A Guide to Local Shops
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General Information • Landmarks Beyond the obvious crowd-pleasers, New York City landmarks Guggenheim (Map 17) is one of New York’s most unique are super-subjective. One person’s favorite cobblestoned and distinctive buildings (apparently there’s some art alley is some developer’s idea of prime real estate. Bits of old inside, too). The Cathedral of St. John the Divine (Map New York disappear to differing amounts of fanfare and 18) has a very medieval vibe and is the world’s largest make room for whatever it is we’ll be romanticizing in the unfinished cathedral—a much cooler destination than the future. Ain’t that the circle of life? The landmarks discussed eternally crowded St. Patrick’s Cathedral (Map 12). are highly idiosyncratic choices, and this list is by no means complete or even logical, but we’ve included an array of places, from world famous to little known, all worth visiting. Great Public Buildings Once upon a time, the city felt that public buildings should inspire civic pride through great architecture. Coolest Skyscrapers Head downtown to view City Hall (Map 3) (1812), Most visitors to New York go to the top of the Empire State Tweed Courthouse (Map 3) (1881), Jefferson Market Building (Map 9), but it’s far more familiar to New Yorkers Courthouse (Map 5) (1877—now a library), the Municipal from afar—as a directional guide, or as a tip-off to obscure Building (Map 3) (1914), and a host of other court- holidays (orange & white means it’s time to celebrate houses built in the early 20th century. -
New York, New York
EXPOSITION NEW YORK, NEW YORK Cinquante ans d’art, architecture, cinéma, performance, photographie et vidéo Du 14 juillet au 10 septembre 2006 Grimaldi Forum - Espace Ravel INTRODUCTION L’exposition « NEW YORK, NEW YORK » cinquante ans d’art, architecture, cinéma, performance, photographie et vidéo produite par le Grimaldi Forum Monaco, bénéficie du soutien de la Compagnie Monégasque de Banque (CMB), de SKYY Vodka by Campari, de l’Hôtel Métropole à Monte-Carlo et de Bentley Monaco. Commissariat : Lisa Dennison et Germano Celant Scénographie : Pierluigi Cerri (Studio Cerri & Associati, Milano) Renseignements pratiques • Grimaldi Forum : 10 avenue Princesse Grace, Monaco – Espace Ravel. • Horaires : Tous les jours de 10h00 à 20h00 et nocturne les jeudis de 10h00 à 22h00 • Billetterie Grimaldi Forum Tél. +377 99 99 3000 - Fax +377 99 99 3001 – E-mail : [email protected] et points FNAC • Site Internet : www.grimaldiforum.mc • Prix d’entrée : Plein tarif = 10 € Tarifs réduits : Groupes (+ 10 personnes) = 8 € - Etudiants (-25 ans sur présentation de la carte) = 6 € - Enfants (jusqu’à 11 ans) = gratuit • Catalogue de l’exposition (versions française et anglaise) Format : 24 x 28 cm, 560 pages avec 510 illustrations Une coédition SKIRA et GRIMALDI FORUM Auteurs : Germano Celant et Lisa Dennison N°ISBN 88-7624-850-1 ; dépôt légal = juillet 2006 Prix Public : 49 € Communication pour l’exposition : Hervé Zorgniotti – Tél. : 00 377 99 99 25 02 – [email protected] Nathalie Pinto – Tél. : 00 377 99 99 25 03 – [email protected] Contact pour les visuels : Nadège Basile Bruno - Tél. : 00 377 99 99 25 25 – [email protected] AUTOUR DE L’EXPOSITION… Grease Etes-vous partant pour une virée « blouson noir, gomina et look fifties» ? Si c’est le cas, ne manquez pas la plus spectaculaire comédie musicale de l’histoire du rock’n’roll : elle est annoncée au Grimaldi Forum Monaco, pour seulement une semaine et une seule, du 25 au 30 juillet. -
Faculty and Staff Activities 2014–2015
FACULTY AND STAFF ACTIVITIES 2014–2015 COOPER AT ARCHITECTURE Professor Diana Agrest’s film “The Making of an Avant- Assistant Professor Adjunct John Hartmann, co-founder Visiting Professor Joan Ockman was a co-editor for MAS: Garde: The Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies with Lauren Crahan of Freecell Architecture, spoke at The The Modern Architecture Symposia 1962-1966: A Critical Edition 1967-1984” was screened at the Graham Foundation, Hammons School of Architecture at Drury University as part (Yale University Press). The publication was reviewed in Princeton University, Cornell University, UC Berkeley of the 2014-2015 Lecture Series. Architectural Record. She was a presenter at The Building EDITED BY EMMY MIKELSON; DESIGN BY INESSA SHKOLNIKOV, CENTER FOR DESIGN AND TYPOGRAPHY; PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOÃO ENXUTO WITH SPECIAL ASSISTANCE FROM THE SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE ARCHIVE AND ELIZABETH O’DONNELL, ACTING DEAN ARCHIVE AND ELIZABETH O’DONNELL, ACTING FROM THE SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE WITH SPECIAL ASSISTANCE ENXUTO BY JOÃO DESIGN AND TYPOGRAPHY; PHOTOGRAPHY CENTER FOR SHKOLNIKOV, EDITED BY EMMY MIKELSON; DESIGN INESSA College of Environmental Design and followed by a panel Symposium held at Columbia University GSAPP. discussion with Agrest, Nicholas de Monchaux, Sylvia Lavin Director of the School of Architecture Archive, and Stanley Saitowitz, the 10th Annual Cinema Orange Film Steven Hillyer, co-produced Christmas Without Tears, Acting Dean and Professor Elizabeth O’Donnell was the Series, Newport Beach Film Festival at Orange County a four-city tour of holiday-themed variety shows hosted co-chair and delivered the introductory remarks for Museum of Art, the San Diego Design Film Festival, and Cite by Judith Owen and Harry Shearer, which included “The Sultanate of Oman: Geography, Religion and Culture” de l’Architecture in Paris, France, which was followed by a performances by Mario Cantone, Catherine O’Hara, held at The Cooper Union. -
Annual Report 2012
Cover Back Spine: (TBA) Front PMS 032U Knock out Annual Report 2012 LETTER FROM THE MAYOR 4 PART I: 2007–2012: A PERIOD OF AGENCY INNOVATION 11 PART II: AGENCY PORTFOLIO, FY12 37 PROGRAMSERVICES 39 PROGRAM SERVICES AWARD RECIPIENTS 40 CULTURAL DEVELOPMENT FUND PANELISTS 50 CULTURAL AFTER SCHOOL ADVENTURES GRANT RECIPIENTS 53 CULTURAL INSTITUTIONS GROUP 58 CAPITALPROJECTS 63 CAPITAL PROJECTS FUNDED 66 RIBBON CUTTINGS 68 GROUNDBREAKINGS 69 EQUIPMENT PURCHASES 69 COMMUNITY ARTS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM 70 30TH ANNUAL AWARDS FOR EXCELLENCE IN DESIGN RECIPIENTS 71 PERCENT FOR ART PROGRAM 72 MATERIALS FOR THE ARTS 74 RECIPIENTS OF DONATED GOODS 76 PARTICIPATING SCHOOLS IN ARTS EDUCATION PROGRAMS 88 CULTURAL AFFAIRS ADVISORY COMMISSION 90 MAYOR’S AWARDS FOR ARTS AND CULTURE 91 DEPARTMENT OF CULTURAL AFFAIRS STAFF 92 P HO TO CREDITSPHOTO 94 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 95 4 Letter from The Mayor NEW YORK CITY: STRENGTHENING INVESTMENT IN THE ARTS Our City’s cultural organizations are essential arts are to New York City’s vibrancy and to improving to ensuring that New York remains one of the world’s the lives of New Yorkers and visitors from around the great cities. A magnet for talent from around the world, world. In addition, the development of new information our creative community is also a thriving small business technology systems has enabled the Department to track sector that exists in every neighborhood throughout these services and further advocate on behalf of culture’s the five boroughs. That is why our Administration has tremendous impact on our City. made supporting the arts a top priority, and why over And we continue to push boundaries in expanding our the past five years—despite challenging times—we have service to the creative sector. -
Anthology Film Archives 104
242. Sweet Potato PieCl 384. Jerusalem - Hadassah Hospital #2 243. Jakob Kohn on eaver-Leary 385. Jerusalem - Old Peoples Workshop, Golstein Village THE 244. After the Bar with Tony and Michael #1 386. Jerusalem - Damascus Gate & Old City 245. After the Bar with Tony and Michael #2 387. Jerusalem -Songs of the Yeshiva, Rabbi Frank 246. Chiropractor 388. Jerusalem -Tomb of Mary, Holy Sepulchre, Sations of Cross 247. Tosun Bayrak's Dinner and Wake 389. Jerusalem - Drive to Prison 248. Ellen's Apartment #1 390. Jerusalem - Briss 249. Ellen's Apartment #2 391 . European Video Resources 250. Ellen's Apartment #3 392. Jack Moore in Amsterdam 251, Tuli's Montreal Revolt 393. Tajiri in Baarlo, Holland ; Algol, Brussels VIDEOFIiEEX Brussels MEDIABUS " LANESVILLE TV 252. Asian Americans My Lai Demonstration 394. Video Chain, 253. CBS - Cleaver Tapes 395. NKTV Vision Hoppy 254. Rhinoceros and Bugs Bunny 396. 'Gay Liberation Front - London 255. Wall-Gazing 397. Putting in an Eeel Run & A Social Gathering 256. The Actress -Sandi Smith 398. Don't Throw Yer Cans in the Road Skip Blumberg 257. Tai Chi with George 399. Bart's Cowboy Show 258. Coke Recycling and Sheepshead Bay 400. Lanesville Overview #1 259. Miami Drive - Draft Counsel #1 401 . Freex-German TV - Valeska, Albert, Constanza Nancy Cain 260. Draft Counsel #2 402, Soup in Cup 261 . Late Nite Show - Mother #1 403. Lanesville TV - Easter Bunny David Cort 262. Mother #2 404. LanesvilleOverview #2 263. Lenneke and Alan Singing 405. Laser Games 264. LennekeandAlan intheShower 406. Coyote Chuck -WestbethMeeting -That's notRight Bart Friedman 265. -
A Guide to Local Shops
A GUIDE TO EAST VILLAGE LOCAL SHOPS EIGHTH EDITION CAFÉS, ETC. 1 – 56 SHOP LOCAL! BAKERY / CAFE / CANDY & CHOCOLATE / EGG CREAM / ICE CREAM / JUICE BAR / TEA SHOP When you spend your money locally, you... • ENSURE economic diversity and stability • KEEP more of your money in your community FASHION 57 – 163 • CREATE local jobs with fair living wages ACCESSORIES / BRIDAL & FORMAL / CHILDREN’S / CLOTHING • SUSTAIN small business owners / HATS / HOME ACCESSORIES & FURNITURE / JEWELRY / • STRENGTHEN the local economy LEATHER WORK / SHOES / VINTAGE, THRIFT, CONSIGNMENT • DEFEND our neighborhood’s identity and creativity GALLERIES 164 – 175 Get Local! is an initiative of the East Village Community Coalition to help build long-lasting communities that keep our neighborhood unique, independent, and sustainable. GIFTS, ETC. 176 – 193 FLORIST / GIFTS / POTTERY / RELIGIOUS GOODS / TOYS ABOUT EVCC We work to recognize, sustain, and support the architectural HEALTH & BEAUTY 194 – 310 and cultural character of the East Village. BARBER SHOP / CUSTOM PERFUME / DENTAL & MEDICAL EVCC MEMBERS CARE / HAIR SALON / HAIR SUPPLY / OPTICIANS & EYEWEAR / •Advocate for the preservation of local historic resources PHARMACY / SPA / TATTOOS & BODY PIERCING / and significant architecture YOGA, PILATES & FITNESS •Promote Formula Retail regulations to protect small busi- nesses and maintain our diversified, livable neighborhood CULTURE, MUSIC, •Publish the Get Local! Guide to encourage shoppers to & ENTERTAINMENT 311 – 357 support diverse, locally-owned retail AUDIO EQUIPMENT / BOOKS / COMIC BOOKS / CONCERT JOIN US! If you feel as passionately as we do about & EVENT PROMOTION / CULTURAL & ARTS VENUES / FILM / local community in the East Village, join the cause: INSTRUMENTS / NEWSPAPERS & MAGAZINES / POETRY CLUB / RECORDS / VIDEO GAMES / VIDEO RENTAL Become a member Visit evccnyc.org to join. -
Hair Salon / Natural & Alternative / Opticians & Eyewear / Pharmacy / Spa / Tattoos & Body Piercing / Yoga, Pilates & Fitness
2019 TWELFTH EDITION A GUIDE TO EAST VILLAGE LOCAL SHOPS @ evccnyc evccnyc.org Many Thanks to the Volunteers & Sponsors who SHOP LOCAL! make our work possible! WHEN YOU SPEND YOUR MONEY LOCALLY, YOU . MAINTAIN ECONOMIC DIVERSITY AND STABILITY KEEP MORE OF YOUR MONEY IN YOUR COMMUNITY CREATE LOCAL JOBS SUPPORT SMALL BUSINESS OWNERS STRENGTHEN THE LOCAL ECONOMY CONTRIBUTE TO OUR NEIGHBORHOOD'S CREATIVE IDENTITY GET LOCAL! IS AN INITIATIVE OF THE EAST VILLAGE COMMUNITY COALITION TO HELP BUILD THE CONNECTIONS THAT KEEP OUR NEIGHBORHOOD UNIQUE, INDEPENDENT AND A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE! The East Village Community Coalition founded EVIMA, the East Village Independent Merchants Association: evimanyc.org LOOK FOR SYMBOLS NEXT TO THE PARTICIPATING BUSINESSES Landmark EVIMA CAFÉS, ETC. 1 – 70 BAKERY / CAFE / CANDY & CHOCOLATE / EGG CREAM / ICE CREAM JUICE BAR / TEA SHOP FASHION 71 – 137 CHILDREN’S / CLOTHING / HATS / JEWELRY / LEATHER WORK / VINTAGE, THRIFT, CONSIGNMENT GALLERIES & MUSEUMS 138 – 164 GIFTS & HOME DECOR 165 – 196 FLORIST / GIFTS / HOME ACCESSORIES & FURNITURE / MAPS & PRINTS / TOYS HEALTH & BEAUTY 197 – 354 BARBER SHOP / COSMETICS / COSMETIC TATTOO / CUSTOM PERFUME / DENTAL & MEDICAL CARE / HAIR SALON / NATURAL & ALTERNATIVE / OPTICIANS & EYEWEAR / PHARMACY / SPA / TATTOOS & BODY PIERCING / YOGA, PILATES & FITNESS MEDIA, CULTURE & ENTERTAINMENT 355 – 397 AUDIO EQUIPMENT / BOOKS / COMIC BOOKS / CULTURAL & ARTS VENUES / FILM / INSTRUMENTS / NEWSPAPERS & MAGAZINES / RECORDS / VIDEO GAMES SPEC IALTY SERVICES 398 – 538 APPLIANCES / ARCHITECTURE -
Name Website Address Email Telephone 11R Www
A B C D E F 1 Name Website Address Email Telephone 2 11R www.11rgallery.com 195 Chrystie Street, New York, NY 10002 [email protected] 212 982 1930 Gallery 14th St. Y https://www.14streety.org/ 344 East 14th St, New York, NY 10003 [email protected] 212-780-0800 Community 3 4 A Gathering of the Tribes tribes.org 745 East 6th St Apt.1A, New York, NY 10009 [email protected] 212-777-2038 Cultural 5 ABC No Rio abcnorio.org 156 Rivington Street , New York, NY 10002 [email protected] 212-254-3697 Cultural 6 Abrons Arts Center abronsartscenter.org 456 Grand Street 10002 [email protected] 212-598-0400 Cultural 7 Allied Productions http://alliedproductions.org/ PO Box 20260, New York, NY 10009 [email protected] 212-529-8815 Cultural Alpha Omega Theatrical Dance Company, http://alphaomegadance.org/ 70 East 4th Street, New York, NY 10003 [email protected] Cultural 8 Inc. 9 Amerinda Inc. (American Indian Artists) amerinda.org 288 E. 10th Street New York, NY 10009 [email protected] 212-598-0968 Cultural 10 Anastasia Photo anastasia-photo.com 166 Orchard Street 10002(@ Stanton) [email protected] 212-677-9725 Gallery 11 Angel Orensanz Foundation orensanz.org 172 Norfolk Street, NY, NY 10002 [email protected] 212-529-7194 Cultural 12 Anthology Film Archives anthologyfilmarchives.org 32 2nd Avenue, NY, NY 10003 [email protected] 212-505-5181 Cultural 13 ART Loisaida / Caroline Ratcliffe http://www.artistasdeloisiada.org 608 East 9th St. #15, NYC 10009 [email protected] 212-674-4057 Cultural 14 ARTIFACT http://artifactnyc.net/ 84 Orchard Street [email protected] Gallery 15 Artist Alliance Inc. -
Artment of Theatre and Dance Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival Region Two Festival 47 the Kennedy Center
Cleveland State University Department of Theatre and DancE Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival Region two Festival 47 The Kennedy Center Festival 47 January 2-6, 2015 KCACTF HAS GONE MOBILE! WELCOME REMARKS Welcome from the Chair of Region II I have been looking forward to this festival for two years. Ever since I came to Cleveland KCACTF HAS State to respond to a production of Miss Julie and our festival host, Michael Mauldin, gave me the grand tour. I loved hearing the story of Playhouse Square’s fall into disrepair and its revival. You have to admire the dedication of the artists who produced Jacques Brel Is Alive and Well and Living in Paris in the State Th eater lobby to prove that theater in downtown Cleveland was a viable proposition. Th e original three-week run extended to two years. Th e beautiful Playhouse Square art deco facilities are just the tip of the iceberg. Cleveland State University has renovated the Middough building, a former car dealership and offi ce building, into its Arts Campus fi lled with rehearsal halls, dance GONE MOBILE! studios, class rooms, art studios, and a black box theatre. We have lots of spaces for great workshops, wonderful performances, exciting exploration of new plays and the latest in design technology. If you aren’t worn out and fi lled with the theatre joy by the end of the festival, you just aren’t trying. Please take advantage of all the festival has the off er and enjoy everything you do this week. We’re glad you’re here Region II’s Festival 47 Dr. -
CATF-Program 2015.Pdf
2015 World Builders by Johnna Adams • Everything You Touch by Sheila Callaghan • On Clover Road by Steven Dietz • WE ARE PUSSY RIOT by Barbara Hammond • The Full Catastrophe by Michael Weller 2014 The Ashes Under Gait City by Christina Anderson • One Night by Charles Fuller • Uncanny Valley by Thomas Gibbons • North of the Boulevard by Bruce Graham • Dead and Breathing by Chisa Hutchinson 2013 A Discourse on the Wonders of the Invisbile World by Liz Duffy Adams • Modern Terrorism, or They Who Want to Kill Us and How We Learn to Love Them by Jon Kern • H2O by Jane Martin • Heartless by Sam Shepard • Scott and Hem in the Garden of Allah by Mark St. Germain 2012 Gidion’s Knot by Johnna Adams • The Exceptionals by Bob Clyman • In a Forest, Dark and Deep by Neil LaBute • Captors by Evan M. Wiener • Barcelona by Bess Wohl 2011 From Prague by Kyle Bradstreet • Race by David Mamet • Ages of the Moon by Sam Shepard • We Are Here by Tracy Thorne • The Insurgents by Lucy Thurber 2010 The Eelwax Jesus 3-D Pop Music Show by Max Baker & Lee Sellars • Lidless by Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig • Breadcrumbs by Jennifer Haley • Inana by Michele Lowe • White People by J.T. Rogers 2009 The History of Light by Eisa Davis • Yankee Tavern by Steven Dietz • Dear Sara Jane by Victor Lodato • Fifty Words by Michael Weller • Farragut North by Beau Willimon 2008 Stick Fly by Lydia R. Diamond • A View of the Harbor by Richard Dresser • Pig Farm by Greg Kotis • WRECKS by Neil LaBute • The Overwhelming by J.T. -
Vol. 1, No.1, October 2015
Vol. 1, No.1, October 2015 It all happened at ST Marks Place: Abbie Hoffman invented the Yippies at No. 30; Andy Warhol, the Velvet Underground, and Jimi Hendrix performed at the experimental nightclub Electric Circus. Gallery 51X backed eighties-era graffiti artists like Keith Harlng and Basquiat. At No. 77 Leon Trotsky edited the dissident newspaper Novy Mir in 1917. Years later in the same building, the poet W.H. Auden and the artist Larry Rivers lived below. At the Holiday Coctail Lounge, Alan Ginsberg drank. Madonna was there, These are just a few of the characters that haunt Haiku - Poem by Allen Ginsberg Drinking my tea Without sugar - No difference. The sparrow shits upside down - ah! my brain & eggs Mayan head in a Pacific driftwood bole - Someday I'll live in N.Y. Looking over my shoulder my behind was covered with cherry blossoms. Winter Haiku I didn't know the names of the flowers - now my garden is gone. I slapped the mosquito and missed. What made me do that? Reading haiku I am unhappy, longing for the Nameless. A frog floating in the drugstore jar: summer rain on grey pavements. (after Shiki) On the porch in my shorts; auto lights in the rain. Another year has past - the world is no different. ST. MARKS BACK IN THE DAY By 1963, Cue's New York: A Leisurely Guide to Manhattan, was already sending folks to the East Village for its cafes, galleries, and charming Beatniks—people like Jack Kerouac, William S. Burroughs, and Allen Ginsberg, a longtime area resident and denizen of Gem Spa at the corner of St. -
Oct-Dec Press Listings
ANTHOLOGY FILM ARCHIVES OCTOBER – DECEMBER PRESS LISTINGS OCTOBER 2013 PRESS LISTINGS MIX NYC PRESENTS: Tommy Goetz A BRIDE FOR BRENDA 1969, 62 min, 35mm MIX NYC, the producer of the NY Queer Experimental Film Festival, presents a special screening of sexploitation oddity A BRIDE FOR BRENDA, a lesbian-themed grindhouse cheapie set against the now-tantalizing backdrop of late-60s Manhattan. Shot in Central Park, Times Square, the Village, and elsewhere, A BRIDE FOR BRENDA narrates (quite literally – the story is told via female-voiced omniscient narration rather than dialogue) the experiences of NYC-neophyte Brenda as she moves into an apartment with Millie and Jane. These apparently unremarkable roommates soon prove themselves to be flesh-hungry lesbians, spying on Brenda as she undresses, attempting to seduce her, and making her forget all about her paramour Nick (and his partners in masculinity). As the narrator intones, “Once a young girl has been loved by a lesbian, it’s difficult to feel satisfaction from a man again.” –Thurs, Oct 3 at 7:30. TAYLOR MEAD MEMORIAL SCREENING Who didn’t love Taylor Mead? Irrepressible and irreverent, made of silly putty yet always sharp- witted, he was an underground icon in the Lower East Side and around the world. While THE FLOWER THIEF put him on the map, and Andy Warhol lifted him to Superstardom, Taylor truly made his mark in the incredibly vast array of films and videos he made with notables and nobodies alike. A poster child of the beat era, Mead was a scene-stealer who was equally vibrant on screen, on stage, or in a café reading his hilarious, aphoristic poetry.