. The votes were counted and recounted to ensure that they had been properly recorded without discrepancies. All the important papers and register books were signed by the workers, placed in large Manila envelopes that were signed and sealed, and turned over to the NYPD police officers who’d kept us company throughout the day.

    By the time I got home the preliminary results were on the news. The system, awkward and cumbersome though it was, had worked. The voters had done their jobs and the poll workers had, too. Now it is up to the winners to do theirs.


    Warning  Posted by Picasa


    Count Every Vote Posted by Picasa

  • NY Board of Elections
  • Poll Worker Positions
  • The Propaganda Remix Project
  • Voting Machine Joke

  • The Village Halloween Parade

    October 31, 2006

    In 1973, Greenwich Village mask maker and puppeteer Ralph Lee staged a house-to-house puppet show to entertain his neighbors, children and friends. Thirty-three years later, Lee’s show has evolved into the nation’s largest public Halloween celebration.

    This year more than two million people lined Sixth Avenue to watch the Village Halloween Parade while another four million watched a live broadcast on local TV station NY1. Many of the people standing behind the barriers watching were as elaborately costumed as those who were marching, dancing and riding up the street.

    Hometown boys (well, at least they are former New Yorkers) Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons of the rock band Kiss served as the Grand Marshals of the four hour event which included elaborate floats, choreographed dancers, dozens of marching bands, hundreds of puppets and more than 50,000 costumed marchers.

    The sheer numbers make the event sound overwhelming but (unlike many other Halloween celebrations) the Village Halloween Parade isn’t raucous or rowdy; it remains a good-natured, friendly outdoor party for vampires, zombies, superheroes and kids of all ages.


    Strawberry & big brother  Posted by Picasa


    Man carrying skeleton puppet  Posted by Picasa


    Captain Morgan  Posted by Picasa


    MTV VJ & “David Letterman”  Posted by Picasa


    Naughty cop & naughty maid  Posted by Picasa


    Reporter & “Paris Hilton”  Posted by Picasa


    Desperate housewife  Posted by Picasa


    Stay-Puft marshmallow man  Posted by Picasa


    Man in a pink tuxedo  Posted by Picasa


    Martini girl  Posted by Picasa


    Catwoman and Psycho Santa  Posted by Picasa


    “Paris Hilton”  Posted by Picasa


    Spoon man  Posted by Picasa


    Lobster boy  Posted by Picasa


    Beheaded man  Posted by Picasa


    Blue-haired lady  Posted by Picasa


    Corpse bride  Posted by Picasa


    Zombie barista  Posted by Picasa


    Elf  Posted by Picasa


    Cheerleader Posted by Picasa


    Raccoon  Posted by Picasa


    The Riddler  Posted by Picasa


    Religious guy  Posted by Picasa


    Devil & Zombie  Posted by Picasa


    Masked man  Posted by Picasa


    Cow  Posted by Picasa


    Spongebob Squarepants  Posted by Picasa


    Bearded bumblebee  Posted by Picasa


    Sock monkey Posted by Picasa


    Man with a headache Posted by Picasa


    Acrobats  Posted by Picasa


    Viagra man  Posted by Picasa


    Zombie  Posted by Picasa


    Banana boy & friend  Posted by Picasa


    Scooby Doo  Posted by Picasa


    Easy chair  Posted by Picasa


    Can-can girl  Posted by Picasa


    First-class mail  Posted by Picasa


    Hot dog girl  Posted by Picasa


    Edward Scissorhands  Posted by Picasa


    Orange feathers & red hair  Posted by Picasa


    Woman with live parrots  Posted by Picasa


    Puppeteers  Posted by Picasa


    “Pamela Anderson” & “Kid Rock”  Posted by Picasa


    Bagged spinach with E Coli  Posted by Picasa


    Wolf & wizard  Posted by Picasa


    Vampires  Posted by Picasa


    Autumn leaf  Posted by Picasa


    Little nurse  Posted by Picasa


    “Borat”  Posted by Picasa


    Little dinosaur in a stroller  Posted by Picasa


    The Munsters  Posted by Picasa


    Gilligan & palm tree Posted by Picasa


    Real cop & zombie cop  Posted by Picasa


    Dia De Los Muertos  Posted by Picasa


    Jack O’Lantern puppets  Posted by Picasa


    Scary implants  Posted by Picasa


    “Prince” & “Madonna”  Posted by Picasa


    On the Mannheim Steamroller float  Posted by Picasa


    Grand Marshals from Kiss  Posted by Picasa


    Paul Stanley & Gene Simmons  Posted by Picasa

  • New York Village Halloween Parade
  • Kiss
  • NY1

  • Halloween Parade & Costume Extravaganza

    October 29, 2006

    On this crisp autumn day, canines from Brooklyn Heights and DUMBO gathered for the 2nd Annual Dog Halloween Parade and Costume Extravaganza. About 60 animals and their human companions assembled at the Remsen St. entrance to the Brooklyn Promenade, then scampered to the Harry Chapin Playground for judging.

    The event’s sponsor, Perfect Paws, awarded dog-centric prizes for costumes in categories such as best large dog, best small dog, best store-bought, best homemade and most original. All entry fees from the Parade and Costume Extravaganza are being donated to the Hillside Dog Run and the Brooklyn Animal Resource Coalition (BARC) and will be used to benefit the animals of Brooklyn.


    Parading towards the Playground Posted by Picasa


    Little Orphan Annie Posted by Picasa


    A little witch Posted by Picasa


    Shar-pei cheerleader (sans pom-poms) Posted by Picasa


    Count Dracula Posted by Picasa


    A pig Posted by Picasa


    Dragon & friend Posted by Picasa


    Elvis & clown Posted by Picasa


    In Happy Halloween shirt & bandana Posted by Picasa


    Angel inspecting the judges  Posted by Picasa


    Little Red Riding Hood & Wolf Posted by Picasa


    In a ball gown  Posted by Picasa


    Hot dog with ketchup Posted by Picasa


    Little Elvis Posted by Picasa


    Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz Posted by Picasa


    Fairy princess Posted by Picasa


    Another Elvis Posted by Picasa


    Security dog Posted by Picasa


    Hippie Posted by Picasa


    In a poncho & sombrero Posted by Picasa


    Hula girl Posted by Picasa


    Devil  Posted by Picasa


    Bark Mitzvah boy Posted by Picasa

  • Perfect Paws
  • Harry Chapin Playground
  • Hillside Dog Park
  • BARC
  • The SITS Girls

  • A Peek at One Hanson Place

    October 28, 2006

    When it opened at the corner of Hanson Place and Ashland Place in 1928, this was the tallest structure in Brooklyn. Designed to house the Williamsburgh Savings Bank by architects Halsey, McCormack & Helmer, the profile of its distinctive clock tower and dome led this description in the AIA Guide to New York City:

    Inadvertently, this was New York’s most exuberant phallic symbol … its slender tower dominating the landscape of all Brooklyn. A crisp and clean tower, it is detailed in Romanesque-Byzantine arches, columns, and capitals. The 26th floor once included accessible outdoor viewing space, after a change of elevators … all in all, it is 512 feet of skyline. Inside, the great basilican banking hall is called by the Landmarks Preservation Commission a “cathedral of thrift.”

    The cornerstone is engraved with the seal of the Williamsburgh Savings Bank, the date of its charter and the words, “To our depositors past and present this building is dedicated. By their industry and thrift they have built homes and educated children, opened the door of opportunity to youth and made age comfortable, independant and dignified. By those sturdy virtues they have attained their ambitions, swept aside the petty distinctions of class and birth and so maintained the true spirit of American democracy.”

    Now the building known as One Hanson Place is closed for renovation. When it reopens in about 15 months or so, this building will contain luxury condominiums.


    Scaffolding and banners cover facade  Posted by Picasa


    Hidden behind scaffolding Posted by Picasa


    A peek behind the scaffolding Posted by Picasa


    Gargoyle behind scaffolding  Posted by Picasa


    Base of a column behind scaffolding Posted by Picasa


    Owl on a column Posted by Picasa


    Lions guard the lobby entrance Posted by Picasa


    Arch over door from lobby to street Posted by Picasa


    Mosaic ceiling  Posted by Picasa


    A corner of the tiled, vaulted ceiling  Posted by Picasa


    Detail of elevator door  Posted by Picasa


    Sign at subway entrance Posted by Picasa


    Turtle in subway entrance Posted by Picasa


    Detail in subway entrance Posted by Picasa

  • One Hanson Place
  • Curbed New York: Borders Coming
  • Corcoran: Apartments at One Hanson Place
  • AIA Guide to New York City
  • Audio Tour of One Hanson Place (mp3)

  • Art Under the Bridge

    October 15, 2006

    This weekend the 10th Annual Art Under the Bridge Festival turns the entire DUMBO neighborhood into an enormous art gallery. More than 1,500 artists with ties to this area are participating by showing their work in exhibitions or opening their studios to the public. Many of the artists are present to meet visitors, discuss their creations and explain their visions.

    Streets, shops, cafes and even parked trucks are filled with paintings, sculptures and photography while basements, garages, parks and empty buildings host performances of dance, film, video and music. This is a time to wander in and out of galleries and installations, sample styles and works, explore new media and artists and, perhaps, find something unexpected and wonderful.

    Today’s notable surprises include the Rider Project, a temporary mobile art gallery located in the back of two rented Ryder trucks (the roof of one is adorned with a sculpture of grass that softly undulates in the wind), Micki Watanabe, who makes books that are scuptures that are caligraphy that are art, Ryan Schroeder, creator of molded frozen casein scupltures that melt, run and eventually disappear, Alan Sanchez, whose intricate drawings and assemblages connect science fiction, childlike wonder and engineering, Gautam Kansara, who transforms documentary-like videos of his family into poignant, moving fantasies, and Katrina Remembered: The Coast Is Not Clear, an exhibit of recent works by six Mississippi artists and Brooklyn’s Radhi Chakasani.


    Panel painted on Water St. (1 of 4) Posted by Picasa


    Panel painted on Water St. (2 of 4) Posted by Picasa


    Panel painted on Water St. (3 of 4) Posted by Picasa


    Panel painted on Water St. (4 of 4) Posted by Picasa


    Viewing images from Hurricane Katrina  Posted by Picasa


    At the Katrina Remembered exhibit  Posted by Picasa


    Viewing Katrina Remembered exhibit  Posted by Picasa


    The Rider Project parked on Water Street Posted by Picasa


    Inside the Rider Project  Posted by Picasa


    Standing in the Rider Project truck Posted by Picasa


    Sitting in the Rider Project truck Posted by Picasa


    Sitting near the Rider Project Posted by Picasa


    Artist Hayley Severns Posted by Picasa


    Artist Ryan Schroeder Posted by Picasa

  • D.U.M.B.O. Arts Center (DAC)
  • D.U.M.B.O. Art Under the Bridge Festival
  • Brooklyn Arts Council
  • Smackmellon
  • Art-Anon & the Rider Project
  • Brooklyn Artists Gym
  • Spring Design & Art
  • The ‘temporary Museum of Painting
  • Micki Watanabe
  • Marc Dennis
  • Peter Denmark
  • Jaime Logreira
  • Radhika Chalasani Photography
  • Amy Bennett
  • Gautam Kansara
  • Helen Brough
  • Eduardo Cervantes
  • Sarah Keane
  • Austin Donohue
  • Asuka Kakitani Jazz Orchestra
  • Courier-Life: 30 Blocks of DUMBO
  • Cool Magazine

  • No Sleep Till Brooklyn

    October 14, 2006

    The powerHouse Arena, an enormous new party space on Brooklyn’s Main Street, is owned and operated by avant-garde art publisher powerHouse Books. This weekend the Arena hosted its first event, No Sleep ’til Brooklyn: A Hip Hop Retrospective — a celebration of 30 years of hip hop culture.

    Named for the Beastie Boys’ 1986 hit and held in conjuction with VH1’s 2006 Hip Hop Honors, No Sleep ’til Brooklyn is a look at hip hop from its underground beginnings in the South Bronx to its ubiquitous presence today. Works by featured artists include photos, paintings, drawings, films, video, books, sneakers and, of course, music.

    Visitors filled the space to look at the works on display, sample the products from Brooklyn Brewery, hear music by DJ Synapse and hear from some of the pioneers of the art gallery graffiti scene: Lee Quinones, Diego Cortez and Patti Astor.


    Graffiti-style list of credits Posted by Picasa


    Life size images cover the front windows Posted by Picasa


    Photos taped to the pillars  Posted by Picasa


    Looking up at photos Posted by Picasa


    Visitors leaving their marks on the wall  Posted by Picasa


    Viewing framed works in the corner  Posted by Picasa


    Eliza from Pinkeye Posted by Picasa


    Sitting on the steps  Posted by Picasa


    Diego Cortez, Lee Quinones & Patti Astor Posted by Picasa


    Jane Dixon & Patti Astor Posted by Picasa

  • powerHouse Books
  • powerHouse Arena
  • No Sleep ’til Brooklyn: A Hip Hop Retrospective
  • No Sleep ’til Brooklyn Launch
  • @149st: Patti Astor
  • @149st: Fun Gallery
  • Diego Cortez
  • Lost Object: Diego Cortez
  • @149st: Lee Quinones
  • Pink Eye Personalizations
  • DJ Synapse
  • Licensed to Ill
  • Wild Style
  • Brooklyn Brewery
  • VH1 Hip Hop Honors

  • Mysteries of Brooklyn: The Hidden Grotto

    October 13, 2006

    Dere’s no guy livin’ dat knows Brooklyn t’roo an’ t’roo, because it’d take a guy a lifetime just to find his way aroun’ duh f_____ town.
    — Thomas Wolfe, Only the Dead Know Brooklyn, 1935

    At the mouth of the alley near the corner of 43rd Street and 8th Avenue, between the bar and the plumbing supply store, stands a tall iron gate. Affixed to the front are two signs: the white one says that a garage is available for rent; the yellow sign proclaims in English and Chinese that behind this gate is a private driveway; violaters will be tow and ticket [sic].

    Peeking past the iron bars of gate, beyond the partially-disassembled cars and the tools strewn about the ground, a passer-by can glimpse something that seems out of place — a flash of color out of keeping with this dirty, gray, shadowed space.

    If the workmen are in a good mood they’ll allow you to pick your way through the mazes of tires, wrenches and hoses until you reach the back wall. There you will find a grotto roughly hewn from wood, plaster and pieces of broken stone. The person who built this wasn’t a skilled craftsman, didn’t know how to use a lathe or a level, didn’t know how to move the electrical outlets that were already laid onto the surface.

    But at some point, an unknown person, for unknown reasons, felt compelled to build this grotto in this very spot. Driven by passion or madness, he or she carefully built a series of niches, firmly fixed statues of saints inside them and painted the entire creation.

    Today, the men who labor here know nothing of the hidden grotto, its creator or its meaning. The plaster is crumbling. The paint flakes from the wood. St. Gabriel’s wing is broken; St. Joseph’s robe is chipped; Mary’s blue mantle is marked with patches of gray. But still they stand here, long forgotten, silently keeping watch over the workers and cars. Just another of Brooklyn’s many mysteries.


    The hidden grotto Posted by Picasa


    Madonna with electrical outlet Posted by Picasa


    They call it “Blooklyn”

    October 13, 2006

    You say you’ve been to Chinatown in New York? Which Chinatown?

    The fact is, New York City now has three separate Chinatowns. The oldest is in Manhattan. The largest is in Queens. And the smallest and newest is right here in Sunset Park, Brooklyn.

    Brooklyn’s Chinatown is centered on 8th Avenue between 50th and 60th Streets. It is commonly believed that the Chinese moved here because they consider the number eight fortuitous for business and “8th Avenue” can be interpreted as “the road to wealth.”

    Maybe.

    But a more plausible explanation is that those seeking to escape from Chinatown Manhattan’s crowded, twisting alleys, noisy factories and overflowing tenements appreciated Sunset Park’s clean, grassy recreation areas, the relatively wide streets, an abundance of retail space and a direct subway connection to friends and jobs in the old Chinatown.

    As with the other Chinatowns, many of the most visible businesses here are focused on food – preparing it, serving it, selling it. The curbs are lined with baskets of skittering crabs, tubs of fat, bobbing bullfrogs and Styrofoam coolers of flopping, freshly-caught fish. Vendors stand in tiny pushcarts, transforming thick, eggy batter into hot, puffy cakes ($1 a bagfull) and transforming skewers of marinated meat into hot, sizzling satay ($1 each). Bakeries fill the air with the scents of fresh-browned chestnut bread, lotus cakes, cinnamon crisps and pork buns.

    In terms of charm and quaintness, Chinatown Brooklyn comes in dead last, which means that it is almost completely free of hulking tour buses, pushy sightseers and cheap, tacky souvenirs. If you go, instead of t-shirt shops and Starbucks, you’ll see hundreds of businesses that cater to the residents’ daily needs: insurance agencies, banks, bakeries, pharmacies, acupuncture clinics, hairdressers, tutoring services, cell phone centers, internet cafes, restaurant uniform and supply stores and florists.

    Want to know which shops have just opened? Look near the doorway for an array of green plants festooned with red ribbons, traditionally thought to bring luck to a new enterprise.


    Church notice board Posted by Picasa


    Egg cake cart Posted by Picasa


    Fa Da Mall Posted by Picasa


    Moms doing errands Posted by Picasa


    Price list in beauty salon Posted by Picasa


    Funny dry cleaning shop Posted by Picasa


    Optician’s shop Posted by Picasa


    Sign in deli window Posted by Picasa


    Dried fruit displayed outside shop Posted by Picasa


    Banks at the corner of 55th & 8th Posted by Picasa


    Fresh caught and for sale curbside Posted by Picasa


    New Dawang Seafood Market Posted by Picasa


    Hong Kong Supermarket Posted by Picasa

  • Village Voice: The Other, Other Chinatown
  • Asia’zine: Brooklyn’s Chinatown
  • Chinatown NYC: Brooklyn
  • Prosper with 8 88 888 88888

  • A Place to Watch the Sun Set

    October 13, 2006

    Sunset Park, one of the highest points in Brooklyn, stands at the corner of 43rd St. and 5th Ave. An essential resource for this crowded, working-class community, the hilly, tree-filled park boasts an art deco recreation center for indoor activities, an outdoor swimming pool (now closed for the season), handball and basketball courts, a baseball diamond and rows of game tables that are usually occupied by older people playing chess, mah-johng, checkers and go. A section known as the Rainbow Playground includes swings, slides, jungle gyms, fountains and other play equipment.

    Climb to the top of the bluff and you’ll see the park’s most notable feature – its sweeping views of Lower Manhattan, the Statue of Liberty, the East River, New York Bay, Staten Island and New Jersey. The vista once included a magnificent view the World Trade Center; when the towers were destroyed, residents gathered here to honor and remember the dead. Now this scenic area is the site of the city’s first Living Memorial Grove, a few dozen young trees protected with wire cages and surrounded by thousands of daffodils planted by local schoolchildren.

    There wasn’t time to do it today, but this is the perfect place to settle comfortably on a wooden bench, kick off your shoes and watch the sun slowly sink below the horizon.


    Boy on a swing Posted by Picasa


    Girl hanging from monkey bars Posted by Picasa


    Boy in yellow on a swing Posted by Picasa


    Boys on the playground Posted by Picasa


    Ceiling in Recreation Center Posted by Picasa


    Terra cotta tiles on Recreation Center floor Posted by Picasa


    Fountain in Rainbow Playground Posted by Picasa


    Rear of fountain in Rainbow Playground Posted by Picasa


    View from the top of the hill Posted by Picasa


    Men photographing the Memorial Grove Posted by Picasa


    Looking towards New York Bay Posted by Picasa


    Benches facing west Posted by Picasa

  • NYC Dept Parks & Recreation: Sunset Park
  • NYC Dept Parks & Recreation: Rainbow Playground
  • NYC Dept Parks & Recreation: Sept 11th Living Memorial
  • NYC Dept Parks & Recreation: City’s 1st Memorial Grove

  • Strawberry Fields Forever

    October 9, 2006


    Imagine there’s no countries
    It isn’t hard to do
    Nothing to kill or die for
    And no religion too
    Imagine all the people
    Living life in peaceYou may say I’m a dreamer
    But I’m not the only one
    I hope someday you’ll join us
    And the world will be as one

    Had he not been killed by Mark David Chapman in 1980, this would have been his 66th birthday. Today his admirers gathered at Strawberry Fields, the teardrop-shaped space in Central Park created as a memorial, to remember John Lennon.

    Throughout the day, dozens of musicians brought their instruments to the circular black and white mosaic that says, simply, Imagine. There, accompanied by fans from around the world, they sang and played in honor of the man, his music and his memory.


    Imagine mosaic Posted by Picasa


    Musicians gather at Strawberry Fields Posted by Picasa


    Fans sing along Posted by Picasa

    Imagine – click on the arrow above to view

  • Central Park Conservancy: Strawberry Fields
  • John Lennon: Official Site

  • Is That a Smile I See?

    October 9, 2006

    While walking past a house on Manhattan’s Upper East side, I saw something out of the corner of my eye. I stopped, went back and photographed this architectural detail. I think it looks as though the stone is smiling. What do you think?


    In front of 38 West 76th Street Posted by Picasa


    Mirror, Mirror

    October 9, 2006

    Anish Kapoor’s monumental Sky Mirror is now on display in the Channel Gardens at Rockefeller Center. The massive, tilted piece, assembled from sections of highly polished stainless steel, stands three stories tall. The Indian-born artist describes the work as a “non-object,” a work of art that suggests a window or void and seems to disappear into its surroundings.

    Despite its size, the combination of its reflective qualities, the curving surfaces and the angle at which it is displayed distort the viewer’s perceptions. The closer one stands, the more difficult it is to discern the edges and boundaries and to see where Sky Mirror begins and ends.

    Walk around it and you’ll see the effects of the changing light and angle; one moment the sculpture stands out distinctly from the nearby buildings, the next it appears to blend into its surroundings, and finally it almost completely vanishes.

    Sky Mirror will remain at Rockefeller Center until October 27. See it soon — before it disappears.


    As seen from Fifth Avenue Posted by Picasa


    Reflecting the office towers Posted by Picasa


    Standing close to the base Posted by Picasa


    Banner at Rockefeller Center Posted by Picasa


    Viewed from Fifth Avenue at dusk Posted by Picasa

  • About Sky Mirror
  • Rockefeller Center
  • Public Art Fund: Kapoor

  • The Hidden Garden in the Sky

    October 8, 2006

    Yesterday I participated in the 4th Annual OpenHouseNewYork Weekend by taking a tour of the Wallabout section of Brooklyn. Today I took advantage of the weekend-long event to visit a legendary space that has been closed to the public for more than 60 years: the Rockefeller Center Rooftop Garden.

    Located atop the British Empire Building, this garden offers exceptional views of St. Patrick’s Cathedral and Saks Fifth Avenue, its neighbors across the street. The compact, formal space, smaller than a city block, includes meticulously clipped hedges, a shallow pool with a small fountain, a few perfectly matched cypress trees, a border of pink geraniums and a raised platform of fastidiously manicured sod.

    Peeking around the corners provides rare glimpses of the rest of the Rockefeller Center complex including Radio City Music Hall and the skating rink which just reopened for the season.

    This is a hidden spot of greenery high above the city, a retreat usually reserved for private moments of the rich and powerful, but for four hours today, it was a beautiful space open to all who came.


    Saks Fifth Avenue across the street Posted by Picasa


    The frog fountain Posted by Picasa


    The garden pool and lawn Posted by Picasa


    The spires of St. Patrick’s Cathedral Posted by Picasa


    A glimpse of Radio City Music Hall Posted by Picasa


    A glimpse of the skating rink Posted by Picasa


    OHNY donation box Posted by Picasa

  • OHNY
  • Rockefeller Center
  • Newyorkology: Rockefeller Center Roof Gardens

  • Dancing up Fifth Avenue for 41 Years

    October 8, 2006

    By definition, the word Hispanic refers to people from the Spanish-speaking areas of the Americas and the Caribbean.

    For 41 years, New York’s United Hispanic-American Parade has brought together people whose origins are in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, Uruguay and Venezuela.

    Dressed in their national and regional costumes, thousands of men, women and children mambo, salsa, merengue, cha-cha and tango up Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue. The dancers’ energy and joy is contagious, the drummers hands are frenetic, and the massed spectators smile, sway and wave flags in time to the relentless beat.


    Girl with yellow pom-poms Posted by Picasa


    Girls in orange Posted by Picasa


    Girl with blue eyeshadow Posted by Picasa


    Puerto Rican woman Posted by Picasa


    Dancers waiting for their cue Posted by Picasa


    A dancer and her beau Posted by Picasa


    Men with bells on their boots Posted by Picasa


    Girl in ostrich feathers Posted by Picasa


    Girl in pink and green Posted by Picasa


    Boys and girls in pink and green Posted by Picasa


    Men with skulls on their chests Posted by Picasa


    People in Peruvian costumes Posted by Picasa


    Drummers marching up the avenue Posted by Picasa

  • New York Hispanic Parade
  • Galos Corp.: New York Hispanic Parade History

  • A Walkabout Wallabout

    October 7, 2006

    OpenHouseNewYork (OHNY), a group focused on New York City’s architecture and design, has organized this as the 4th Annual OpenHouseNewYork Weekend. Billed as “America’s largest architect and design event,” the Weekend offers free tours of dozens of sites around the city, many of them usually closed to the public.

    I was unaware of OHNY or the event, scheduled for today and tomorrow, until late last night. When I went to OHNY Web site to investigate the available tours, I found that most of the best-known, least-accessible buildings were already full to capacity. Searching for a tour that I could join, I discovered the Wallabout neighborhood.

    Even if you’ve never set foot in New York, you’ve probably seen and heard of certain iconic locations ― the Statue of Liberty, the Empire State Building, Greenwich Village, Times Square. But even natives are unfamiliar with some areas of the city, and the Wallabout neighborhood is firmly among the obscure.

    The area borders three districts burgeoning with new historic and commercial interests ― Fort Greene, Clinton Hill and the Brooklyn Navy Yard ― but even its closest neighbors don’t know Wallabout’s name or its story.

    The name comes from the location; this section of Brooklyn is built on a parcel of land purchased in 1637 from the Dutch West India Trading Company by Walloon (Belgian) Jansen de Rapeljein. The river inlet bordering his land became known as Wallabout Bay (from Waal Boght, “Bay of Walloons”).

    During the 1700s, Wallabout Bay was the site of one of the greatest tragedies of the American Revolution when 11,000 men died on British prison ships moored in the East River. Most of their corpses were thrown overboard and, for many years afterwards, their bones washed up on the muddy shore.

    Five years after the establishment of the United States, the first shipyard was built on Wallabout Bay. In 1801 the federal government purchased the land and the shipping works and established what would come to be known as the Brooklyn Navy Yard.

    As the shipyard developed, commercial interests related to the docks began to spring up in the surrounding area, resulting in factories and warehouses for the goods being shipped and low-cost housing and taverns for the shipworkers. Those bustling streets, just beyond the walls of the Navy Yard, were dubbed the Wallabout district.

    There was never a reason for tourists to flock to this modest, hidden neighborhood. This was never a fashionable location. The houses, while often attractive and comfortable, were never populated by socialites or bankers; the shops, while serviceable, never included fine jewelers or chic dressmakers; the amenities, while adequate, never featured museums or theatres.

    The houses here were always, in every respect, in the shadows of the shipyards, warehouses and factories. Because the district was defined by industry, not ethnicity or economic status, it lacks a clearly defined culture and identity.

    Two major events transformed Wallabout and led it even deeper into obscurity: first, in the 1940s, World War II, great swathes of the industrial area (including most of the Dutch-style marketplace) were torn down to make way for America’s urgently expanded shipbuilding efforts; secondly, in the 1960s, the construction of the massive Brooklyn-Queens Expressway (BQE), during which block after block of housing was razed in the name of “progress” and “slum clearance.” The building of the BQE not only destroyed streets and houses, it eliminated an source of public transportation, bisected the area and cut neighbor off from neighbor.

    Today, a small band of activists and advocates are working to have Wallabout named as a Landmark district. This designation would help homeowners restore some of Brooklyn’s oldest wood framed houses, which today are often decaying and crumbling, while preserving more of the area’s rapidly disappearing industrial landscape.

    Ironically, the most neglected houses in Wallabout are also among those most likely to still retain their original architectural details; their owners, either through neglect or lack or resources, failed to follow the lead of neighbors who have stripped away delicate ironwork, hidden carved stone under vinyl siding, replaced stained glass with factory-made windows and, strangely enough, covered solid bricks with brick veneers and layers of stucco.

    Today’s tour, led by an historic preservationist from the Pratt Institute, working with the Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn Partnership, took us past former candy factories and cold-storage warehouses, charming cottages and crumbling churches, tidy homes and neglected gardens, empty lots, litter-strewn housing projects and well-maintained apartment buildings.

    At the end of the program, the group turned onto Ryerson Street, site of the last surviving home of America’s greatest poet, Walt Whitman. There, we were greeted by representatives of the Walt Whitman Project, who ― to the surprise and delight of the tour group and the area’s residents ― read to us from the 1856 edition of Whitman’s masterpiece, Leaves of Grass.


    The sum of all known reverence I add up in you, whoever you are;
    The President is there in the White House for you–it is not you who are
    here for him;
    The Secretaries act in their bureaus for you–not you here for them;
    The Congress convenes every twelfth month for you;
    Laws, courts, the forming of States, the charters of cities, the going and
    coming of commerce and mails, are all for you.List close, my scholars dear!
    All doctrines, all politics and civilisation, exsurge from you;
    All sculpture and monuments, and anything inscribed anywhere, are tallied in you;
    The gist of histories and statistics, as far back as the records reach, is in you this hour, and myths and tales the same;
    If you were not breathing and walking here, where would they all be?
    The most renowned poems would be ashes, orations and plays would be vacuums.

    All architecture is what you do to it when you look upon it;
    Did you think it was in the white or grey stone? or the lines of the arches and cornices?

    All music is what awakes from you, when you are reminded by the instruments;
    It is not the violins and the cornets–it is not the oboe nor the beating drums, nor the score of the baritone singer singing his sweet romanza–nor that of the men’s chorus, nor that of the women’s chorus,
    It is nearer and farther than they.


    Heading into the ‘hood under the BQE Posted by Picasa


    The grandest house in the neighborhood Posted by Picasa


    The shabbiest house in the neighborhood Posted by Picasa


    Few awnings remain in the old marketplace Posted by Picasa


    A warehouse with an awning and terracotta tiles Posted by Picasa


    77 Clinton Ave., former bakery building Posted by Picasa


    Site of the Rockwell Candy factory Posted by Picasa


    The site of former stables on Waverly Ave. Posted by Picasa


    Vinyl siding covers a wooden house Posted by Picasa


    Left, brick & ironwork; Right, brick veneer Posted by Picasa


    The last remaining tenement Posted by Picasa


    A brick & brownstone doorway Posted by Picasa


    Apartment building doorway carved with dragons Posted by Picasa


    An original doorway and glass-paned door Posted by Picasa


    A rotting front stoop Posted by Picasa


    99 Ryerson Street, Walt Whitman’s house Posted by Picasa

  • OHNY
  • Prison Ships In Wallabout Bay
  • Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn Partnership
  • Pratt Institute
  • Fort Greene & Clinton Hill Places of Interest
  • Andrew Cusak: Wallabout Market
  • Gowanus Lounge: Wallabout Update
  • The Walt Whitman Project
  • Fort Greene Park Conservancy
  • Clinton Hill Blog
  • NYC Roads: Brooklyn-Queens Expressway

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