Sunday, July 31, 2011

SE 1st Street and Bowery, 1942, photo in color!

Some great pictures of Lower Manhattan from the 1940's IN COLOR at the
How to Be a Retronaut blog.


Southeast corner of 1st St. and Bowery (1942)

Image from the Charles Cushman Collection




















Up 4th Ave from Astor Place, Cooper Union on the right (1942)
Image from the Charles Cushman Collection

Mars Bar Links

E.V. Greive post Mars Bar exterior demoliton under way.

Some photos of various recent Mars Bar murals

Images of Mars Bar via Flickr and the NY Times

NY Times article from July 15th, 2011 that explains in detail the demo/construction project going on where Mars Bar is (was) located.

Photo: Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Icebox Show - info links about the Bowery

click to enlarge


As a complement to CFEVA group show "Construct" at The Icebox project space in the Crane Arts building in Philadephia, I created a limited run set of informational postcards explaining my pieces [flo#7] (pictured above) and [flo#4].

I also wanted to create a post where non-New Yorkers could learn about the area that inspired the work. Here are some links to give some background information about the Bowery, what it symbolized for previous generations and what it has become.

A good place to start is this article from the NY Times circa 2003 titled "Palimpsest Street" that describes the Bowery of old + hints at what is to come.
"It is an avenue unlike any other in New York, a hodgepodge of business and bohemia that runs through or alongside some of the city's most venerable and dynamic neighborhoods -- Chinatown, the Lower East Side, SoHo, NoLita, the East Village -- without really seeming to be a part of any of them. The Bowery is its own New York, at any moment a palimpsest of nearly every image, good and bad, that has defined the city."

A NY Times Magazine article and slideshow circa 2011 explain what the Bowery has become:
"Where flophouses and derelict buildings once stood, luxury condominiums with prices of more than $2,000 per square foot are popping up. Empty lots, gas stations and family businesses have been swept away. Fancy hotels now charge upward of $400 a night for the privilege of crashing on the same Bowery where $4.50 bought a bed for the down and out. Luxury rental apartments — where one-bedrooms start around $4,000 a month — have replaced John McGurk’s long closed but not forgotten watering hole."

wikipedia entry about the Bowery.
"In the 1940s through the 1970s, the Bowery was New York City's "Skid Row," notable for "Bowery Bums" (disaffiliated alcoholics and homeless persons)."
Luc Sante's ode to a lost New York City "Low Life: Lures and Snares of Old New York" tells the story of New York's Lower East Side, circa 1840-1920, Which the Bowery was a part of.

Martha Rosler's photographic piece "The Bowery in Two Inadequate Descriptive Systems" 1974-1975.
"The work offers a poetic, humorous, even elegaic interrogation of the concept of the Bowery as urban blight."
One of the best known landmarks on the Bowery (now defunct) is CBGB's which was famous as the birthplace of the American punk movement.

click to enlarge

Monday, March 28, 2011

Public Hearing Regarding Bowery Historic Recognition

Via Bowery Boogie.....http://www.boweryboogie.com/2011/03/public-hearing-regarding-bowery-historic-recognition/

1912ish Cooper Sq Postcard

In light of the somewhat recently announced plan to revamp the Astor Place/Cooper Triangle area, I thought this postcard, pre-Hewitt Building, pre-Cooper Park trees, was interesting.

Image: Ephemeral NY

Sunday, March 20, 2011

The Skids? Not Hardly

From this weekend's NY Times, an article about the up and coming Bowery, or wait, its no longer up and coming.  A slideshow is here.  Interesting that they mention a time before The Bowery was the skids, when it was quite fashionable. 



Friday, March 18, 2011

The Supersizer of Brooklyn

New NY Times Magazine article explaining the rise and fall of architect Robert Scarano.  Note the information about 4 East 3rd street, which went from a gas station to a 16 story tower which eventually was converted into the Bowery Hotel.

Some Big Bets That the Funky Bowery Can Be Luxe

From the NY Times circa 2007 "Some Big Bets That the Funky Bowery Can Be Luxe". I wonder when the day will come when the reference to the Bowery having been "skid row" will pass?

East Village circa 2008 via the NY Times

The pictures in the slide-show and the article "True Grit? Not So Much, Anymore" are really nothing special, but I thought I'd post it for future reference.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

New plans revealed for 51 Astor Place

Article from Curbed.com detailing the new plan for the site of the former Cooper Union Engineering building.  Office space anyone?

Monday, February 14, 2011

The impending demolition of 35 Cooper Square

EV Grieve tells us about the impending demolition of 35 Cooper Square.

image: EV Grieve




























Until very recently this was the site of The Asian Pub, a longtime college type bar hangout spot (click here for info on the protest staged by some NYU students). According to this NYU News article, it is one of the first buildings built by Peter Stuyvesant in 1825. It was also the site of the mural "Forever Tall".  More pix and info about the mural can be found on this post from a while back....


Attribution: Muralizer at en.wikipedia

Sunday, February 13, 2011

WXY to expand Astor Place and Cooper Square

Click to read about the new plan for Astor Place/Cooper Square park: "Cube's New Square" from The Architect's Newspaper.


Monday, January 17, 2011

Cooper Union to Cooper Square Hotel - pt 1

This is part one of a two part post about my piece  "Cooper Union to Cooper Square Hotel". 

The Abraham S. Hewitt Building, part of The Cooper Union, was built in 1905 on the site of a former Armory. It was originally meant to grow to six stories, but it only made it to two.  I've heard various reasons why, one is that Cooper ran out of money before it was completed, another is that the building was so heavy it started to sink.  The building consisted of a grandiose lobby with wide stairs flanking its sides, yet it only rose 2 floors.  It had two levels of basements, and the bottom-most had a gigantic furnace that for years pumped out steam heat for both itself and the Foundation Building.  I thought the building always felt kind of melancholy, in that it knew it was meant to be more but could never live up to its potential as it was.

Some students (Natsuko Uchino and Alex Haring and others I believe) started a project documenting the building before it was demolished but it never came to fruition.  There are a bunch of photos out there somewhere of the interior of the building.  I have some.  Maybe someday they'll see the light of day again.

I got to go on a tour when they were demolishing the building, and our guide told us that the steel beams used in the structure were military grade (post WWI) and very heavy.  The demo crew had a very hard job.  When I was a student the building was used mostly for administrative purposes, but before the Engineering building was built in the 1950's it housed the Engineering school.   In the mid 1990's it was converted to classrooms and studio spaces for the Art and Architecture school.  It's demolition displaced many students and while the new building was being built they were shipped out to temporary studios in Long Island City.  Once the Hewitt building was leveled a massive hole was dug, and a rectangular form sprung forth, which was later clothed in a sort of bunched mesh.  The whole process took two and a half years.  This new building was designed by Morphosis Architects, lead by Thom Mayne.   

extensive wirednewyork forum thread with lots of info about the project


Time lapse video of the Hewitt Building being torn down and the new building being built. "This is two and a half years of construction at about 4 frames per day up until May 24, 2009".  I've often wondered how many times I might be in this video, walking to work.


Cooper Union, Hewitt Building
picture from Flickr user maayanpearl of the interior right before demolition
























Here is my collage:























And the images it is made up of (+ a few extras)


















Image I found of the Hewitt Building from 1992.  The big black constructivist looking thing in front is a sculpture I made sophomore year of college (!), this was documentation taken right before it went into the dumpster.  Note the blinds and plants in the windows.



























2003 - the day of the blackout.  I remember staying at work for a while after it happened, since no one knew quite what was going on.  I grabbed some expired film and a camera and took some shots around the area.



















2004.  Note "Forever Tall", a CITYarts sponsored mural created in response to 9/11 by lead artists Hope Gangloff and Jason Search (both Cooper Union alums) in collaboration with students from the community and across the city, is still there.  It was painted over in 2004, and an explanation of why can be found in this The Villager article.

















2006 - as the building was being cleared.



























2006 - demolition starts.





















2006





















2006 - Note: The Cooper Square Hotel is in its beginning stages, and the wall where "Forever Tall" was is now orange.






















2006





















2006 - from inside the fence.





















2006 - from inside the fence.  Imprint of stairs were the ones leading to the basement from the front of the lobby.


























2006





















2007




























2010

"Lost East Village" set on Flickr by rollingrk

Just found this Lost East Village set on Flickr by rollingrk which contains many "before" photos of places along the Bowery and other East Village buildings that have been replaced by new ones.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Sculpture for Living

The building named "Sculpture for Living" is located on Astor Place and Cooper Square (near where the Bowery officially begins). My knowledge of this space began in 1990, when it was a parking lot surrounded by a short disheveled fence. The color darkrooms at Cooper Union overlook this former parking lot plus the Carl Fischer clock above. These were mainstays in terms of what to look at while you were waiting for your print to process. (The clock used to work, and in fact one year the long hand blew off in the wind, but the small hand still spun around). In the early 2000's a Rem Koolhaas designed hotel was chosen to be built on this spot (the rather humorous looking model was lovingly nick named "the cheese grater"). Post 9/11 the idea was scrapped, the land leased to a developer by its owner (Cooper Union), and circa late 2003 the condo building designed by Charles Gwathmey that you see today began rising . The parking lot picture in this collage is from 2001, right around when the original hotel design was announced. It took over a year to build.

Website for the Sculpture for Living

Link to article about the Rem Koolhaas designed hotel




















Here is my collage:
























And the photos that make up the collages (with an extra shot or two, one that shows the Carl Fisher clock):

circa 2001
early 2004

Cooper Union in the background

off the roof of Cooper Union


also off the roof of Cooper Union. sad hands-less clock.



today.  the clocks hands are painted on.

Friday, January 7, 2011

NY Times St. Marks Place article

here in today's issue, highlights include the oldest buildings on the block and a brief history.

Thank You! + "Time and Space on the Lower East Side"

Thanks so much to everyone who came out to the opening last night, it was a great turnout and nice to see some old and new faces in the crowd?

After some much needed sleep I'll start posting about the show again, but right now I wanted to pass on this book project which has come to light by Brian Rose and Ed Fausty.  I remember seeing some of it on the web, and as I was installing at La Mama a desk copy of it was part of the previous La Mama "La Familia" show, as well as an image by Ed Fausty of East 1st Street..

This should put to rest the question I get a lot...."was it really that bad here back in the day?".   "Bad" is a relative term, but mostly I find myself these days saying "well, there are just a hell of a lot more people around.  the place is more full".  Bombed out empty buildings are now fixed up and occupied, new buildings have been built in empty lots, the trash is actually picked up, etc, etc.  When you look at old aerial maps you see lots of buildings, but there are no indicators of how many were empty, especially over in the alphabets.

There are some spaces in the newer photos that I've shot repeatedly, and some which included elements I've used for my pieces in the show.  Its always great to see how others frame the same materials, empty lots, sequences of buildings, etc.  Since the photos in their book were shot using 4x5 cameras, the pictures feel like formal statements of the times.  I'm excited to buy my own copy and to give the book to someone who hasn't lived here for 20 years to see if they can differentiate between the "now" and 'then' photos.   I wonder if in 20 years it will have changed again as much as it has today? 

Anyway, take a look, the preview is available on Blurb, and its for sale there too.  I was surprised at what a good job Blurb did, its a beautiful book!

http://www.blurb.com/books/1546878
http://www.blurb.com/bookstore/detail/1546878























Now, I seriously need to get some coffee......

Thursday, January 6, 2011

some installation pictures

I was up til 4AM last night installing, and up bright and early today to finish, but I wanted to post a few pictures from my point and shoot of the work. 

Also, thank you Sonya G., Lauren P. and especially Simone!!!  There is no way I could have finished all of this without you!

More to come.....




Wednesday, January 5, 2011

[flo#7]-Bowery/Houston........What I've been working on......

Sorry it's been awhile since my last post, I've been in high gear production mode for the show for many many many days now.  If you know my work you know it is BIG, so these jps really don't do the work justice. 

Much more to post coming up soon, but here's a teaser of some of the images that will be wrapping around the walls of La Mama Gallery, along with artist Wil Ortega's work "Faster, Bigger, Cheaper". 

The show is titled "Phase Shift"., and the opening is this Thursday (!) from 6-8, stop by if you can!  It is up until January 30th.

Note: I still want to put together a booklet in conjunction with the show but it most likely won't be ready for the opening.  I'll post here when its ready.  ALSO I am going to try to make a limited edition run of inkjet prints (to sell) of the collages (not collaged, just the Photoshop files printed on some fancy paper), in the future.  I've never done this before with my work, so we'll see how it goes.  Will post here when that happens.

OK - on to images......(I'll deconstruct them in later posts)

Avalon-Chrystie to Bowery Hotel

Bowery Bar to 2 Cooper Square

Sculpture for Living
Cooper Union (Hewitt Building) to Cooper Square Hotel