Sunday, January 27, 2019

Week in Grieview


[1st Avenue steam out]

Stories posted on EVG this past week included...

RIP Jonas Mekas (Wednesday ... Thursday)

There was a slight decline in the number of NYC chain stores this past year (Monday)

A visit to Miscelanea NY on 4th Street (Thursday)

A look at where Citi Bike is expanding in the East Village (Wednesday)

1st signs of the construction to come at the 2nd Avenue explosion site (Friday)

Joe’s Steam Rice Roll heading to 36 St. Mark's Place (Tuesday)

Cheska's pizza now serving in the Bowery Market (Tuesday)

Today's Urban Etiquette marijuana sign of the day (Sunday)

A session for tenants to learn how to fight back against construction as harassment (Thursday)

Former Nicoletta space for rent on 2nd Avenue and 10th Street (Tuesday)

Report: The L-train's weekend repair plans would mean exit-only stations on 1st and 3rd avenues (Thursday)

On the Mark Cleaners now open on 13th Street (Tuesday)

Checking in on the under-renovation Ottendorfer Library (Wednesday)

'Fear and misinformation' on 4th Street: Developer sues over rejected hotel plans (Thursday)

This is what the Sunshine Cinema looks like today — 1 year after it closed (Monday)

Whatever happened to ... Donostia? (Thursday)

... and over on Broadway and 13th Street, someone made an addition to the ad for Success Academy Charter Schools... writing in the annual salary of founder and CEO Eva Sarah Moskowitz ...



On this topic, the East Village Community School PA is hosting a screening of the documentary "Backpack Full of Cash," which explores the cost of privatizing America's public schools, free of charge and open to all, on March 6 at 6 p.m.

Thanks Choresh Wald!

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Grant Shaffer's NYC See



Here's this week's NY See, East Village-based illustrator Grant Shaffer's comic series — an observational sketch diary of things that he sees and hears around the neighborhood ... and NYC.

Saturday, January 26, 2019

Ghost signage reveal on 5th Street



Workers renovating 317 E. Fifth St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue uncovered this ghost signage today ... Derek Berg spotted this earlier today... Wines & Lager Beer (early BEER STORE?)... I can't quite make out the first name (Cosrt?)...



Updated 1/27

I looked at the city tax photos for this address ... a business is in the space, though it doesn't have this wine/lager signage...



Can't quite make out the sign ...

The West African fare at Golody Halal Buffet on 1st Avenue

Over at Eater, Robert Sietsema visits Golody Halal Buffet at 222 First Ave. (between 13th Street and 14th Street) in his latest Cheap Eats series.

The longtime food writer likes what he found. A sampling from the buffet:

Choices include popular dishes from Senegal, Guinea, Cote D’Ivoire, Ghana, and Nigeria, and the selection changes daily. The cashier told me, for example, that a fermented cornmeal mash from Ghana called kenkey would be available on Wednesdays ... The day I went, there were several types of rice available, and a Guinean sauce de feuilles made with sweet potato leaves, a Nigerian okra sauce dotted with beef, and a Senegalese chicken yassa ... It helps to know this food already, but you’ll do quite well just loading up your plate with things that look good to you. The cost is $5.99 per pound, which is a great deal.

Sounds like a much more interesting cheap eats option than the previous tenant here — the $1 slices of Joey Pepperoni.

Friday, January 25, 2019

'Thin Man' triple feature tomorrow at the Tompkins Square Library branch


The first three of the six Nick and Nora (and Asta!) capers, starring Myrna Loy and William Powell, are playing tomorrow at the Tompkins Square Library branch (331 E. 10th St. between Avenue A and Avenue B) starting at 11 a.m.





The big Asleep



The London-based trio Big Joanie released their debut record, Sistas, last month (details here) ... the above video is for "Fall Asleep."

Some background, per Cargo Records:

Inspired by The Ronettes, Nirvana, Breeders and Jesus and Mary Chain, Big Joanie have described themselves as being “similar to The Ronettes filtered through ’80s DIY and Riot Grrrl with a sprinkling of dashikis.”

A return to 11th Street this weekend for 'McKinney Arts REDUX'


[Now and then]

Last month, Mark McKinney was walking around the East Village with his son.

From 1996-1997, he ran a gallery, McKinney Arts, at 526 E. 11th St. between Avenue A and Avenue B. When he went by the storefront in December, he saw that it was a flex rental space available for pop-up shows.

"I figured, what's the likelihood of the exact same space being available 22 years later?" McKinney, who now lives and works from Belleville, N.J., told me. "So I rented the space for this weekend, tracked down a number of artists who I represented 22 years ago, and I've curated a show called "McKinney Arts REDUX."

The two-day show is tomorrow (Saturday!) and Sunday. A few details:

A pop-up show featuring art by:

Peter Bregoli, Jennie Booth, Peter Carey, Marguerite Day, Fred Fleisher, Mark McKinney, Tony Nogueira, and Brad Terhune.

Hours:
Saturday, 2-9 p.m., with an opening reception from 6-9 p.m.
Sunday, noon-8 p.m.

Before moving to 11th Street, McKinney lived on Stanton Street and ran an impromptu exhibition space there.

"The 'bedroom' was so small, I couldn't fit my bed in there, so I turned it into a gallery," he said.

TGIF, red-tailed hawk edition



Amelia and Christo, the red-tailed hawks of Tompkins Square Park, as seen here lounging in the nest ... photo this afternoon courtesy of Steven.

1st signs of the construction to come at the 2nd Avenue explosion site



A jackhammer crew has started to break up the sidewalk this morning on Second Avenue at Seventh Street ... where there are approved plans (as of Dec. 27 by the city) to build a 7-story condoplex on this corner.

The Morris Adjmi-designed residential building with 21 condos and ground-floor retail will include a commemorative plaque that honors Moises Locón and Nicholas Figueroa, the men who died in the gas explosion on this site on March 26, 2015.

Shaky Cohen's Nexus Building Development Group paid $9.15 million for the empty lots.

The previous owner of 119 and 121 Second Ave., Maria Hrynenko, her son Michael Hrynenko (now deceased), contractor Dilber Kukic and their plumber Anthanasios Ioannidis illegally tampered with the gas line then failed to warn those in the building before the blast, according to the Manhattan District Attorney.

According to public records, Hrynenko and the other defendants will appear in court again on March 21. Records show that Hrynenko and the other accused have appeared in New York County Criminal Court 23 times since February 2016... and the outcome was the same — "adjourned/bail continued" — since their initial appearance. There's also a new judge presiding, Michael J. Obus of the State Supreme Court in Manhattan. Justice Kirke Bartley had been the judge of record.

Updated 2:30 p.m.

WIP via Steven...



Previously on EV Grieve:
Exclusive: 2nd Avenue explosion sites have a new owner

Dedicating Moises Locón Way and Nicholas Figueroa Way on 2nd Avenue at 7th Street

Soil testing underway at the 2nd Avenue explosion site

EVG Etc.: East River Park stormproofing reactions; 14th Street trapeze hoop dreams


[A note at Ben Shaoul's new condoplex next to Katz's]

As we've been reporting, City Council held an oversight hearing on the secretly revised East River Park stormproofing plan on Wednesday afternoon. Gothamist and Curbed had reporters at the well-attended hearing. Find their recaps at these links:

LES & East Village Residents Feel 'Duped' By City's Surprise Plan To Bury East River Park (Gothamist)

Revamped East Side flood protection plan debated at packed City Council hearing (Curbed)

A visit to the East 14th Street home of aerialist Phoenix Feeley, who is subletting her place that is outfitted with a trapeze hoop. However: "The hoop will stay in a locked closet, for use by any tenants with the proper training and insurance." (The New Yorker)

The MTA postpones its fare-hike vote — until next month (amNY)

Inside the fight over the Elizabeth Street Garden (Curbed)

What's happening in the ongoing e-bike/e-scooter debate among city bigs (Daily News)

A new development with "micro units" coming to Essex Street (City Realty)

Yep: New York’s nightlife industry outpaces rest of local economy (Curbed)

Staffers at the New Museum on the Bowery vote to unionize (Hyperallergic)

East Village-based singer-songwriter Riley Pinkerton plays the Mercury Lounge Feb. 6 (Official site)

An appreciation of the late Saul Leiter, artist, photographer and longtime East Village resident (Off the Grid)

Give 'em the hook originated on stage at this Bowery theater in the 1890s (Ephemeral New York)

"Burning," the critically acclaimed South Korean thriller from Lee Chang-dong, got snubbed in the best foreign-language film category in the Oscar race. Anyway, it's still enjoying a run at the Quad on 13th Street (Official site)

A rando ICYMI: That video of Beto O'Rourke on rhythm guitar in a onesie and sheep mask playing (with a band) "Blitzkrieg Bop" (Mother Jones)

... and if you happen to have a subscription to The Economist, then you can read a feature on Alex Harsley, the photographer who runs the great 4th Street Photo Gallery on Fourth Street between Second Avenue and the Bowery. The piece is titled "Alex Harsley is an unsung doyen of New York photography."

The city has been Mr Harsley’s home since 1948, when, aged ten, he moved there from South Carolina. He took his first photograph ten years later, and became the first black photographer to work for the city’s district attorney’s office. His scintillating pictures freeze moments in New York’s evolution from the 1950s to the present.

You can also head into the EVG archives for this two-part interview with Alex from January 2014.


[Photo for EVG by James Maher]

Thursday, January 24, 2019

Late-afternoon rainbow break



Thanks to EVG reader Jeanne Krier for sharing this rainbow pic looking to the East from late this afternoon around 4:30 ... no word on where the end of the rainbow was.

A memorial for Jonas Mekas outside the Anthology Film Archives



There's a makeshift memorial for Jonas Mekas outside the Anthology Film Archives on Second Street at Second Avenue. Mekas, the filmmaker, writer, poet, curator, historian as well as co-founder of the Anthology, died yesterday morning. He was 96.

Steven shared these photos...









Here are several links for more on Mekas and his impact on cinema...

Jonas Mekas: how a Lithuanian refugee redefined American cinema (The Guardian)

Jonas Mekas, Underground Filmmaker Who Cast A Long Shadow, Dies At 96 (NPR)

Jonas Mekas, RIP: Why This 96-Year-Old Legend Was Our Most Important Cinephile (IndieWire)

And among his many, many works... "My Mars Bar Movie," an 87-minute documentary on one of the filmmaker's favorite bars.