Showing posts with label Stacie Joy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stacie Joy. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

A visit to Lovewild Design

Photos by Stacie Joy

This past December
East Village native and current resident Sierra Zamarripa realized a longtime dream — opening her own shop in the neighborhood. She did this with the arrival of Lovewild Design at 136 Avenue C between Eighth Street and Ninth Street. 

The sustainable gift shop relocated here from South Williamsburg, where it debuted in June 2017.

For starters, it's a legit family affair here with Sierra's daughter Cecilia and mother Thea Boyer helping run the business. (Sierra grew up as an entrepreneur, and her parents and grandmother were entrepreneurs, as she told us in this 2017 interview.)

EVG contributor Stacie Joy recently stopped by the warm, inviting shop full of handmade goods ... as well as a stationery line... 
Lovewild Design is open Tuesday-Sunday from noon to 6 p.m. Follow the shop on Instagram for updates. And if you happen to be up in Woodstock, there's a new (as of April 2021) outpost there too.

Saturday, October 9, 2021

Saturday's parting shots

RebelMatic (check them out here) brought their punk and funk to First Street Green Art Park this afternoon ...
Thanks to Stacie Joy for the photos!

Tuesday, October 5, 2021

A visit to Genshinkan Aikido

Text and photos by Stacie Joy

Genshinkan Aikido is a well-hidden gem. 

I’ve walked by 62 E. Fourth St. (between Second Avenue and the Bowery) a million times but had no idea what was hiding up several steep flights of steps — an airy, light, immaculate and well-appointed martial arts studio. 

I recently stopped by to observe the practice. Dojo-Cho/chief instructor Gary Wagener (above left), sensei, currently holding a Yondan rank, or 4th-degree black belt, meets me at the door as he finishes preparing for class. I am given a mat and cushion. I offer assurances that I won’t be in the way,  and I am left to experience the class without distraction. 

Things begin with a period of meditation, followed by some instruction and a brief talk before the students pair off for what looked like choreographed moves. However, teacher and assistant Dojo-Cho Ariana Koblitz (above right) assures me it’s a self-defense technique. 

Between water breaks (the dojo has fans circulating, but soon everyone is sweaty on this muggy evening), I hear the sound of bodies slamming on mats, Japanese call and response prompts, the soft voices of the instructors issuing corrections, adjustments, instructions and encouragement. And a few gentle jokes. 

There are lots of rituals. I am especially keyed into the sound rituals involved in this practice: bells ringing, wooden clapper blocks (known as taku, and handmade in white oak by a student) clacking — a very loud and effective attention grabber, and breathwork, heard best during the silent meditation. 
After the class winds down, I speak with Gary to learn more about the space, the Japanese martial art of Aikido, and its place in the community.

What type of martial arts do you teach?

Our school is devoted to the transmission and preservation of the traditional Japanese martial art of Aikido, a defensive art that redirects the energy of an attacker. Aikido focuses on compassion to resolve the physical conflict and offers a path devoted to personal, physical, and spiritual growth.  

Students learn to peacefully resolve actual attacks through techniques involving throws, joint locks, strikes, and strategies for unbalancing opponents. We also train with traditional Japanese wooden weapons — the sword (bokken), staff (jo), and knife (tanto). These weapons are a fundamental component of our training and students discover, over time, how these weapons directly connect to the hand-to-hand techniques. 

Beyond the practice itself — and just as important — at the heart of our school is a genuine community of amazingly good people. They’re shockingly nice. And, to be honest, the student base is not what I expected when we first opened the school. The goal was simply to open a traditional martial arts school and give students a place to train and train and train. It quickly evolved into something much more than the simple study of a budō (the martial way, or way of war). 

These like-minded students of all backgrounds found kinship amongst each other. They found a place where they belonged and began to bond through the training, and the harmonious principles of the training. They continue to learn that our art is easily applied beyond the dojo and truly enriches their daily lives. 

Your website mentions that there are no tournaments or trophies and that the practice itself is noncompetitive. How does this Aikido practice differ from other martial arts?

There are other noncompetitive martial arts, including Kenjutsu, Ninjutsu, Iaidō, certain styles of Kung Fu, and others. For the majority of students, the noncompetitive aspect of Aikido is an important one. Students seeking a place to learn self-defense without the anxieties that they can experience in a competition-based environment tend to thrive in this setting. 

This allows students to learn freely from each other during a class. Eliminating competition gives the focus on the whole rather than the individual. Students want to help each other along their path through all levels of training. It’s really quite wonderful...this art was created to improve daily life through principles/concepts of compassion and harmony.    

Who is a typical student if such a thing exists? Is this practice accessible to beginners? And what would you tell people who may be intimidated by this type of discipline? 

Diversity is at the core of our school. Students range widely in age and vocation. Doctors, architects, cooks, computer engineers, actors, musicians, financial analysts, designers, dancers, law enforcement officers (who patrol our very own East Village streets), school teachers, and plenty more. We even have a student who’s in VFX [visual effects]! We’ve had classes where there have been more than 15 different countries represented. The diversity is a gift. 

No matter the reasons a student begins their practice, you find this sweet and sincerely genuine group of people from all walks of life seeking a common goal of...peace. Peace not only for themselves but also for those around them. 

The only thing that should intimidate a beginner visiting our school is the 5-story walkup. It’s natural to be intimidated or nervous when exploring something foreign and unknown, especially with a martial art. People may not want to hear this, but I get nervous walking into the dojo sometimes. Approaching the practice with a beginner’s mind gives you this sense of the unexpected. 

Rest assured, any visitor will be welcomed to the dojo with nothing but a sincere and warm greeting. And they’ll experience much of that same warmth during a class. All of our classes are open to all levels and we focus on safety and taking classes slow to begin. The focus is on basic body movements and positioning, concepts, and form when a student starts. We want students to feel safe and welcome.   

You and Ariana spoke about redirecting an attacker’s energy and resolving conflicts harmoniously. Can you elaborate on this?

“To injure an opponent is to injure yourself. To control aggression without inflicting injury is the Art of Peace.” — Morihei Ueshiba, Ōsensei 

This mantra is at the foundation of our daily training. Understand, we are a true budō. And the physical application of Aikido can be quite powerful through joint locks and throws. But we’re not fighting. That’s never our purpose. There’s a stigma that martial arts are all about kicking and punching, and more recently, grappling (MMA, or mixed martial arts) fighting. We are not a fight club.  

Our goal is conflict resolution...resolution that comes about through redirecting the energy a defender is receiving. Through partnered classes, we practice understanding how to guide an attack with a variety of defenses. 

Why choose the East Village for your studio? 

The EV is an ideal spot for countless reasons. Mainly, it’s a vibrant community surrounded by art. A neighborhood that’s essentially a living art in many ways. And that’s exactly what Aikido is, a living art. Kinetic, evolving, constantly changing, a motion of beauty. 

I see the streets of the EV the same way. The neighborhood is clearly changing and has been since its inception — and always will. New buildings, restaurants, residents, graffiti, galleries, theaters, trees, the list of how the neighborhood continues in motion is infinite. 

And finding the beauty in that change is a challenge sometimes, but it’s mostly there if we want to see it. Similar to how a strike can be redirected into a moment of harmonious connected rhythm. Does that make sense? I hope so! 
You can keep up with the dojo on Instagram.

Sunday, October 3, 2021

A moment or two at the Anarchist Bookfair

The 15th Anarchist Bookfair took place yesterday at La Plaza Cultural on the southwest corner of Ninth Street and Avenue C. 

There was a nice turnout, as this pic by EVG contributor Stacie Joy shows (click on the image to go big)...
... and two other scenes...
... with an appearance by Monty Cantsin...

Thursday, September 30, 2021

An early morning visit with NY1's Roger Clark

Text and photos by Stacie Joy

It’s 7 a.m., and Roger Clark is precisely where you’d expect him to be at this hour: in front of a camera for NY1

This past Monday, the veteran broadcast reporter is in the East Village to cover the Village Voices street exhibit with the Village Preservation team members. There are two live hits; the second includes trustee Leslie Mason and executive director Andrew Berman and touches on Patti Smith and Charlie Parker.
Clark strikes set after some on-air patter with anchor Pat Kiernan and a few funny fumbles in the lead-ins. He then heads over to meet musician Randy Gun in front of Jean-Michel Basquiat’s former home-studio on Great Jones to talk about the Basquiat bartending book exhibition and sale. 

Clark OK’d for me to tag along with him this morning to watch him put together a report. Today’s assignment is definitely on the less death-defying side. Through his 20 years at the station, viewers have seen him gamely jet-skiing, tap dancing, BMX biking, ax throwing, rock climbing and more

I’m pleased to see that Clark is as affable in person as he is on the air, cracking gentle dad jokes, donning hastily tucked button-downs, and joshing with his happily at-ease interviewees. He’s interested and curious about his subjects, easy to talk to, and quick to laugh. He seems genuinely surprised and pleased and a touch embarrassed when people walk by and tell him how much they enjoy his reports. 

Watching him at work is fascinating. I expect a team, but it’s just him and Guido, his camera operator. Clark sources, writes, interviews, and edits his own material. When Guido’s not available, Clark shoots it too, clutching an iPhone and fiddling with an external mic. There isn’t any intermediary assigned to run interference when I show up to ask questions and take pictures. There’s no pretense either. 

Guido has another assignment, so I watch as Clark interviews Gun. They discuss the Hudson Valley (Gun has a home in Phoenicia and Clark once lived nearby in Newburgh), punk music and the history of the Bowery. Long after PR agent Barbara Wagner and Janis Gardner Cecil, president of JGC Fine Art, the art-house exhibiting the book, have left, the two of them continue to chat about shared passions.
Once the interviews are over, Clark and I sit down at a nearby cafe to talk about his relationship with the East Village. Clark is a native New Yorker, growing up in Staten Island, the Bronx and Queens, attending school at Stuyvesant High. 

Clark tells me that he didn’t really start exploring the area until he was 16 or so. He mentions seeing people wearing Canal Jean Company pins, music/band tees, and sporting mohawks and began to seek out record shops, poster places, and clothing stores. 

I ask him what a perfect day in the East Village might include. He mentions Veselka for breakfast, some walking and people-watching, an egg cream or beignets at Ray’s Candy Store, shopping at record stores, and checking out Trash & Vaudeville. He lists Gruppo for pizza for dinner with drinks at a favorite spot such as the Library, Double Down Saloon, Niagara, 7B/Horseshoe Bar or Dream Baby, and a show at the Bowery Electric. (His band Perp Walk has played the Bowery Electric, Niagara’s and Otto’s Shrunken Head.) 

We also talk about media personalities and dream jobs. When Clark was a child, he wanted to play for the Mets but couldn’t hit a curveball and instead became interested in sportscasting. He has a degree in journalism from Syracuse University and worked his way up to the spot he holds today: NYers favorite morning features reporter. And if he weren’t at NY1? Perhaps a morning news correspondent gig like Mo Rocca’s, or a commentator like the now-retired Charles Osgood or the late Charles Kuralt. 

Clark is also a passionate sports fan, and I recall the question my editor suggested that I ask: What will the Mets need to do in the off-season to contend in 2022? Clark doesn’t hesitate to explain that the team needs to dump some poor performers who the fans are accustomed to (he’s looking at you, Dom Smith and J.D. Davis) and get a new closer. Edwin Díaz isn’t handling his business, I am informed. 

He’s finished his snack and will soon start editing his segments from his Upper East Side apartment for tomorrow’s NY1 morning show. (You can watch the features here and here.)

As we part ways, a neighbor walks by and behind his back gives me an enthusiastic thumbs up and mouths, “ROGER CLARK — YES!”

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

A visit to Ergot Records

Ergot Records made its debut back on Friday at 32 E. Second St. between Second Avenue and the Bowery.

Adrian Rew, who's behind the experimental imprint of the same name, is the owner here ...
EVG contributor Stacie Joy stopped by the shop during the opening weekend. For now, Ergot Records will focus on second-hand records and cassettes, spanning an array of genres, including jazz, salsa, punk, disco, hip-hop and avant-garde.

Eventually, Rew, a resident DJ at the Lot Radio and former curator at the gallery Blank Forms, wants to add books and other literature and host in-store events. 

Here's a look around the shop, which includes several listening stations ... 
Rew, who previously worked at A-1 Records on Sixth Street, renovated the space with the help of a few friends. He signed a five-year lease on the storefront and plans to stick around for a while. We hope so too. 
Hours:

• Wednesday-Thursday: 11 a.m.-7 p.m.
• Friday-Saturday: Noon-8 p.m. 
• Sunday: noon-6 p.m.

You can find the Ergot Records Instagram account here

Wednesday, September 1, 2021

In a New York Groove

This past Thursday night, Hayley Griffin (above right) hosted her New York Groove Party at Berlin, the music venue below 2A at 25 Avenue A. 

The Silk War were the headliners with a record release party. (Singer-songwriter Alexandra Blair is on the left in the top pic). 

EVG contributor Stacie Joy stopped by for part of the evening, which included a set by local singer-songwriter Fiona Silver and her band, guitarist Guy Fiumarelli, bassist Steve Salerno and drummer Sonny Ratcliff ...
Stacie had another commitment and couldn't stay for the whole show... but she did catch DJ Bailey Leiter's turn in the DJ booth (you may know her from her Hello Banana vintage shop on First Avenue) ...
... and captured a few other moments ...