Thursday, February 2, 2017

Mr. White bringing 'new Southern cuisine' to St. Mark's Place



As previously noted, February's CB3-SLA agenda includes an applicant vying for a beer-wine license at 121 St. Mark's Place between Avenue A and First Avenue.

Here's more about the space via public documents (PDF) at the CB3 website. For starters, Mr. White will serve "New Southern cuisine." (The online application did not include a sample menu.)

The proposed hours are noon to 2 a.m. Monday through Saturday; 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. on Sunday. (The application notes that alcohol service will end at 2 a.m., with the restaurant closing one hour later "to allow the customer to finish his meal.") The configuration shows 10 tables seating 28 patrons, and two bars seating 19 people.

The documents also note that the principals have experience at the Grand National (now the Big Whiskey) and the Whiskey Brooklyn in Williamsburg.

No. 121 was last home to the Belgian Room, which the state seized for nonpayment of taxes in April 2015. (The reconfigured space includes the former Ton-Up Cafe next door.)

The February SLA committee meeting is Monday at 6:30 p.m. Location: The Thelma Burdick Community Room, 10 Stanton St. at the Bowery.

Sunday is the last day for Turntable Lab before move to new 10th Street storefront


[Image via Turntable Lab]

As we've been noting, Turntable Lab is leaving its 16-year-home on Seventh Street for a new space on 10th Street.

The store has announced that Sunday is the last day in business selling vinyl and stereo equipment here between Avenue A and First Avenue before reopening soon at 84 E. 10th St. between Third Avenue and Fourth Avenue.

Here's more on the store's early days via their Instagram account...


Previously on EV Grieve:
Turntable Lab reveals new 10th Street storefront

Barber shop cuts into 9th Street storefront



A barber shop has opened on Ninth Street just east of Second Avenue.

For now, Famous Cutz is having a $15 haircut special...



Ambica, a handcrafted jewelry shop, was previously in the storefront at No. 305.

Thanks to Steven for the photos

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

A sale that actually lives up to its billing



Outside the Cure Thrift Shop on 12th Street today... photo by Derek Berg

[Updated] Noted



That new Diane Von Furstenberg campaign is pretty edgy... photo today on Seventh Street between Avenue A and First Avenue by Derek Berg

Updated 5:55 p.m.

The signs have been ripped off the plywood...


[Photo by Derek Berg]

Report: Anyway Cafe robbed at knifepoint

A knife-wielding man made off with a bag of cash during a noon-time robbery Monday at the Anyway Cafe on Second Street at Second Avenue, the Post reported.

Per the Post:

A thief seemed to know what he was looking for when he entered an East Village restaurant and demanded at knife-point that a worker give him “the money from the bottom,” police said Tuesday.

The crook entered the Anyway Cafe ... and barked his demands at a female employee.

When she walked behind the bar, the man got more specific, demanding: “Give me the money from the bottom!” according to cops.

The employee handed over a white garbage bag and white envelopes containing cash, cops said.

The Post only had this description of the suspect: "25 years old, standing about 5-foot-5 and ... wearing a red jacket."

Out and About in the East Village

In this ongoing feature, East Village-based photographer James Maher provides us with a quick snapshot of someone who lives and/or works in the East Village.



By James Maher
Name: Lola Sáenz
Occupation: Artist, Poet
Location: 12th Street
Date: Saturday, Jan. 28 at noon

I was born in El Paso, Texas. I always wanted to be an artist. When I left high school, I couldn’t afford to go to art school, so I moved to LA and lived there for about 10 years. I started to do artwork the last few years living there. Then I met this girl who was from here in the gay pride parade and she said, ‘You gotta come to New York because it’s the place.’ I said, ‘Yeah, well, I’ve always dreamt about it.’

I moved to New York in 1990. The first year here I lived on King Street. I was personal training. I had already met a woman in LA who lived in New York City. Her name was Linda Stein, who was a big real-estate broker to celebrities and manager of the Ramones. Linda was the first person who gave me work. I became her personal trainer, for 15 years. She also said that if I needed to move, I could always stay upstairs for free in her apartment where her daughter used to have bunk beds, and I could use their bathroom and kitchen.

So I did, and I moved uptown to Central Park West. It was a tiny little room on the top of the building — a gorgeous view. All I could fit there was a futon and an art table, and it had one window. I would share the bathroom down the hallway with the guys, the doormen. In that building, I met Bill and Judith Moyers and got to train them. Linda introduced me to a lot of clients to train, including the owner of Hess Oil.

Not having a kitchen or a bathroom was tough. So after a year I found this small apartment in the East Village in 1993. I’ve been here ever since. I eventually stopped training Linda to focus on the art, and a few years or so later she was murdered by her yoga teacher. I was shocked and devastated. Most of the magazine and newspaper articles were writing about the story, making it sound like it was Linda's fault. It was impossible that anyone would deserve to be murdered for saying the word fuck or blowing smoke.

I wrote to The New York Times, New York Magazine, etc. in her defense, but no one took my story except Lincoln Anderson from The Villager. And of course I was right. After all the investigation, it was found that the yoga teacher had been stealing from Linda. She remains in prison.

There was a shop called Peter Leggieri's Sculpture Supply Store below my apartment where the record store is now. It became my living room. That’s where I learned how to carve. He would sell stones from all over the world. He would give me a few stones and chisels. It was a great outlet in the East Village because all the artists would stop by and say hello. It was bit rough. There were a lot of drugs on the block. I remember a detective friend would go up on the roof through the back of Peter’s place to spy.

It got rough right in my next-door apartment, which was a lady-of-the-night hangout for all the junkies. It was a little weird. I kept thinking where else can I go, so I stuck it out. I didn’t really care what people did with their lives. People would be getting high on the staircase, and I didn’t want any confrontation with any of them. It was like that for the whole first year.

Then Giuliani came to power, and before you know it the marshals came and broke the door, pulled everyone out, and arrested a bunch of people. The undercover cops started arresting a lot of people. The year after that was cool because I didn’t have to bump into anybody living next door to me. I didn’t care about the outside world — it was just what was next door to me.

I’m a self-taught artist. Since I was a kid, all I wanted to be was an artist. I started to watch and study Picasso and Frida Kahlo and Matisse and Diego. I would go to museums and be inspired by the work. I guess you’re born with it or something. The first few paintings that I did in LA, I felt like I had been guided by the hand of God or something. It was me, but it was like somebody else was there.

I decided to create one painting a year. My artwork has four or five layers of paint, and I don’t like transparency — and the paint supplies are very expensive. I do a lot of city-related paintings and a lot of self-portraits. I add a little poetry to an artwork sometimes. I’ll work on a painting like a maniac. Every painting has its own story. I could work on it for a month straight every day and every night with a couple days off a week. If I’m really in it, I will work it until I feel exhausted or I get stuck.

In Part 2 next week, Sáenz talks about the influence of 9/11 on her work and thoughts on the neighborhood today. "I wouldn’t want to live anywhere else."

James Maher is a fine art and studio photographer based in the East Village. Find his website here.

Todd Hase brings custom furnishings to 7th Street



Furniture designer Todd Hase has opened a new outpost (a Home and Mid-Century Modern Shop) at 111 E. Seventh St. between Avenue A and First Avenue.

Here's more about Todd Hase, who previously had a shop in Soho, via the business website:

Todd Hase Furniture, Inc. includes a full collection of upholstery, tables, casegoods, accessories and textiles. Designed by Todd Hase, the line is distinctly modern. It uses a classic vocabulary of shapes and lines to offer a pared down, simplified yet extremely palatable, ultimately usable line of home furnishings. Old world techniques of manufacturing are applied to these modern products: eight-way handtied springs fill upholstered seating and hand fitted marquetry patterns of beautiful veneers enhance tables, casegoods and lighting.

And!

In 1996 Todd and his wife Amy Hase opened their original showroom in New York. Todd Hase designed products are made in the USA then shipped domestically and around the world. In addition to the Todd Hase Collection, Amy and Todd Hase offer a fine selection of inspiriing French antiques acquired from Paris and the regions near their chateau in Normandy. The Todd Hase showroom and design atelier in the Hamptons offers an eclectic mix of Todd Hase Collection and Textiles, French antiques, lighting, carpets, garden furniture, fine art, and decorative accessories.

The Seventh Street shop is open Monday-Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and noon to 5 p.m. on Sunday. There are also Todd Hase locations in West Hollywood, West Palm Beach and Southampton.

Village Style Vintage Shop, the previous tenant here, moved out to Brooklyn last October.

Report: Sugar Cafe closes after service on Sunday

Sugar Cafe, the slender 24/7 mainstay on East Houston and Allen Street these past 10-plus years, is expected to shut down after service on Sunday.

DNAinfo confirmed the closure with three employees last evening. BoweryBoogie had previously heard that a rent increase — perhaps as much as double the current ask — was behind the closing.

We'll always have Paris (Baguette), and Egg Salad Bacon Rolls



Early last September, I noted that an outpost of Paris Baguette was opening in the shoppes of Stuy Town on First Avenue near 16th Street.

And that was likely the last time I walked by this strip of shoppes. Which is why I had no idea that this Paris Baguette had opened earlier in the fall.

As noted, the quickly expanding South Korea-based company has more than 3,000 corporate and franchised stores across multiple countries in Asia as well as in Europe. There are a handful of locations currently in Manhattan.

Anyway, I happened to walk by the other day ... and so I went inside. I recalled DrGecko's comment about the food items:

Oh, god, I love their place on 32nd St. If I'm feeling down, just a quick look at their bizarre stuff always cheers me up.

I haven't seen the doughnut stuffed with potato salad recently, but their skewered hotdog-in-a-roll or their sweet-potato sponge cake will surely brighten up the neighborhood.

P.S. I don't necessarily recommend actually eating any of these things.

This item for sale certainly cheered me up — behold the Egg Salad Bacon Roll (#paleo)...



Anyway, the place looked to be doing pretty good business. There was a short line at the counter and I didn't feel like waiting for an Egg Salad Bacon Roll coffee. Another day perhaps.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Paris Baguette opening a location in Stuy Town (28 comments)