Wednesday, November 18, 2015
Take a walk around the East Village on this June afternoon in 1986
Another video from the archives of Nelson Sullivan arrived on YouTube yesterday.
In this 13-minute video from June 1986, Sullivan crosses Third Avenue and heads east on St. Mark's Place ... turns south on Second Avenue ... and continues on East Seventh Street to Tompkins Square Park, where he spots Lady Bunny (out of drag) and DJ Dmitry... before hanging out on A and Seventh ...
Sullivan's video archive was donated to NYU's Fales Library & Special Collections in 2012.
He died of a heart attack on July 4, 1989.
H/T EVG reader Brian K.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Take a quick trip back to Avenue A and East 7th Street in 1986
The East Village of Nelson Sullivan
The first nice Sunday of 1987 in the East Village
'The Fabulous Personalities of 1980s New York'
[Updated] Nino's and Yoshi Sushi served with eviction notices on Avenue A
[EVG photo from last week]
Back on Oct. 21, signs arrived on the front door of Nino's on Avenue A at St. Mark's Place noting a closure due to a gas leak in a building next door. A similar sign arrived a storefront away at Yoshi Sushi, 131 Avenue A.
Now, the landlord of both businesses have served eviction notices.
Nino's has five days within service of this notice to respond… the legal documents taped to the door states that the October rent is due (with interest) for the sum of $22,549.93…
The situation appears more dire at Yoshi Sushi …
… where the legal documents state that the owners need to pay more than $42,000 in rent and penalties dating back to September…
Updated 5 p.m.
An EVG reader notes that at Nino's, someone has removed the eviction notice that arrived this morning… and there's a new sign noting that Nino's will reopen…
The annual New York Cares Coat Drive is underway
This morning at the Mission we kicked off the @NewYorkCares #CoatDrive! pic.twitter.com/GmxIWe5HgL
— The Bowery Mission (@BoweryMission) November 17, 2015
The goal is to collect 100,000 winter coats for New Yorkers in need this winter. Find out what you can do here.
Out and About in the East Village
In this weekly 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
James Maher is a fine art and studio photographer based in the East Village. Find his website here.
By James Maher
Name: Karen Platt
Occupation: Artist
Location: 4th Street between Avenue A and Avenue B
Time: 3:45 pm on Wednesday, Nov. 11
I was born and raised in New York — 333 E. 30th St. My mom and dad went to Cooper Union. They’re both artists. Growing up I was an arty kid. I went to the High School of Music & Art, when it was in Harlem, and P.S. 116 before that. I was doing music and all that kind of stuff. I did fine art and I worked for Billboard magazine doing graphic design for them.
I’ve been in my building on Fifth Street for 20 years now. It was very nice to be down here. There was respect — mutual respect between people. Just… you could be. It wasn’t overcrowded. There was actually breathing room. There were a lot more old people. There were just neighborhood people that you saw every day. We were friends with everybody and we all knew each other.
There were a lot of artists and there was always an art show to go see. There always plays and drag shows. I was like a club kid back in the day. We used to go to the Area Club. Pyramid used to do this this funny-as-hell soap opera on stage called "Sordid Lives." Black Lips was the other show they did. I’d faithfully go every week. The shows were amazing and the atmosphere was so intimate, like a small cabaret. You felt like you were part of something completely unique.
I used to work at the Yaffa Café for like 20 years. Antony of Antony of the Johnson’s waitered there. He used to perform as Fiona Blue at the Pyramid Club and he was amazing. I also worked for a jewelry designer who had a loft on Essex and Allen. She made a lot of Madonna-type rubber bracelets. I wound up buying her delta industrial drill press for $65. I make rave style jewelry from plastic and rubber tubing. I sold it at a store called Mod World on First Avenue between East Fifth and Sixth. I called myself Big Love Designs. I still have — and completely love — that drill press. It has done me good over the past 30 years.
When I was about 19 years old I worked at the Mars Bar. It was owned by Hank Penza, who recently passed away. Hank would gives loans to guys who lived on the Bowery, and every week they would line up outside the bar to pay him back. I had two day shifts that were filled with the interesting men from the Bowery. I’d sling $2 drinks. The drinks were simple to make and if you did not know how to make them, the customers would happily tell you how. There were so many colorful characters who came in that I could write a book about all of them. Mars Bar was probably the diviest bar around, but it had a realness and trueness, with people down on their luck, artists, sculptors and musicians. You were part of a community of creative people. I miss that feeling.
James Maher is a fine art and studio photographer based in the East Village. Find his website here.
Construction watch: 321 E. 3rd St.
The 6-story residential building going up at 321 E. Third St. is looking decidedly less cinderblock-y now than the rendering on the plywood would have you believe…
Oh, the rendering…
The 30-unit building here between Avenue C and Avenue D comes courtesy of Queens-based Venetian Management LLC, who's listed as the owner on DOB records.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Another parcel of East Village land ready for development
Plywood arrives at East 3rd Street lot, site of incoming 6-floor apartment building
Handing out the litter summonses
A rep from a co-op on East Seventh Street wrote in … noting that the building had been hit with a "plague of litter summonses" of late… all of them citing "litter within 18 inches of the curb."
The question: Any other people/buildings in the neighborhood getting fined ($100 for the first offense) like this?
The residents feel as if their building has been singled out (they have received two within 11 days).
We looked at this PDF at the Department of Sanitation for an explanation on enforcement …
Residential Premise Enforcement Routing
Under the Enforcement Routing Program, enforcement agents patrol all areas including commercial, industrial, manufacturing and residential blocks at specified times focusing on violations for dirty sidewalks, dirty areas and failure to clean 18 inches into the street. During the enforcement routing time, when enforcement agents observe a dirty sidewalk, dirty area or an 18-inch violation in front of/adjacent to a residential premise, a notice of violation will be issued. Although enforcement agents will issue notices for dirty sidewalk, dirty area, or failure to clean 18 inches into the street violations only during the specified 2 one-hour daily routing time periods, they may issue notices for all other violations at any time.
Residential Premises
Residential routing times citywide have been set as follows:
8:00 AM to 8:59 AM and 6:00 PM to 6:59 PM
This issue of the Journal of the National Association of Administrative Law Judiciary from May 2014 has a footnote-heavy article titled "Fighting Dirty Sidewalk Tickets in New York City."
[Updated] The upscale hotel bar with a pool named for the late environmentalist Adam Purple
A photo posted by Hotel Indigo (@hotelindigo) on
The 293-room Hotel Indigo at 171 Ludlow St. (and 180 Orchard St.!) opened its doors on Monday between East Houston and Stanton.
The property has been in the works for about 10 years now. (You can read more at The Lo-Down and BoweryBoogie.)
And the main attraction — for guests and non-guests alike — promises to be the 15th-floor bar with an outdoor pool. Here are details via WWD:
Mr. Purple is the first venture this far downtown for Gerber Group, which operates places such as Union Square’s Irvington and The Roof at Viceroy, along Central Park. Though there will be some adjustments for the group — “we’ll see a lot more tattoos on our staff” — the move to the Lower East Side sees Gerber maintaining their high-end approach. “We’re not the Lower East Side place that has $3 beers and $1 shots,” Gerber says; Mr. Purple’s house cocktails average around $14 to $15, and beers are $7.
And where did the name originate?
The bar name comes from the Lower East Side icon David Wilkie, who became known as “Mr. Purple” for his preferred shade of clothing. The street artist Lee Quiñones was working on a mural for the hotel, and one of the images he was doing was of Mr. Purple. “That’s really what inspired us,” Gerber says. Mr. Purple’s image is discreetly painted on the ceiling of the 14th floor lobby.
Purple, the environmentalist and activist, died on Sept. 14 at age 84. Considered by some to be the godfather of the urban gardening movement, Purple created a five-lot, 15,000-square-foot garden amid the nearby ruins of the Lower East Side in the mid-1980s.
And now his memory lives on at Mr. Purple with its purple bar seats and $15 house cocktails...
Purple Reign <3
New York meet Mr Purple's Spot @HotelindigoLES #pullup #Discoverles #Nyc pic.twitter.com/Dj27enTB7M
— Hotel Indigo L.E.S. (@HotelindigoLES) November 17, 2015
Updated 4:30 p.m.
Gothamist notes that Mr. Purple's reps seem "to be backtracking on this a bit." They quote a news release about Mr. Purple with this backstory:
A mysterious man, born and raised in the Lower East Side, the city was his muse. He was an unmistakable staple of the neighborhood and an unforgettable piece of its continuing character. His art, like his personality, was ephemeral with no known relics outlasting him. It has been said that to see him work was to have a glimpse into utopia. For now, Mr. Purple, and all that he represents, is up to your imagination to interpret.
Updated 11/24
The Gerber Group sent us the following statement this morning in regard to Mr. Purple:
The name of the bar and restaurant was established when the project was first conceptualized in 2014. It was indeed inspired by Lower East Side resident David Wilkie, who became known as "Mr. Purple." A gardener and activist, he was an iconic figure who dedicated his life to beautifying and improving the neighborhood. A mural was painted in his honor and can be seen on display in the lobby area of the hotel.
Also, in honoring Wilkie's dedication to the neighborhood, the restaurant is committed to supporting the Lower East Side community through several initiatives including partnerships with the Bowery Mission and local businesses such as Russ & Daughters, il laboratorio del gelato and Yonah Schimmel Knish Bakery who are all featured on the restaurant's menu. Additionally, through the Lower East Side Employment Network (LESEN), 30 percent of jobs at the hotel have been allocated to local residents.
Updated 11/25
A representative from Russ & Daughters reached out to us with a statement:
Russ & Daughters doesn’t have a partnership with Mr. Purple or Hotel Indigo. That restaurant simply purchased smoked salmon at our shop one time. We never authorized them to use our name on their menus or in their promotional materials.
Previously on EV Grieve:
RIP Adam Purple
Tuesday, November 17, 2015
A #lovewall for St. Mark's Place
Earlier today, British-born artist James Goldcrown painted a mural of hearts on the side of Foot Gear Plus on St. Mark's Place at First Avenue...(he created a similar #lovewall earlier this year outside L'asso on Mott and Kenmare)...
Per his Instagram account, the hearts are for Paris...
Photos via EVG contributor Steven
--
To Hank
Someone decided to pay his or her respects to the late Hank Penza, who owned Mars Bar among many others during his life, here at the Centre-fuge-curated rotating outdoor gallery/construction trailer on East First Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue …
Previously on EV Grieve:
RIP Hank Penza
RIP Steven Steinberg
Steven Steinberg, the third generation owner of New York Central Art Supply at 62 Third Ave. near East 11th Street, the oldest art supply store in the United States, died this past Sunday. He was 79. The cause of death was pneumonia, a complication of the Parkinson's disease he has battled for the last eight years, according to his son Doug.
Steinberg began working for his father Harold at New York Central in the 1950s, and gradually built a clientele of the world's leading modern artists, including Andy Warhol, Willem deKooning, Frank Stella, Cecily Brown, among many others.
The store, largely unchanged from when it was founded by Steven's grandfather Benjamin Steinberg in 1905, was reknown for its large selection of unique and hard-to-find materials, and staff of knowledgeable, quirky artists.
A true art lover, Steinberg helped the burgeoning modern arts scene in New York City by allowing artists to pay with credit when money wasn't available (which was often the case). He also helped many artists realize their visions by working with manufacturers to develop materials such as unique papers, materials, inks, brushes and paints.
For deKooning, Steinberg developed a unique fan-shaped brush. When David Hockney wanted a series of lithographs that appeared to be drawn with crayon, Steinberg worked with master lithographer Ken Tyler and Superior Ink to create a wax-saturated printing ink that simulated crayon.
Steinberg is survived by his wife Diiana Steinberg, his children Barrie and Doug, and grandchildren Alexandra, Danielle, Hudson and Gemma.
Thank you to the Steinberg family for the photo and information in this post.
Reminders: Meeting on possible improvements to the Tompkins Square Park Playground
Just a reminder… Councilmember Rosie Mendez is hosting a meeting tonight to discuss ideas for improving the Tompkins Square Park Playground near East Seventh Street and Avenue B. Mendez has allotted some $900,000 to renovate this space… this is the first step in the improvement process…
The meeting tonight is at St. Brigid's on Avenue B (enter the community center space on the East Eighth Street side) from 6:30-8.
Meanwhile, someone offered his or her opinion on the meeting on one of the flyers in the Park… even pointing out a missing word in the text…
[Photo by Steven]
Previously on EV Grieve:
Your chance to brainstorm ideas to renovate the Tompkins Square Park Playground (27 comments)
The apartment where the golden rule 'is that no one else can tell anyone else to be quiet'
[Via @TimHerrera]
An East Village apartment-for-rent listing via Craigslist has been making the rounds of late. (The ad is no longer live.)
Esquire wrote about it last week in a post titled Is This the Worst NYC Apartment Listing You've Ever Seen?
Sounds promising!
Apparently the ad is for real... here are some excerpts...
"We are all in our late 20's - early 30's here in NYC to live it up, take advantage of the sweet neighborhood, and have as much fun as possible while still managing to make it to work on time!"
"We all play in bands, love live music, and entertain guests on a regular basis along with the occasional open jam session at random hours of the night."
"If you are the type of person whose main source of entertainment is sitting at home, watching Netflix on your laptop, this apartment is definitely not for you.
"The neighborhood is loud, people in the building make a ton of noise, once in while, you may even want to pop in some ear-plugs... but we love it here!! There is a drum-kit in the common room along with guitars & amplifiers, where we jam out on a regular basis, create art, and engage in stimulating conversations with other tenants in the building. If this is something you would enjoy, please join us!"
The rent is $1,325.
And the room measures 11 x 6.
Anyway, Esquire spoke with the person who takes out the for rent ad. His name is Haffro.
And here's part of the Q-and-A between Esquire and Haffro:
How big is that place? It seems pretty small from the description.
It's a four-bedroom. Actually, a three-bedroom apartment, but I moved into the utility closet. It's a pretty big closet, 6 x 5. I live in there, and I just rent out the rooms. The biggest bedroom is 12 x 11, the middle is 12 x 10, the smallest is 11 x 6. They're all fully furnished, so when people come in, I don't have them bring their own shit. The ideal roommate would be someone moving in, coming to NYC with a suitcase and a backpack. The entire place costs $3800.
What reactions have you gotten to the Craigslist ad?
We don't really get that many responses. I probably get five or six each time I repost it. You can repost it every 48 hours. When I do get a response, I have another response I cut and paste in there, and the main thing is, I'm like, "All right, I just want you to know, in our apartment I think of it like a living, breathing art space. We have one golden rule, and the one rule is that no one else can tell anyone else to be quiet."
After being told that some people think it sounds like the worst living situation ever, Haffro responds:
If you don't like live music, what do you like? What're you gonna watch, Netflix? It pisses me off. We're trying to create a creative environment; people can bring their guitars, smoke weed. It's a very progressive building. Some people will walk by and say, "I saw the door open, I heard some music, I thought I'd stop in." I mean, you know the East Village, you know the idea. It used to be very punk rock. It's not like that now, kind of boutique a little bit, fancy cocktail bars. For me, I just live at dive bars, just mop bucket, disgusting-smelling bars. Those are the places I like...
H/T @FashionByHe
East 8th Street and Avenue C, home to 5 restaurants in recent years, is now on the market
Back on Friday, EVG reader Peter from 8th St. noted some activity at the former restaurant at 127 Avenue C at East Eighth Street… where workers were clearing out the space…
There was also a new notice (dated Nov. 12) from the Marshal noting that the landlord (in this case, Croman/9300 Realty) had taken legal possession of the space…
The for rent signs arrived a little later… (the listing hasn't appeared online just yet)…
The space has been vacant now for a year. Lumé, the "Epicurean drinkery," was the last concept to try this corner… which took over for the short-lived Life - Kitchen and Bar … which had taken over for Verso, perhaps best known for a topless diner encounter.
Other restaurants here in recent years include Caffe Pepe Rosso and Caffe Cotto.
And, as previously noted, the storefront once housed a bakery … which apparently Iggy Pop frequented for cake and strong coffee in the early 1990s…
Previously on EV Grieve:
[NSFW] About the topless diner at Verso Sunday night
This Thanksgiving, you can have a Thanksgiving arepa
Via the EVG inbox…
The newly opened Arepa Factory (147 Avenue A near East 9th Street) puts a Venezuelan twist on Thanksgiving with a Turkey Day feast you can hold in the palm of your hand. A sweet potato-corn flour Thanksgiving Arepa filled with turkey, gravy, stuffing and cranberry sauce will be available from Tuesday, Nov. 17 through Monday, Nov. 30 for $12.95 (note: Arepa Factory is closed Thanksgiving Day).
Arepa Factory, which opened in October, puts a modern, healthy spin on this traditional Venezuelan dish. Owner Monica Muzzo, a native of Venezuela, designed Arepa Factory to be an authentic Arepera, a casual spot for takeout and dine-in where arepas are filled to order in front of you – with a twist. Chef Rafael I. De Garate oversees a menu that marries Venezuelan tradition with new creative ingredient combinations inspired by the diversity of cultures in New York.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Arepa Factory has opened on Avenue A
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