Monday, September 30, 2024

6 posts from September

Photo by Stacie Joy 

A mini month in review...

• Dimmed lights on 1st Avenue: Only 1 Indian restaurant remains at Instagram-friendly address (Sept. 23

• Dressing up Avenue A for a 1990s crime thriller (Sept. 17

• More details emerge about the new Whole Foods Market StuyTown on 14th Street (Sept. 16

• 2 men indicted for fatal Tompkins Square Park shooting (Sept. 13

• Inside a historic Stuyvesant Street home for sale (Sept. 12

• A walk across the new Delancey Street pedestrian bridge (Sept. 3)

Excavator spotted at 1st Avenue site as plans for 7-story residential building await city approval

Photos by Steven 

On Friday, we spotted a lone excavator in the pit where three buildings — 33-37 First Ave. — once stood on this NW corner of Second Street. 

This is the first notable activity we've seen here since workers removed the sidewalk bridge in late June

To update on the situation here, a 7-story residential building with ground-floor retail is still awaiting city approval for its new address, 88 E. Second St. 

According to DOB paperwork, the proposed building will be 19,278 square feet, with 2,994 square feet designated for commercial space. Plans call for 22 residential units, which would likely be rentals given the square footage.

Read our previous posts for more about the project and prior businesses at 33-37 First Ave.

Caravan of Dreams launches crowdfunding campaign to secure future

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

Caravan of Dreams, now in its 33rd year of serving organic/vegan food in the East Village, has launched a crowdfunding campaign to ensure its survival.

Manager Abe Gross (below right with owner Angel Moreno) said the restaurant on Sixth Street "had a slow summer," and he was "hoping for a stronger September." They need the money for "sustainability."
Moreno, who started the restaurant in 1991, said, "When we want to serve others, it comes back to us. It's about being grateful. There is no place for complaining, bad emotions or energy. Just be grateful!"
You can find the GoFundMe page here

Caravan of Dreams is at 405 E. Sixth St. between Avenue A and First Avenue.

That's Mr. KEKE Ramen to you on Cooper Square

Photo by Jacob Ford 

Mr. KEKE Ramen is set to open at 63 Cooper Square between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place. 

According to the website: "Our mission at Mr. KEKE is to redefine the Asian fast-food landscape ... by seamlessly blending tradition with innovation, ensuring an exhilarating culinary journey." 

This is the brand's first Manhattan outpost, serving various ramen dishes, hot pot and dim sum. The menu is available here

The business started in the late 1990s and has locations in Glen Cove, Great Neck, and Flushing.

This space was previously home to Ise, a Japanese restaurant that closed in June after 36 years in NYC service.

Openings: Yawning Cobra, Potbelly, Love Mi

A few recent openings from the past month or so to note...

Yawning Cobra is now open downstairs at 356 Bowery between Bond and Great Jones.

The cocktail lounge (enter via a serpent-shaped door knob) is open Tuesday through Saturday from 5 p.m. to 1 a.m., with a midnight close on Sundays.

King's Cross was the last tenant in the subterranean space.

A Potbelly Sandwich Shop opened last Tuesday at 740 Broadway at Astor Place... in a storefront that was previously a &pizza outpost...
Since last month, on the SE corner of Fourth Avenue and 13th Street, Love Mi has been selling bubble tea, fruit tea, and various yogurt drinks... in the former Liquiteria space.

Sunday, September 29, 2024

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included (with someone having a cow on 14th Street by Derek Berg)...

• Dimmed lights on 1st Avenue: Only 1 Indian restaurant remains at Instagram-friendly address (Monday

• I need More: Here are J. Kathleen White's 2024 dioramas on 9th Street and Avenue C (Tuesday

• San Loco is closing its Lower East Side location (Thursday

• Buy a t-shirt to help power Flower Power on 9th Street (Wednesday

• "SCUMB Flowers" at Dashwood Projects (Friday

• At the 18th annual Anarchist Bookfair (Sunday

• Happy No. 130 to Veniero's Pasticceria! (Monday

• On Avenue A, Benny's Burritos returns for the movies (Tuesday) ... Kim's Video is the latest of the departed Avenue A businesses to return for a set piece (Thursday

• A moment on Avenue A in 1995 (Wednesday

• Façade exploration work continues at the former P.S. 64 (Monday)

PUNK Magazine is back with a new issue and a battle of the bands in Tompkins Square Park (Thursday) ... PUNK in the rain (Saturday

• LÀ LÁ Bakeshop bringing Vietnamese desserts to 2nd Avenue (Thursday

• Holy Cow announces itself on 14th and B (Monday

• Checking in at No Fork on Avenue A (Thursday

• Signage alerts: St. Mark's Burgers & Dogs, Kamisama, Alphabet City Gourmet Deli (Monday

• Blazing the trail: A map to all the high points of legal cannabis dispensaries (Tuesday

• Closings: Pizza Pazzo on 1st Street (Monday

This past Tuesday evening, the Francis Kite Club celebrated Sunaura Taylor's new book "Disabled Ecologies: Lessons from a Wounded Desert." Below is Sunaura (on the right) with her sister and fellow author Astra Taylor (photo by Daniel Efram)...
Francis Kite Club, 40 Avenue C between Third Street and Fourth Street, hosts many interesting events, workshops and programs. Check out their calendar here.

Saturday, September 28, 2024

Saturday's parting shot

Photo by Derek Berg 

On Second Avenue, braving the rain to make sure movie night is a popping success! (Sorry, slinking away...)

PUNK in the rain

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Despite the crummy weather, the show went on today in Tompkins Square Park... as longtime East Village resident John Holmstrom, the co-founder, editor, and illustrator of PUNK Magazine, celebrated the release of his latest issue with a Battle of the Bands. 

We were there to see the 50s-rock twang of Labretta Suede & The Motel 6 ...
The new issue is available at several local businesses, including Trash & Vaudeville on Seventh Street and East Village Vintage Collective on 12th Street as well as a paper box on St. Mark's and A...

EVG Etc.: The possible future of Mayor Adams; the effect of unlicensed weed shops

Tompkins Square Park photo shoot via Derek Berg

• Insiders talk about what might be next for Mayor Adams (Politico) ... Inside the mayor's "clumsy" attempt to hinder foreign bribery probe (NBC News

• A State Supreme Court judge refused to toss two lawsuits seeking to overturn Gov. Hochul's congestion pricing pause (Streetsblog

• The enforcement of illegal weed shops has left the LES and East Village with dozens of empty storefronts for the foreseeable future (Gothamist)

• A feature on East Village musician Jesse Malin's recovery from a spinal stroke — with some help from friends (CBS News

• An interview with EV native Kyota Umeki, who now runs the skateboard-friendly Star Shop on Ninth Street (Office Magazine

• About "Dickhead," now playing at Theater for the New City (Our Town

• Mapping the city's best slices (Eater

• "The Substance" is a reminder of all the films Demi Moore has made, and don't sleep on "Margin Call" (Metrograph

And this weekend at Cooper Union (info here): 
Hello From The Data Vandals (or free as air and water, or whatsoever things are true) is the premiere exhibition by the New York City data-activist collective known as the Data Vandals (artist Jen Ray and data visualization expert Jason Forrest). 
It will be on view in Cooper's Civic Projects Lab at 41 Cooper Square. The Data Vandals' art focuses on starting conversations on universal issues through data visualization. Using sculpture, performance, music, and bold designs, the Data Vandals create dialogues that are relatable, accessible, and dynamic.

The exhibition will be a fun look at the East Village through data past and present, filling the Civic Projects Lab with large data visualization paintings and sculptures, workshops, lectures, and a movie night.

The Clemente Center kicks off its Historias initiative with a block party on the LES

Later today, the Clemente Soto Velez Cultural and Educational Center will hold a block party to kick off Historias, a $2.5 million three-year initiative to tell Latinx stories in NYC. 

Read more about the Historias project here and here

The event will be held from 2 to 9 p.m. on Suffolk Street outside of the Clemente at Rivington. (Organizers confirm the festivities will proceed regardless of rain later today.) This link includes the full rundown of the block party events. 

The Clemente, a 30-year-old Puerto Rican and Latinx cultural space, is currently undergoing renovations.

Friday, September 27, 2024

Friday's parting shot

There was a report of a fire at 50 Avenue A between Third Street and Fourth Street late this afternoon ... the FDNY sent four trucks, and, thankfully, there didn't seem to be any sign of a fire.

Thanks to Joshua Cohen for the photo.

'Mad' world

 

Going with some New York noise-rock legends Live Skull here — "Mad Kingship," from the band's most recent release, 2023's Party Zero

Live Skull is headlining a loft show tonight (late) at Pretty Garden Club, 55 Canal St. at Orchard.

'SCUMB Flowers' at Dashwood Projects

Photos and text by Tia Jonsson 

Wednesday night marked the opening of Justine Kurland's "SCUMB Flowers" at Dashwood Projects, an offshoot of Dashwood Books

The exhibition showcases a selection of Kurland's collages, which she made from fragments of photo books by men. It's part of a larger project Kurland calls "SCUMB Manifesto," inspired by Valerie Solanas' 1967 text with the same name. Kurland adds a 'B' — "Society for Cutting Up Men's Books."
Kurland also collaborated with poet Ariana Reines on a zine titled "Ariana and SCUMB Flowers" that mixes the collages with Reines' poetry. (Below, from left: Reines and Kurland.)
The show will be up until Nov. 11, and a poetry reading with Reines will be held on Oct. 5 from 5 to 7 p.m.

Dashwood Projects, which debuted in this space last March, is located at 63 E. Fourth St., between the Bowery and Second Avenue. The gallery is open Wednesday through Friday, noon to 5 p.m., and Saturday from 1 to 6 p.m.

 Tia Jonsson is an East Village resident and former student of Justine Kurland.

President Zelensky visits the Ukrainian Museum

Top photo: Office of the President of Ukraine via @ukrainianmuseum 
2nd photo: Adriana Leshko 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and First Lady Olena Zelenska visited the Ukrainian Museum in the East Village on Monday. 

The President and First Lady officially opened the Museum's new exhibit, "Alexandra Exter: The Stage is a World," on Sixth Street between Second Avenue and Cooper Square. 

Ukrainian Museum Director Peter Doroshenko gave the two a tour of the exhibit. Zelensky then sat down for a meeting and discussion with members of the Ukrainian community, moderated by Oksana Markarova, the Ambassador of Ukraine to the United States.
The Art Newspaper has more about the presidential visit here

Zelenskyy is in the U.S. this week to attend the UN General Assembly. 

The Exeter show opens today. Per the Museum: 
Marking the first solo showcase of her work in North America, it offers a comprehensive exploration of Exter's pioneering career from 1913 to 1934. Featuring over thirty paintings and works on paper, the exhibition highlights her early abstractions and avant-garde theater contributions. Through collaboration with Ukrainian and U.S. museums, as well as international private collectors, this survey delves into Exter's influential contributions to theater and cinema, presenting both rare and iconic pieces beloved by art lovers around the world. 
The exhibit will be on display through Jan. 19. The museum is open Wednesday-Sunday from noon to 6 p.m. 

BTW, a membership to The Ukrainian Museum makes for a nice gift.

The 13th annual LUNGS Harvest Arts Festival continues through Sunday

Here's a reminder that the 13th annual LUNGS Harvest Arts Festival continues through Sunday at dozens of East Village/LES community gardens.

Check the LUNGS website here for the day-by-day, garden-by-garden schedule. 

Thursday, September 26, 2024

Thursday's parting shot

Photo by Derek Berg 

Today's Pigeon Bird on a Bagel on 7th Street...

An Eric Adams reader

Photo from Tompkins Square Park in May 2023 by Stacie Joy

It's the story dominating headlines today here and across the country: Mayor Eric Adams has been indicted on five federal public corruption charges, including bribery and wire fraud — the first for a sitting New York City mayor. 

He defiantly said today he will fight the charges... and has no plans to resign as he faces these criminal charges.

Here's his press conference today, where he was initially drowned out by protestors (The City)... 
Here's a collection of headlines about this ongoing story... 

• What we know about the investigations surrounding Adams (The Associated Press with live updates

• Read the Adams indictment (NBC 4

• Investigations, resignations, indictment: A timeline of Mayor Adams' troubles (Gothamist

• Live ongoing coverage at NBC News here

• Eric Adams promised to be a mayor unlike any New Yorkers had ever seen. Much about him remains head-scratching. (The New York Times

• Who is Jumaane Williams? If Eric Adams resigns, the NYC public advocate becomes mayor. (CBS News)

PUNK Magazine is back with a new issue and a battle of the bands in Tompkins Square Park

East Village resident John Holmstrom, the co-founder, editor, and illustrator of PUNK Magazine, is ready to release a new issue (Punk #23) with a free show in Tompkins Square Park. 

On Saturday from 2-6 p.m., Holmstrom (with some help from The Shadow) is hosting a Battle of the Bands. 

Here's more info from Holmstrom's Newsletter:
It’s happening! We will be printing a new issue of PUNK Magazine in time for the Sept. 28 Battle of the Bands at Tompkins Square Park. This will be the first new issue since ... 2023! 
It will be printed in the same format as PUNK #1: Reverse quarter fold, 24 pages, only on newsprint instead of offset paper. This issue is meant to be a "Temporary Thing" (as Lou Reed said in a great song). 
Despite many efforts to revive PUNK Magazine over the years, I've been unable to get back on our feet. BUT! It looks like this one just might be successful. I still believe that the print medium is better than the internet: It lasts longer. It doesn't keep track of who reads it, doesn't spy on everything you do. And it's so much fun to work with people to put together a magazine! Web stuff is too often a solo project… 
So here we are: A new issue of PUNK Magazine is on the way. This issue is devoted to the upcoming Sept. 28 event at Tompkins. I'm not expecting to get rich, just want to promote a few bands I like. Which was my intent back in 1975, when I discovered the CBGB scene.

Free copies of the new PUNK will be distributed during Saturday's show. 

Previously on EV Grieve

San Loco is closing its Lower East Side location

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

After 22 years at 111 Stanton St., San Loco is closing its location here between Ludlow and Essex. 

The lease is up, and according to owners Jill and Kimo Hing, they are at an impasse with the landlord.
"It's time to move on," says Jill. 

Kimo adds, "The pandemic changed the business, the neighborhood has changed, and our customers have changed. The cost of business has increased, with inflation and product costs rising." 

Monday is the last day for business on Stanton Street. 

San Loco's outpost on Avenue C will remain in service. 

"We're trying to look at the positive; we'll be here at Avenue C, and we're now able to expand our menu," Jill says. "Kimo and I will be back in the kitchen." 

The family-run business will keep the same delivery range, down to Grand Street (FDR to Third Avenue and up to Stuy Town). They hope their customers will show up to support the business before it closes and to say goodbye. They mention having final bills to pay and wanting to see their longtime customers. And for those who want to help: "If you know of a place in the neighborhood with affordable and reasonable rent, let us know!"

San Loco has a longtime presence in the East Village, starting in 1986 on Second Avenue before later moving across the street to 124 Second Ave. between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place. That outpost closed in June 2017 due to a rent increase that was unsustainable. The Avenue A San Loco closed in 2014 after 15 years in business.

LÀ LÁ Bakeshop bringing Vietnamese desserts to 2nd Avenue

Photos by Steven 

LÀ LÁ Bakeshop, a Toronto-based Vietnamese bakery, is opening its first NYC outpost at 73 Second Ave. between Fourth Street and Fifth Street. 

We spotted a small sign on the door and tracked down the owners, who confirmed the arrival later this fall.
The Bakeshop, described as "a modern Vietnamese bakery for all," specializes in "nostalgic Asian desserts." 

Per its website:
We're coming to the East Village this Fall ... And we can't wait to introduce you to the Salted Egg Pork Floss Cake — the best cake you've never heard of. (Somehow, the Vietnamese have managed to keep it a secret for this long.) We know, we know, it sounds bizarre, but you might just love it. 
You can follow the opening news via Instagram

The cafe-bakery Cinnamon Girl quietly closed here last year after 18 months.