Downtowngallerymap May/June 2021 Lower East Side • Soho • Tribeca

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Downtowngallerymap May/June 2021 Lower East Side • Soho • Tribeca DOWNTOWNGALLERYMAP MAY/JUNE 2021 LOWER EAST SIDE • SOHO • TRIBECA downtowngallerymap.com / [email protected] 1 DOWNTOWNGALLERYMAP MAY/JUNE 2021 LOWER EAST SIDE • SOHO • TRIBECA Please check with individual carriage trade Elizabeth Houston Gallery International Center of Photography galleries for their visiting thru Jun 13: Hearts and Minds thru Jul 9: Robyn Day thru Aug 25: But Still, It Turns: Recent procedures. 277 Grand St. 2nd Fl. (Forsyth + Eldridge) 190 Orchard St. (Houston + Stanton) Photography from the World carriagetrade.org | (718) 483 - 0815 elizabethhoustongallery.com 79 Essex St. (Delancey + Broome) Thu - Sun 1 - 6 (646) 918 - 6462 | Tue - Sat 11 - 6 icp.org | (212) 857 - 0000 LOWER EAST SIDE Thu - Sun 11 - 7 Cindy Rucker Gallery Equity Gallery 601Artspace May 12 - Jun 19: Carlos Sandoval de thru May 22: Rapture: A Queer Taste for Jack Hanley see gallery website for exhibition info Leon Color, Texture and Decorative Pattern thru May 8: Emily Mullin 88 Eldridge St. (Hester and Grand) 143B Orchard St. (@ Rivington) May 26 – 30: Eye Contact May 13 – Jun 12: Best in Show 601Artspace.org | (212) 243 - 2735 cindyruckergallery.com | (212) 388 - 9311 Jun 3 –12: 6 x 9 - Spring Fundraiser 327 Broome St. (Bowery + Chrystie) Thu - Sun 1 - 6 Wed - Sat 12- 6 & by appt. Jun 16 – Jul 10: NYAE Curatorial jackhanley.com | (646) 918 - 6824 Residency Program Exhibition Tue - Sat 11 - 6 Andrew Edlin Gallery The Clemente Center 245 Broome St. (Orchard + Ludlow) thru May 8: Beverly Buchanan | thru May 22: Good & Bad Government nyartistsequity.org | (931) 410 - 0020 James Cohan Gallery Abigail DeVille 107 Suffolk St. Rivington + Delancey) Wed - Fri 11 - 6, Sat 12 - 6 - thru Jun 12: Josiah McElheny May 13 – Jun 26: Parallel Phenomena theclementecenter.org | (212) 260 - 4080 291 Grand St. ( @ Eldridge ) 212 Bowery (Prince + Spring) Wed - Sun 12 - 7 Fort Makers jamescohan.com | (212) 714 - 9500 edlingallery.com | (212) 206 - 9723 thru May 27: Goodnight House Tue - Sat 10 - 6, appointments encouraged Tue - Sat 10 - 6 Cristin Tierney Jul 8 – Sep 16: BANANA thru Jun 12: John Wood + Paul Harrison 38 Orchard St. (@Hester) Klaus von Nichtssagend Gallery Arsenal Contemporary Jun 18 – Aug 6 - Joan Linder + Maureen fortmakers.com | (917) 588 - 4533 thru May 15: Donna Chung | Graham thru May 15: Samantha Rosenwald O’Leary Tue - Sat 12 - 7, Sun 12 - 6 by appt only Anderson contact gallery for next exhibition info 219 Bowery, 2nd Fl. (Stanton + Rivington) call (917) 960 -1690 May 21 – Jun 26: Jennifer J. Lee | 214 Bowery (Prince + Spring) cristintierney.com | (212) 594 - 0550 Heart Murmurs arsenalcontemporary.com | (212) 658 - 0017 Tue - Wed by appt , Thu - Fri 10 - 6, Sat 12 - 6 François Ghebaly 54 Ludlow St. (Grand + Hester) Wed - Sun 11 - 6 May 5 – Jun 7: The Future in Present Tense klausgallery.com | (212) 777-7756 Cuchifritos 389 Grand St. (Essex + Clinton) Tue - Sat 11 - 6 Betty Cuningham thru May 29: Systems Entwined ghebaly.com | (646) 559 - 9400 thru May 22: John Lees Jun 4 – Aug 7: Dominique Duroseau Tue - Sat 12 - 6 Lichtundfire Jun + Jul: Andrew Forge 88 Essex St. (@ Delancey inside Essex Market) thru May 22: EXPANDING SPACE 15 Rivington St. (Bowery + Chrystie) artistsallianceinc.org | (212) 420 - 9209 FROSCH & CO May 26 – Jun 19: ABSTRACT SINGULARITY bettycuninghamgallery.com Tue - Sun 12 - 6 & by appt. thru Jun 6: Jerry Kearns 175 Rivington St. (Clinton + Attorney) (212) 242 - 2772 | Tue - Sat 10 - 6 Jun 10 – Jul 18: Vicki Sher lichtundfire.com | (917) 675 - 7835 David Lewis 34 E. Broadway (Catherine + Market) Wed - Sat 12 - 6, Sun by appointment bitforms gallery May 7 – Jun 30: Barbara Bloom froschportmann.com | (646) 820 - 9068 May 1 – Jun 12: Jonathan Monaghan 88 Eldridge St. 5th Fl. (Grand + Hester) Wed - Sun 12 - 6 L’INCONNUE 131 Allen St. (Rivington + Delancey) davidlewisgallery.com | (212) 966 - 7990 thru Jun 12: Emily Ludwig Shaffer & bitforms.art | (212) 366 - 6939 Tue - Sat 11 - 6 Geary Contemporary Françoise Grossen Tue - Sat11 - 5:30 reservations encouraged May 14 – Jun 26: Roberto Visani 211 Madison St. (Madison & Rutgers) Derek Eller Gallery 208 Bowery ( Prince + Spring) linconnue.biz | Wed - Sat 12 - 6 Bodega thru May 29: EJ Hauser geary.nyc | (212) 242 - 0185 May – Jun: Kern Samuel Jun 3 – Jul 2: David Korty Tue - Wed by appointment, Thu - Sat 11 - 6 Lyles & King 167 Rivington St. (Clinton + Attorney) 300 Broome St. (Eldridge + Forsyth) thru May 29: Natalie Frank bodega-us.org derekeller.com | (212) 206 - 6411 Hashimoto Contemporary Jun 5 – Jul 3: In Praise of Shadows, Wed -Sat 12 - 6 Tue - Sat 11 - 6 & by appointment thru May 8: Augustine Kofie curated by Ebony L. Hayes Jun 19 – Jul 10: Corey Lamb 21 Catherine St. (E. Broadway + Henry) Bridget Donahue Downs & Ross 210 Rivington St. (Ridge + Pitt) lylesandking.com | (646) 484 - 5478 thru May 8: Monique Mouton thru Jun 19: Ivy Haldeman hashimotocontemporary.com Tue - Sat 1 - 6, Sun 12 - 6 May 15 – Jul 10: Satoshi Kojima Jun 24 – Jul 31: Douglas Watt (212) 477- 4759 | Tues - Sat 10 - 6 by appt only 99 Bowery, 2nd Fl. (Grand + Hester) 96 Bowery, 2nd Fl. (Grand + Hester) Marc Straus bridgetdonahue.nyc | (646) 896 - 1368 downsross.com | (646) 741-9138 High Noon thru Jun 25: José Carlos Martinat Wed - Sat 12 - 6 Wed - Sat 11 - 6 thru May 16: Theresa Hackett May 20 – Jun 25: Jong Oh May 20 – Jun 27: Bobbie Oliver Jun 9 – Jul 30: Summer Group Show Callicoon Fine Arts Ed. Varie 124 Forsyth St. (Delancey + Broome) 299 Grand St. (Allen + Eldridge) see gallery website for exhibition info thru May 20: Pot Shop @both locations hignoongallery.com | (760) 519 -1956 marcstraus.com | (212) 510 - 7646 49 Delancey St. (Forsyth + Eldridge) Jun: NDR NW MGMT @184 E 7th St. | Wed - Sun 12 - 7 Wed - Sun 11- 6 and by appointment callicoonfinearts.com | (212) 219 - 0326 Petit Fair @Full Tank Moto Cafe Wed - Sun 10:30 - 6:30 contact gallery for details The Hole Martos Gallery 184 E. 7th St. (Ave B + Ave C) thru May 9: Nature Morte May 5 – Jun 12: Joel Otterson + Chuck CANDICE MADEY 49 Monroe St (Market + Mechanics Alley) May 20 – Jun 20: Jonny Niesche + Nanney thru May 21: Darrel Ellis | Carrie edvarie.com | (917) 399 - 6498 | Thu - Sun 12 - 6 Michael Staniak | Eric Yankher 41 Elizabeth St. (Hester + Canal) Schneider 312 Bowery (Bleecker + East 1st) martosgallery.com | (212) 560 - 0670 contact gallery for next exhibition info theholenyc.com | (212) 466-1100 Tue - Sat 10 - 6 1 Rivington St., 2nd fl. (@Bowery) Wed Sun 12 - 7 candicemadey.com Thu - Sat 11 - 6 & by appt. downtowngallerymap.com / [email protected] 2 DOWNTOWNGALLERYMAP MAY/JUNE 2021 LOWER EAST SIDE • SOHO • TRIBECA Massey Klein Gallery PROXYCO SPACE776 Tibor de Nagy Gallery May 7 – Jun 19: Kate McQuillen see gallery website for exhibition info thru May 12: LIU Post MFA show May – June: assume vivid astro focus Jun 25 – Jul 31: Kevin Francis 121 Orchard St. (Rivington + Delancey) May 14 – 19: Jourdain Lee 11 Rivington St. (Chrystie + Bowery) 124 Forsyth St. (Delancey + Broome) proxycogallery.com | (347) 842 - 6458 May 21 – June 16: Liz-n-Val tibordenagy.com | (212) 262 - 5050 masseyklein.com | (917) 261 - 4657 Tue – Sat 11 - 6 & by appointment Jun 17 – 30: Studio KYSH Tues - Sat 10 - 6, Sun by appointment Mon - Thu by appt. only, Fri - Sun 12 - 5 37- 39 Clinton St. (Rivington + Stanton) Rachel Uffner Gallery space776.com | (718) 578 -1195 TOTAH McKenzie Fine Art thru June 5: Arghavan Khosravi | Tue - Sun 12 - 6 thru June: Mara De Luca thru May 9: Reed Danziger Touch, curated by Augusto Arbizo 183 Stanton St. (Clinton + Attorney) May 14 – Jun 27: Don Voisine 170 Suffolk St. (Houston + Stanton) SPANTZO davidtotah.com | (212) 582 - 6111 55 Orchard St. (Grand + Hester) racheluffnergallery.com | (212) 274 - 0064 thru May 9: Mohamed Khalil, Tue - Sat 11 - 6 mckenziefineart.com | (212) 989 - 5467 Wed - Fri 10 - 6, Sat - Sun 11 - 6 Elizabeth Riley Wed - Sat 11 - 6, Sun 12 - 6 May 20 – June 13: DESTROY ALL MONSTERS Trotter&Sholer Real Pain/More Pain Jun 17 – Jul 11: MIGHTY JOY thru Jun 9: Derek Weisberg Milton Resnick and Pat Passlof Foundation May 1– 29: Marc Librizzi 138 Eldridge St. (Delancey + Broome) Jun 19 – Jul 17: Our New York Times thru Oct 23: Guy Goodwin May 1– 29: Larissa De Jesús Negrón spantzo.com | (646) 609 - 2400 168 Suffolk St. (Houston + Stanton) May 15 – Oct 23: Midge Wattles May 8 – Aug 1: Alix Vernet @NADA Tue - Sun 12 - 6 trotterandsholer.com | (646) 684 - 9304 87 Eldridge St. (Grand + Hester) House, Governors Island Wed - Sun 12 - 6 resnickpasslof.org | (646) 559 - 2513 30 Orchard St. (Hester + Canal) Spencer Brownstone Gallery Thu - Sat 11 - 6 realpain.com | (212) 970 - 3284 thru Jun 20: Katie Bell VAN DER PLAS GALLERY Thu - Sun 12 - 8 appt. recommended 170-A Suffolk St. (Houston + Stanton) thru May 9: Scot Borofsky Mizuma & Kips spencerbrownstonegallery.com opening May 14: Ultra Local thru May 9: Multifariousness RICHARD TAITTINGER GALLERY (212) 334 - 3455 | Wed - Sun 10 - 6 Jun: S. Huggland + K.Wendall aka FA-Q May 12 – Jun 5: Jeffrey Brosk thru May16: NARRATIVE FIGURATION 156 Orchard St. (Stanton + Rivington) Jun 9 – Jul 3: JM Haessle 60s - 70s Sperone Westwater vanderplasgallery.com | (212) 227 - 8983 324-B Grand St. (Orchard + Ludlow) May 27 – Jul 25: Frances Goodman thru May 29: John Giorno Sun - Wed 11 - 5, Thu - Sat 11 - 7 mizumakipswadaart.com | (516) 882 - 4411 154 Ludlow St. (Stanton + Rivington) June: Group Show Wed - Sun 12 - 6 richardtaittinger.com | (212) 634 - 7154 257 Bowery (Houston + Stanton) Voltz Clarke Gallery Tue - Sun 11 - 7 contact gallery for speronewestwater.com | (212) 999 - 7338 thru Jun 16: Uzo Njoku Museum at Eldridge Street appointment Tue - Sat 10 - 6 opening Jun 17: LADIES FIRST contact museum for exhibition info 195 Chrystie St.
Recommended publications
  • 9/12 at Barnes & Noble, Tribeca, NYC October Benefit
    12 Upcoming Events 2015 Non-Profit Organization 6th Annual U.S. Postage Read-a-Thon – 9/12 Paid P.O. Box 354 • Mill Neck, NY 11765 at Barnes & Noble, Mill Neck, NY a public 501 (c)(3) charity Permit 3 Tribeca, NYC www.brookejackmanfoundation.org “A Celebration of Literacy and Hope” on Saturday, September 12. October Benefit – 10/15 at the Mandarin Oriental Please save the date for the fall reception – Thursday, October 15, at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel, New York City. Guest Chefs, Silent & Live Auctions, & more! “Books are the quietest and most constant of friends; they are the most accessible and wisest of counsellors, and the most patient of teachers.” – Charles W. Eliot h “Dear Ms Erin Jackman – The Lord bless you and your family. People like you are what we need in this world.” – Diancarlos Newsletter h 20 15 B “We really liked this program because of the special moments we have lived in our lives. And we had books every week. One show was acting about the 3 pigs and the big bad wolf.” The children we serve . the 5K Run . Bob Jackman Freedom – Merey, Steven and Kelsey Award . newest BJF book. hh MAKING A DIFFERENCE . “Children are the world’s THE CHILDREN WE SERVE most valuable resource and its best hope for the future.” – John Fitzgerald Kennedy Spotlight on What’s New Brooke’s Cooks Expands! “Alone we can do so little, together we can do so much.” ’s newest initiative is the Brooke’s Cooks program – which aims to – Helen Keller BJF advance literacy skills among at-risk children through cooking workshops and demonstra - tions.
    [Show full text]
  • Soho Arts Network Soho Arts Network Map of Nonprofit Art Spaces
    SoHo Arts Network 1 apexart 291 Church St. 11 International Center 250 Bowery 212 . 431 . 5270 of Photography Museum 212 . 857 . 0000 Tue – Sat: 11am – 6pm Tues – Sun: 10am – 6pm apexart.org *Thu open until 9pm $14, $12 for seniors, 2 Artists Space 55 Walker St. $10 for students, free for members Books & Talks 212 . 226 . 3970 and children under 14 Wed – Sun: 12 – 6pm icp.org artistsspace.org 12 Judd Foundation 101 Spring St. 3 Center for Architecture, 536 LaGuardia Pl. 212 . 219 . 2747 AIA New York Chapter 212 . 683 . 0023 Visits by appointment Mon – Fri: 9am – 8pm, Tue, Thu, and Fri: 1pm, 3pm, and 5pm Sat: 11am – 5pm Sat: 11am, 1pm, 2pm, and 4pm centerforarchitecture.org $24, $11.50 for students and seniors, free for high school students 4 CIMA – Center for Italian 421 Broome St., 4th fl. juddfoundation.org Modern Art 646 . 370 . 3596 Fri – Sat 13 Leslie-Lohman Museum 26 Wooster St. Tours: 11am and 2pm, of Gay and Lesbian Art 212 . 431 . 2609 Open hours: 1 – 6pm Wed – Sun: 12 – 6pm $10, free for members and students *Thu open until 8pm *Advance registration recommended $9 suggested donation italianmodernart.org leslielohman.org 5 Dia: The Broken 393 West Broadway 14 Museum of Chinese 215 Centre St. Kilometer 212 . 925 . 9397 in America 212 . 619 . 4785 Wed – Sun: 12 – 6pm (closed 3 – 3:30pm) Tue – Sun: 11am – 6pm diaart.org *Thu open until 9pm $10, $7 for seniors and students, free 6 Dia: The New York 141 Wooster St. for members and cool culture families SoHo Arts Network Earth Room 646 .
    [Show full text]
  • Your Concise New York Art Guide for Spring 2018
    Your Concise New York Art Guide for Spring 2018 February 28, 2018 Events Your list of 45 must-see, fun, insightful, and very New York art events this season. Leonard Fink, “Self-Portrait on Pier 46 (“This is Serious Too”)” (1979), silver gelatin print, 8 x 10 in (collection and © of the LGBT Community Center National History Archive) We’re back with our yearly spring guide of must-see, fun, insightful, and very New York art events. From museum shows to air fairs to film festivals, you’ll have plenty to keep you busy with this season. Please note that some of the exhibitions listed here opened in January and February, but lucky for us they continue through the spring. January The Beautiful Brain: The Drawings of Santiago Ramon y Cajal and Baya: Woman of Algiers When: January 9–March 31 Where: Grey Art Gallery (100 Washington Square East, Greenwich Village, Manhattan) The Grey Art Gallery is putting on two fascinating and very distinct exhibitions this season. One displays neuroscientist Santiago Ramon y Cajal’s drawings of the brain, which are not only beautiful but remarkably clear and accurate. Eighty of his drawings, which date to the late 19th and early 20th centuries, will be shown alongside contemporary visualizations of the brain. The gallery’s second exhibition is devoted to Baya Mahieddine (known as Baya), an Algerian artist who has yet to gain international recognition. Her vibrant, patterned gouaches Baya, “Femme et enfant en bleu (Woman and child in blue)” (1947) and ceramics drew the attention gouache on board, 22 3/4 x 17 7/8 in (Collection Isabelle Maeght, Paris © of André Breton, Henri Matisse, Photo Galerie Maeght, Paris) and Pablo Picasso.
    [Show full text]
  • Reinventing, Downtown
    Reinventing, Downtown By XICO GREENWALD | June 24, 2017 Abstract Expressionists Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock and Franz Kline urged a pair of friends to start an art gallery. Tibor de Nagy and John Bernard Myers followed their advice and, in 1950, on East 53rd Street, they opened the Tibor de Nagy Gallery. MEDRIE MACPHEE A Dream of Peace, 2017 oil and mixed media on canvas, 60 x 78 inches In the years to come, Mr. Myers and Mr. de Nagy would exhibit works by a number of second-generation Abstract Expressionists, including Alfred Leslie, Grace Hartigan, Robert Goodnough and Helen Frankenthaler. They also showed figurative paintings by the likes of Larry Rivers, Jane Freilicher, Fairfield Porter and Red Grooms. And Tibor de Nagy editions, the gallery’s book imprint, published poetry by Frank O’Hara, John Ashbery, Barbara Guest and others. Mr. Myers left the gallery in 1970. By that time, Tibor de Nagy had relocated to the 57th Street gallery district. When Mr. de Nagy died in 1993, he bequeathed his business to two young gallery assistants, Eric Brown and Andrew Arnot. Over the next 24 years, Mr. Arnot and Mr. Brown built on the gallery’s legacy together, exhibiting New York School pictures alongside works by select contemporary artists influenced by New York School poets and painters. But in the fast-paced New York art world, perhaps the only constant is change. Mr. Brown departed from the gallery this year. And now Mr. Arnot has relocated Tibor de Nagy to the Lower East Side, partnering with Betty Cuningham Gallery in a space-sharing agreement.
    [Show full text]
  • TRIBECA NYC PREMIER CORNER RETAIL LEASING OPPORTUNITY up to 3,383 SF Y a W D a O B R T WE S Location NORTHEAST CORNER of WEST BROADWAY & WARREN STREET
    TRIBECA NYC PREMIER CORNER RETAIL LEASING OPPORTUNITY UP TO 3,383 SF Y A W D A O R B T S WE location NORTHEAST CORNER OF WEST BROADWAY & WARREN STREET size BROADWAY GROUND FLOOR 3,383 SF DIVISIBLE LOWER LEVEL 3,663 SF DIVISIBLE WEST frontage WEST BROADWAY 73’9” WARREN STREET 36’4” ceiling heights GROUND FLOOR UP TO 13’1” LOWER LEVEL UP TO 8’8” possession IMMEDIATE site status SN LASHES & LE PAIN QUOTIDIEN neighboring tenants STARBUCKS EQUINOX WHOLE FOODS SMYTH HOTEL EQUINOX THE FREDERICK HOTEL CAPITAL ONE SOULCYCLE TARGET TRACEY ANDERSON SERAFINA THE FOUR SEASONS the HOTEL space Combination of downtown cool and sophistication, TriBeCa is where locals and visitors intersect. A true neighborhood, offering eclectic retail and dining, affluent residential and dense daytime population, boutique hotels and fitness services. MEDIAN HH INCOME MEDIAN AGE AREA EMPLOYEES RESIDENTS BROADWAY 193,423 39,146 $200,001 35.1 WEST D’OREGANO 1 NEW YORK URBAN FAX BAR BILLYS ACADEMY BAKERY CINEMA OF ART KORI TRIBECA ODYSSEY KATAOKA JEWELRY SQUARE 53 LEONARD DINER CONDOS GHOST RIDER 56 LEONARD CAFE 88 LEONARD NEW YORK HOT & COOL LAW SCHOOL APARTMENTS MON CHER THE MARKET WASHINGTON SARAH MARKET SCHOOL MILLS HAIR BEAUTY BAR NYC CORRECTION SCALINI DEPARTMENT FEDLI VCAFE GIORGIA FOURTEENJAY THE ODEON 68 THOMAS CONDOS TINY’S & THE WEATHER UP BAR UPSTAIRS TRIBECAGIRLS BALLOON TRIBECA’S TRIBECA TOWER TOKYO SALOON TAKAHACHI KITCHEN BAY DUANE STREET A UNO TRIBECA SKIN LAUNDRY HUDSON STREET LANCE LAPPIN THE ARMOURY THE NISH NUSH READE STREET SUN IN BLOOM Washington THE
    [Show full text]
  • Lower Manhattan
    WASHINGTON STREET IS 131/ CANAL STREETCanal Street M1 bus Chinatown M103 bus M YMCA M NQRW (weekday extension) HESTER STREET M20 bus Canal St Canal to W 147 St via to E 125 St via 103 20 Post Office 3 & Lexington Avs VESTRY STREET to W 63 St/Bway via Street 5 & Madison Avs 7 & 8 Avs VARICK STREET B= YORK ST AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS 6 only6 Canal Street Firehouse ACE LISPENARD STREET Canal Street D= LAIGHT STREET HOLLAND AT&T Building Chinatown JMZ CANAL STREET TUNNEL Most Precious EXIT Health Clinic Blood Church COLLISTER STREET CANAL STREET WEST STREET Beach NY Chinese B BEACH STStreet Baptist Church 51 Park WALKER STREET St Barbara Eldridge St Manhattan Express Bus Service Chinese Greek Orthodox Synagogue HUDSON STREET ®0= Merchants’ Fifth Police Church Precinct FORSYTH STREET 94 Association MOTT STREET First N œ0= to Lower Manhattan ERICSSON PolicePL Chinese BOWERY Confucius M Precinct ∑0= 140 Community Plaza Center 22 WHITE ST M HUBERT STREET M9 bus to M PIKE STREET X Grand Central Terminal to Chinatown84 Eastern States CHURCH STREET Buddhist Temple Union Square 9 15 BEACH STREET Franklin Civic of America 25 Furnace Center NY Chinatown M15 bus NORTH MOORE STREET WEST BROADWAY World Financial Center Synagogue BAXTER STREET Transfiguration Franklin Archive BROADWAY NY City Senior Center Kindergarten to E 126 St FINN Civil & BAYARD STREET Asian Arts School FRANKLIN PL Municipal via 1 & 2 Avs SQUARE STREET CENTRE Center X Street Courthouse Upper East Side to FRANKLIN STREET CORTLANDT ALLEY 1 Buddhist Temple PS 124 90 Criminal Kuan Yin World
    [Show full text]
  • The Artist and the American Land
    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Sheldon Museum of Art Catalogues and Publications Sheldon Museum of Art 1975 A Sense of Place: The Artist and the American Land Norman A. Geske Director at Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, University of Nebraska- Lincoln Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/sheldonpubs Geske, Norman A., "A Sense of Place: The Artist and the American Land" (1975). Sheldon Museum of Art Catalogues and Publications. 112. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/sheldonpubs/112 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Sheldon Museum of Art at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Sheldon Museum of Art Catalogues and Publications by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. VOLUME I is the book on which this exhibition is based: A Sense at Place The Artist and The American Land By Alan Gussow Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 79-154250 COVER: GUSSOW (DETAIL) "LOOSESTRIFE AND WINEBERRIES", 1965 Courtesy Washburn Galleries, Inc. New York a s~ns~ 0 ac~ THE ARTIST AND THE AMERICAN LAND VOLUME II [1 Lenders - Joslyn Art Museum ALLEN MEMORIAL ART MUSEUM, OBERLIN COLLEGE, Oberlin, Ohio MUNSON-WILLIAMS-PROCTOR INSTITUTE, Utica, New York AMERICAN REPUBLIC INSURANCE COMPANY, Des Moines, Iowa MUSEUM OF ART, THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY, University Park AMON CARTER MUSEUM, Fort Worth MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, BOSTON MR. TOM BARTEK, Omaha NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART, Washington, D.C. MR. THOMAS HART BENTON, Kansas City, Missouri NEBRASKA ART ASSOCIATION, Lincoln MR. AND MRS. EDMUND c.
    [Show full text]
  • Article 80 Small Project Review Application 420 West Broadway
    Article 80 Small Project Review Application 420 West Broadway Residential Development 420 West Broadway SouthExhibit Boston, 9 MA 02127 West Broadway Street Perspective West Broadway Theatre LLC McDermott Quilty & Miller LLP RODE Architects Inc. 420 West Broadway 420 West Broadway Mixed Use Development RODE Architects, Inc. 420 West Broadway, South Boston, MA 02127 23 McDERMOTT QUILTY & MILLER LLP 28 STATE STREET, SUITE 802 30 ROWES WHARF, SUITE 600 BOSTON, MA 02109 BOSTON, MA 02110 January 10, 2017 Brian Golden, Director Boston Planning and Development Agency One City Hall Square Boston, MA 02201-1007 Attn: John Campbell Re: Article 80 Small Project Review Application/420 W Broadway, South Boston Dear Director Golden: As counsel to West Broadway Theatre, LLC, the owner-developer of the above- referenced property (the “Project Proponent”), I am pleased to submit the enclosed application for Article 80 Small Project Review. The proposed project consists of the redevelopment of the former Broadway Theatre property, including demolition and replacement of the main portion of the existing structure and construction of a new 44,000 gross s/f building, with 42 residential units in six-stories of building above 42 underground/garaged parking spaces accessed by Athens Street, approximately 1,350 gross s/f of ground level Local Retail space in a restored 2- story section of the existing building on West Broadway; roof deck above, side and rear balcony open space and related site, pedestrian and vehicular access improvements (collectively, the “Proposed
    [Show full text]
  • God in Chinatown
    RELIGION, RACE, AND ETHNICITY God in Chinatown General Editor: Peter J. Paris Religion and Survival in New York's Public Religion and Urban Transformation: Faith in the City Evolving Immigrant Community Edited by Lowell W. Livezey Down by the Riverside: Readings in African American Religion Edited by Larry G. Murphy New York Glory: Kenneth ]. Guest Religions in the City Edited by Tony Carnes and Anna Karpathakis Religion and the Creation of Race and Ethnicity: An Introduction Edited by Craig R. Prentiss God in Chinatown: Religion and Survival in New York's Evolving Immigrant Community Kenneth J. Guest 111 New York University Press NEW YORK AND LONDON NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS For Thomas Luke New York and London www.nyupress.org © 2003 by New York University All rights reserved All photographs in the book, including the cover photos, have been taken by the author. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Guest, Kenneth J. God in Chinatown : religion and survival in New York's evolving immigrant community I Kenneth J. Guest. p. em.- (Religion, race, and ethnicity) Includes bibliographical references (p. 209) and index. ISBN 0-8147-3153-8 (cloth) - ISBN 0-8147-3154-6 (paper) 1. Immigrants-Religious life-New York (State)-New York. 2. Chinese Americans-New York (State )-New York-Religious life. 3. Chinatown (New York, N.Y.) I. Title. II. Series. BL2527.N7G84 2003 200'.89'95107471-dc21 2003000761 New York University Press books are printed on acid-free paper, and their binding materials are chosen for strength and durability. Manufactured in the United States of America 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Chinatown and the Fuzhounese 37 36 Chinatown and the Fuzhounese have been quite successful, it also includes many individuals who are ex­ tremely desperate financially and emotionally.
    [Show full text]
  • Soho Arts Network
    Downtown Culture Walk is a self-guided walking tour SoHo Arts Network SoHo Arts Network presented by the SoHo Arts Network (SAN), highlighting 1 the nonprofit art spaces in the SoHo and downtown Downtown Culture Walk neighborhoods. SAN celebrates the rich history of our nyartmaps.com unique creative community and collectively shares our Saturday, April 27, 2019 distinct cultural contributions with neighborhood residents 12 – 6pm and visitors. On April 27, members of SAN will open their doors for Downtown Culture Walk, inviting participants 3 2 to discover the nonprofit art spaces in the neighborhood. Walkthroughs, talks, open hours, and other programming 4 will be offered that day for free or reduced admission. Map courtesy of NY Art Maps, NY of Map courtesy 5 6 1. Swiss Institute 11. Dia: The Broken 38 St. Marks Pl. Kilometer 7 8 393 West Broadway 9 2. The Sylvia Wald DOWNTOWN & Po Kim Art Gallery 12. Storefront for Art 417 Lafayette St., 4th floor and Architecture 97 Kenmare St. CU LT UR E 3. Grey Art Gallery New York University 13. The Drawing Center 100 Washington Sq. East 35 Wooster St. 10 WA LK 4. 80 Washington 14. CIMA - Center for 11 Square East Italian Modern Art 12 New York University 421 Broome St., 4th floor 5. AIA New York | Center 15. Leslie-Lohman Museum for Architecture of Gay and Lesbian Art 536 LaGuardia Pl. 26 Wooster St. 14 13 6. The Renee & Chaim 16. Museum of Chinese Gross Foundation in America 526 LaGuardia Pl. 215 Centre St. 17 15 7. Dia: The New York 17.
    [Show full text]
  • The Decline of New York City Nightlife Culture Since the Late 1980S
    1 Clubbed to Death: The Decline of New York City Nightlife Culture Since the Late 1980s Senior Thesis by Whitney Wei Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of BA Economic and Social History Barnard College of Columbia University New York, New York 2015 2 ii. Contents iii. Acknowledgement iv. Abstract v. List of Tables vi. List of Figures I. Introduction……………………………………………………………………7 II. The Limelight…………………………………………………………………12 III. After Dark…………………………………………………………………….21 a. AIDS Epidemic Strikes Clubland……………………..13 b. Gentrification: Early and Late………………………….27 c. The Impact of Gentrification to Industry Livelihood…32 IV. Clubbed to Death …………………………………………………………….35 a. 1989 Zoning Changes to Entertainment Venues…………………………36 b. Scandal, Vilification, and Disorder……………………………………….45 c. Rudy Giuliani and Criminalization of Nightlife………………………….53 V. Conclusion ……………………………………………………………………60 VI. Bibliography………………………………………………………………..…61 3 Acknowledgement I would like to take this opportunity to thank Professor Alan Dye for his wise guidance during this thesis process. Having such a supportive advisor has proven indispensable to the quality of this work. A special thank you to Ian Sinclair of NYC Planning for providing key zoning documents and patient explanations. Finally, I would like to thank the support and contributions of my peers in the Economic and Social History Senior Thesis class. 4 Abstract The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the impact of city policy changes and the processes of gentrification on 1980s nightlife subculture in New York City. What are important to this work are the contributions and influence of nightlife subculture to greater New York City history through fashion, music, and art. I intend to prove that, in combination with the city’s gradual revanchism of neighborhood properties, the self-destructive nature of this after-hours sector has led to its own demise.
    [Show full text]
  • 151 Canal Street, New York, NY
    CHINATOWN NEW YORK NY 151 CANAL STREET AKA 75 BOWERY CONCEPTUAL RENDERING SPACE DETAILS LOCATION GROUND FLOOR Northeast corner of Bowery CANAL STREET SPACE 30 FT Ground Floor 2,600 SF Basement 2,600 SF 2,600 SF Sub-Basement 2,600 SF Total 7,800 SF Billboard Sign 400 SF FRONTAGE 30 FT on Canal Street POSSESSION BASEMENT Immediate SITE STATUS Formerly New York Music and Gifts NEIGHBORS 2,600 SF HSBC, First Republic Bank, TD Bank, Chase, AT&T, Citibank, East West Bank, Bank of America, Industrial and Commerce Bank of China, Chinatown Federal Bank, Abacus Federal Savings Bank, Dunkin’ Donuts, Subway and Capital One Bank COMMENTS Best available corner on Bowery in Chinatown Highest concentration of banks within 1/2 mile in North America, SUB-BASEMENT with billions of dollars in bank deposits New long-term stable ownership Space is in vanilla-box condition with an all-glass storefront 2,600 SF Highly visible billboard available above the building offered to the retail tenant at no additional charge Tremendous branding opportunity at the entrance to the Manhattan Bridge with over 75,000 vehicles per day All uses accepted Potential to combine Ground Floor with the Second Floor Ability to make the Basement a legal selling Lower Level 151151 C anCANALal Street STREET151 Canal Street NEW YORKNew Y |o rNYk, NY New York, NY August 2017 August 2017 AREA FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS/BRANCH DEPOSITS SUFFOLK STREET CLINTON STREET ATTORNEY STREET NORFOLK STREET LUDLOW STREET ESSEX STREET SUFFOLK STREET CLINTON STREET ATTORNEY STREET NORFOLK STREET LEGEND LUDLOW
    [Show full text]