Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Centre-fuge public art project debuts new work in Cycle 2

Oops. Crap. We forgot to mention this yesterday... the artists involved in Cycle 2 worked this past weekend on the trailer here on East First Street west of First Avenue... and the artists were finishing up early yesterday evening...


And for the whole background ... from the EV Grieve inbox...

Centre-fuge Public Art Project is proud to present Cycle 2, the second installation of art on the rotating outdoor gallery at First Street and First Avenue.

In mid-2011 a drab, gray trailer, serving as a temporary office for workers on the 2nd Avenue subway line, popped up on the South side of First Street. For one year Centre-fuge Public Art Project transforms the trailer into a rotating street gallery. Up to seven artists at a time create work on all visible sides of the structure with the art changing every other month.

The goal of Centre-fuge is not only to re-beautify this incredible block, but also to encourage the community to express itself in a public forum. With the closure of half of Houston Street, making underground way for the 2nd Avenue Subway line, the ever-growing presence of construction makes the block feel less like a neighborhood full of individuals and more like a work site full of barricades and jackhammers. The project is dedicated in memory of friend, creator and Lower East Side neighbor, Mike Hamm.

Artists represented in Cycle 2 of Centre-fuge are Claw Money, Eiknarf, John P. Dessereau, Julius Klein, Kenny Rodriguez and Yuri Velez, with a collaborative piece by Mastro and Ben Angotti. Centre-fuge is brought to you by founders Pebbles Russell and Jonathan Neville.

And for more information and bios of the Cycle 2 artists, please go here.

BoweryBoogie had coverage...

Previously.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Noted


St. Mark's Place this afternoon near First Avenue.

Photo by Bobby Williams.

Hey now: Other Music launching its own record label

The Times is reporting this evening that Other Music, the record shop over on East Fourth Street near Broadway, is starting its own record label "with an eye toward showcasing underground music in New York and reissuing albums by foreign artists."

Per the article:

The new label, Other Music Recording Co., will be an imprint of Fat Possum, the Oxford, Miss, record label that has such bands as Youth Lagoon and Smith Westerns in its stable. Its first release will be a 7-inch vinyl record by an obscure Brooklyn indie-pop band called Ex Cops, coming out on April 24.

Read the whole article here.

Oh, wait! Pitchfork broke the news earlier this afternoon.

EV Grieve Etc: Mourning Edition

[Weekend Stompers yesterday on Second Avenue]

The Lower East Side mistaken identity murder (Gothamist)

A new security system at 120 E. Fourth St. (Occupy East Fourth Street)

Velvet Underground & Nico turns 45 today (Westword)

'STAMPEDED' on East Second Street (The Lo-Down)

Q-and-A with a counter man at First & First Finest Deli (Racked)

More nightlife for Ludlow below Delancey (Crain's New York)

About the art fair at the Comfort Inn on Ludlow (ArtInfo)

Downtown diner Roxy Luncheonette in danger of closing (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)

Remembering Jack Kerouac on his birthday (Off the Grid)

Real-time NYC map app (Runnin' Scared)

Calvin Klein ad attracts anti-bulge notes on the Bowery (BoweryBoogie)

History of the Blarney Stone bars (Ephemeral New York)

Former burial society home rises from the dead on East Fourth Street

Nearly two years ago, we wrote about a new listing that appeared for two townhouses at 326-328 E. Fourth St. between Avenue C and Avenue D... 12 bedrooms in the two homes... and both buildings were going for $4.6 million.


As the Times reported in September 2010, this is was home to "an artists’ collective and burial society called the Uranian Phalanstery and First New York Gnostic Lyceum Temple, was started in the East Village in the late 1950s by the artists Richard Oviet Tyler and Dorothea Tyler."

Later, preservation groups fought a losing battle to landmark the 170-year-old buildings. The Landmarks Preservation Commission said the buildings didn’t merit landmarking status, giving developer Terrence Lowenberg and penthouse-making architect Ramy Issac the green light to add two stories to the top.

Anyway! Thanks to Dave on 7th for pointing out that workers have removed the construction netting on the new buildings...




...and a view from the rear...


...and a now-and-then of sorts...


The new 326-328 looks similar to Lowenberg's other East Village rehab — 147 First Avenue...


Previously on EV Grieve:
Historic East Fourth Street artists' collective soon to be condos

Two side-by-side townhouses on East Fourth Street await your renovation

City doesn't give a shit about these historic East Village townhouses

Almost working around the clock on developing 326-328 E. Fourth St.

Met Foods removes the R

Renovations seemed to have wrapped up over at Met Foods on Second Avenue between Sixth Street and Seventh Street...

As Jeremiah has written about, a Ratner's was located here for more than 50 years ... (Read Jeremiah's post here.)

The R from Ratner's remained inside the front entrance... given the renovations, it seemed unlikely that this sliver of history would survive...


Sure enough. From a reader:

Manager of the Met on Second Avenue explaining why they removed the R from the floor: "it was cracked and disgusting, you really should have seen it."


Workers put in a new floor here this past week...


And so far, that exposed piece of Ratner's old wall is still there.

Well, perhaps we should just be thankful that the store survived its fight against NYU. We could be looking at a dorm instead...

Does this mean you'll have to sever your arm with a dull knife to eat Pizza Roma?


Spotted outside Whole Foods Bowery... Referencing "127 Hours" to sell pizza seems a little ... odd.

2 men and a chair inside 35 Cooper Square

On Friday afternoon, Bobby Williams spotted two workers inside the gate at the seemingly dormant 35 Cooper Square space...


... perhaps they entered to prop up this chair. Rather like the look of this now. Still life. Or target practice.

Your chance to run a cafe and kiosk in Union Square

To be honest, we've lost track of exactly what was happening with the restaurant opening at the north side of Union Square Park in the retooled pavilion ... After lawsuits and squabbling and stuff, City Farm Cafe was supposed to open here this spring ... But, per the Times, that group withdrew from the deal last fall...

Yesterday, we noticed the following public notice in the Post...


It's a 15-year lease... with "compensation to the city" starting at $300,000 in Year 1, escalating to $453,777 by Year 15... Given how slow this whole process has been, a restaurant should be in place here in 15 years...

Coming soon to Second Avenue: Gelato


EV Grieve reader abrod passes along word of this incoming gelato shop on Second Avenue near East Fourth Street... previously home to Crembebe, a boutique specializing in kid's fashions...

Oh, and Gelato Ti Amo is part of an international Tuscany-based chain who only use products branded FSC, Forest Stewardship Council, according to the Gelato Ti Amo website.

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Today in red-tailed hawks eating pigeons in Tompkins Square Park


It was a busy day for hawk watching today in Tompkins Square Park... where onlookers were watching a red-tailed hawk dine on a pigeon...



Eventually, another hawk came along and watched the action as well...


Photos by Bobby Williams.

Meanwhile, for no reason, in Times Square


From a very special correspondent who wanted to keep haunting us with Smurfs.

July 4 — ruined

On Thursday morning, we noted that the lights on the Tompkins Square Park holiday tree were still illuminated... and we said that we hoped they would stay on until July 4. (For no apparent reason.)

Uh, well, Thursday night — the lights were off. (Sorry — horrible picture.) And they remained off all weekend...


We took a closer look at the tree this weekend... and the lights are still attached ... so it's just a matter of plugging in the cord...


However, the NYPD has the tree under 24-hour watch to prevent this from happening.*


[* Not really. But we like to pretend...]

Artichoke expands on East 14th Street

Just two weeks ago, we noted that Curly's Vegetarian Lunch moved on, and the similar-menued 14 Carrot Vegetarian opened in its space on East 14th Street ... and just like that ... @SamStorer is back with this news: 14 Carrot is gone, and neighbor Artichoke has expanded...

Week in Grieview

[76 Third Ave. coming down]

A look at Mary Pupillo's 95 years in the East Village (Wednesday)

The scoop on the Cabrini Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation closing (Wednesday)

Restoring the Joe Strummer mural (Friday)

More about Bikinis opening on Avenue C (Tuesday)

The Museum of Reclaimed Urban Space coming to C-Squat (Monday)

A black-tie wedding reception at Katz's (Sunday)

Retna finishes work on the Houston/Bowery wall (Monday)

Jim Jarmusch is your East Village poets and poetry tour guide (Tuesday)

Why Steve Jobs is now a permanent part of Tompkins Square Park (Friday)

'World's most wanted hacker' lived on Avenue D (Tuesday)

Obscura opens on Avenue A (Sunday)

'Imagine a park' at 51 Astor Place (Tuesday)

The painting Billy Leroy left behind

So the tent is gone now here at Billy's Antiques...


Proprietor Billy Leroy passed along this photo of a painting that he accidentally left behind on the property...


BoweryBoogie has coverage of the funeral possession here.

Today at Bar 82

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Depending on the time, it may be an hour later than you think


Remember the whole "spring forward" thing tonight...

Photo by Bobby Williams.

Bye bye Billy's

Here's the tent at Billy's Antiques last evening on Houston at the Bowery ...

[Photo via Fresh Paint NYC]

And today, the tent came down... a funeral procession ensued...



Look for a two-story brick building some day (and subsequent dozens of posts) ... Billy says that he will return...

Bottom two photos by Bobby Williams.

Fire on East Ninth Street


8E sends along this photo from a fire earlier this evening at 55 E. 9th St. (between Broadway and University) ... don't know the extent of the damage just yet...

[Updated] Family members react to Cabrini's closure


We mentioned yesterday that WNBC 4 was working on a Cabrini-closure story... Here are a few excerpt's from Gus Rosendale's story...

Family members of residents found out this week that they would have to make other arrangements once the East Fifth Street home closes, likely in July. The Cabrini Center has another nursing home facility in Westchester.

"My mother is in a wheelchair," said Malanke Savanovic, of Bayside, Queens. "We don't know where to put her."

Joe Torre, who lives nearby in Gramercy, makes daily visits to his mom in the nearby home and now fears he'll have to move her to another borough, further away.

"You need to be in there to see the love in there," he said.

Also.

Elizabeth Herring, who lives nearby and whose father lives in the home -- and has spent his whole life on the Lower East Side — vowed to fight the sale of the building.

"This is not over by a long shot, and we are in it for the long haul," she said.

Meanwhile, here's a snippet from NY1's report today:

Joanne Floyd said she has not slept since learning the Cabrini Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation in the East Village is closing. Her husband, who has Parkinson's disease, lives in the center.

"I'm overwhelmed, I don't know what to say. It's the most frightening thing I've ever faced," said Floyd. "I can hardly talk. I cared for him at home for four-and-a-half years, he fell, he hit his head and he came here. I've come every day for a year-and-a-half, I didn't miss one day."

Here's our story on it from Wednesday ...

East Village bars hosting first-ever Furry Vest Pub Crawl


Tomorrow, starting at 2.

[UPDATED] Did the Yogurt Station close on St. Mark's Place?


That's what a reader asked. With the paper over the windows/doors and all. Perhaps just a remodeling.

Does anyone know?

Meanwhile, we went to Yelp to see if we could find any clues ... There's a reluctant 2-star review from last Saturday... The Yelper asked, "What HAPPENED!!!!"

Yeah, what happened?

There were only two flavors: red velvet and chocolate. I'd go for the red velvet. MELTED!!!!! So I went for chocolate (eh, nothing special). By the time I got to eat it, it was already melted.

There was a good amount of flavors, mind you. And they STAYED frozen to the last bite. Not tonight!

Not to mention, the girl behind the register had quite the grumpy face. Before then, there was a friendly girl that worked the register. This makes me sad. Maybe service went downhill because the employee(s) there don't care about maintaining the store.

Anyway, the last time that we saw paper over the windows at this address... from February 2009...



UPDATED:
Nope, still open! Just closed for remodeling or something.

Seventh Street sunrise

This is what the north east corner of 13th Street and Fourth Avenue looked like on March 3, 2012


This year, we'll post photos like this of various buildings, streetscenes, etc., to capture them as they looked at this time and place... The photos may not be the most telling now, but they likely will be one day...

Friday, March 9, 2012

Yet so close to home...



A new one (circa January!) from Brooklyn's A Place to Bury Strangers. Called "So Far Away."

WNBC 4 on the Cabrini closure story


Was curious if or when the mainstream media would pick up on the impending closure of Cabrini Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation on Fifth Street and Avenue B... Here's our story on it from Wednesday ...

Let's start talking about the TSP Ratstravaganza again



Spotted this video over at Runnin' Scared. A staffer at the Comptroller's Office, which conducted an audit about not-so-swell conditions for kids in City parks, sent along the video from Tompkins Square Park ... not sure when this was made (not recently, a little green out) ... But it brings us back to the heady days of the TSP Ratstravaganza from last summer.

Speaking of rats. Here's some gore from this week in Tompkins Square Park...

Not this one...




Police looking for these men wanted for slashing 2 victims outside IHOP

[Via DNAinfo]

A Crime Stoppers alert, via DNAinfo ... Per the report:

Police are searching two suspects wanted for slashing two men in front of the IHOP restaurant on East 14th Street.

The suspects allegedly argued with the two victims, who are in their 20s, on the street outside the IHOP, which opened late last year at 235 E. 14th Street, on March 3 about 6 a.m. The suspects then slashed at both victims with an unknown object before fleeing the scene, police said.

Info on these guys? Call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-577-TIPS