Showing posts sorted by relevance for query friday the 13th. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query friday the 13th. Sort by date Show all posts

Monday, August 6, 2018

Cleaning up the Relaxation Garden on Avenue B and 13th Street



Several Parks Department workers descended upon the dormant Relaxation Garden on 13th Street and Avenue B and removed trash and debris this past Thursday.



As the Post reported, the GreenThumb garden, part of the city’s urban gardening program, had been locked up the past two years during renovation work next door. During this time, the space had become infested with rats — thanks in part to the NYCHA-controlled trash compactor adjacent to the lot.


[Photo from yesterday]

Per the Post:

For about four hours, the workers hauled away trash and construction debris from the lot at Avenue B and East 13th Street, cut down a tree, pruned shrubs and hacked at weeds.

“It’s going to come back as a community garden. We can’t say when,” a Parks Department worker told The Post.

The workers also removed the GreenThumb-branded Relaxation Garden sign from the fence.

Meanwhile, the construction at the building next door, 207 Avenue B, remains at a standstill. The city issued a Stop Work Order in March 2017 because the contractor of record withdrew from the project. That Order is still in place as of Friday.



The Parks Department was reportedly working with 207's landlord to expedite the work so that the garden can reopen.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Report: Rats running rampant in the Relaxation Garden on Avenue B and 13th Street

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

[Updated] Report: City approves East 10th Street Historic District; but Ben Shaoul's buzzer-beater gives him the OK to alter historic building

[Image via Curbed]

Curbed has news from this afternoon's public hearing at the Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) regarding the East 10th Street Historic District.

"The LPC voted unanimously to create the East 10th Street Historic District."

The East 10th Street Historic District comprises 26 buildings on the north side of East 10th Street between Avenues A and B that reflect the 19th and 20th century history of the East Village.

The vote also effectively ends developer Ben Shaoul's plan to add a fifth floor to the existing four-floor building at 315 E. 10th St.

Updated:

Well, then. Curbed added this to their earlier post:

"While the LPC moved quickly to prevent Shaoul from altering the building, the good mood among preservationists after the LPC's affirmative vote dimmed when it was learned that the DOB issued the developer his construction permits this morning, just hours before the LPC hearing and vote."

Here's the paperwork from the DOB...


The city gave Shaoul the OK to convert the building from nonprofit use to residential — plus an addition floor to the circa 1847 building ... appropriately enough, on Friday the 13th.

Updated:

The Lo-Down has more on this story, including a statement from Elizabeth de Bourbon, the LPC’s director of communications.

[T]he lawyer for the owner contacted us to say his client plans to meet with us to discuss suggestions for the design of the one-story addition and is willing to work with LPC staff as they move ahead on their grandfathered permit.

Previously on EV Grieve:
A bid to protect the integrity of 315 E. 10th St.

Landmarks Preservation Commission expedites hearing on East 10th Street Historic District

Sunday, December 3, 2017

Week in Grieview


[7th and A the other morning]

Stories posted on EVG this past week included...

Fire under sidewalk bridge on 13th Street temporarily brings an end to homeless encampment (Tuesday)

Watch a bike theft in progress on 3rd Street (Monday)

Preliminary work underway at city-owned empty lot on 3rd Street (Tuesday)

Volunteers on a mission to help reinvigorate Alphabet Scoop on 11th Street (Wednesday)

Reader report: Man spotted exposing himself in Tompkins Square Park (Thursday)

7 years later, a Ben & Jerry's is returning to the East Village (Tuesday)

The latest installment of I Am a Rent-Stabilized Tenant (Thursday)

Parishioners hope their prayers are answered with former Nativity space on 2nd Avenue (Friday)

Not fake news then: Pro-dorm rally organizer admits some participants were paid, report says (Friday)

The 26th annual tree lighting in Tompkins Square Park is Dec. 10 (Thursday)

Agozar! closes on the Bowery (Monday)

Brooklyn man accused of punching ex before leading cops on a chase through the East Village (Thursday)

Kona Coffee and Company now open on 2nd Avenue (Monday)

Mr. Throwback has a new home on 9th Street (Friday)

Baar Baar opens on 1st Street in Avalon Bowery Place (Thursday)

"Shadowman," the documentary on Richard Hambleton, debuts at the Quad (Friday)

122CC signage arrives at the refurbished 122 Community Center on 1st Avenue (Friday)

"Kitchen separated by the fridge" (Wednesday)

80 E. 10th St. tops out (Monday)

Turntable 5060 is now Tapanju Turntable, and it opened Friday (Thursday)

Gino Sorbillo opens his pizzeria on the Bowery (Monday)

Turning Rutherford Place into 1987 Russia (Friday)

Pizza in the mix for former Cock space on 2nd Avenue (Wednesday)

NiceBrow bows on 9th Street (Wednesday)

Canal Pizza opening in the former Cup & Saucer Luncheonette space on the LES (Wednesday)

... and here's Andre Trenier's December mural at Mikey Likes It at 199 Avenue A near East 12th Street...



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Sunday, May 19, 2019

Week in Grieview


[1st Avenue looking south toward 11th Street via Vinny & O]

Report: Ex admits to murdering Elizabeth Lee on Cooper Square (Friday)

Trader Joe's finally confirms that a Trader Joe's is opening on 14th Street at Avenue A (Wednesday)

A visit to Sei Shin Dojo on Avenue A (Friday)

Keeping up with the Joneses: Gabriel Stulman confirms plans for former Great Jones Cafe (Wednesday)

Update on the affordable housing planned for 204 Avenue A and 535 E. 12th St. (Wednesday)

The all-new Essex Market debuts in its new Essex Crossing home (Tuesday)

Prepping the former P.C. Richard & Son for demolition on 14th Street (Friday)

'The First Time I Saw The Ramones' at 72 Gallery (Tuesday)

The former Grassroots Tavern space on St. Mark's Place is on the market (Thursday)

2020 vision: New completion set for Rite Aid-adjacent condoplex on 1st Avenue (Tuesday)

54-56 3rd Ave. is for sale, and there are air rights (Wednesday)

Emergency generator work underway at the Riis Houses on Avenue D (Wednesday)

Concern over new GreenThumb regulations for community gardens (Friday)

Nexus of the Juiciverse: Juicy Lucy's kiosk at 1st and 1st returns to action (Tuesday)

Meet Noodles debuts on 3rd Avenue (Thursday)

This week's NY See strip! (Monday)

A look at 119-121 2nd Ave. post sidewalk-bridge collapse (Monday)

Report: Microsoft signs lease for gas-station replacing office building on Lafayette and Houston (Thursday)

Ravi DeRossi's Fire & Water is closed for now on 7th Street (Monday)

Headless Widow signage arrives on 1st Avenue (Friday)

Jackdaw, coming soon to the former Durden space on 2nd Avenue (Monday)

Demolition watch: 238 E. 3rd St. (Tuesday)

Sandwicherie has closed on 4th Avenue and 13th Street; doomed corner status yet? (Monday)

With a new menu, Little Tong dropping the Noodle Shop on 1st Avenue (Thursday)

3 chances to hear about the city's plan to stormproof East River Park — and the East Side (Monday)

Steiner East Village retail watch on Avenue A (Thursday)

Bright Horizons signage arrives at EVGB on 14th Street (Monday)

Portraits from DanceFest in Tompkins Square Park (Saturday)

... and a few photos via Steven from the 13th Annual Dance Parade yesterday along St. Mark's Place...













... and one last reader submission from the DanceFest yesterday in Tompkins Square Park... though he's technically not dancing...



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Thursday, June 20, 2013

404 E. 14th St.: The coolest building that you will find with a McDonald's on the ground floor



From the outside, 404 E. 14th St. doesn't look like much, right? ... especially with that McDonald's and its express window taking up the ground floor. The back of the building on East 13th Street (alternately known as 405 E. 13th St.), is more promising...



However, since the 1960s, the building has hosted and housed a dynamic community of artists, poets and filmmakers. And now, gallery artist Tom Burckhardt, who currently lives and works in the building along with wife and fellow gallery artist Kathy Butterly, have organized an exhibit showcasing the work of artists who live (or have lived) at 404. The opening reception is tonight at the Tibor de Nagy Gallery, 724 Fifth Ave. between 56th Street and 57th Street. (The exhibit is open through Aug. 2.)

Here's some information from the show's news release:

Beginning in the 1960s, it was among the first in New York to become an artist building, and remains so today. Although stylistically distinct, the artists who have lived or worked there over the years are nevertheless bound together in their shared experience of this uniquely vibrant, artistic scene.

The exhibition will comprise paintings, sculpture, and photographs by the various artists, in addition to films, correspondence, poetry and ephemera relating to the history of the building and its inhabitants. To coincide with his current Museum of Modern Art exhibition, Claes Oldenburg will be represented by working maquettes from his collection. A selection of poet Allen Ginsberg’s last photographs, taken when he lived in the building, will be included, as well as a 1966 foam floor sculpture by John Chamberlain. Rarely-exhibited works by Larry Rivers that were created at his 14th Street studio will be on view, such as a portrait of cult writer Jim Carroll, along with a large scale work from his Bad Witch series.

The building dates to the early 20th century and originally housed a button factory. It later became a warehouse for the locally owned Bloom & Krup hardware store. The first tenants, including Rivers, Claes and Patty Oldenburg, Yayoi Kusama, On Kawara, Chamberlain, and Herb Aach, arrived in the mid-1960s. (The building made a recent notable appearance in Richard Hell's memoir, "I Dreamed I Was a Very Clean Tramp," where he discussed living here and bedding Patty Oldenburg.) Filmmaker Wes Anderson owns a space in 404, and he reportedly edited "Moonrise Kingdom" here.

Tom Burckhardt, who moved into the building in 1995, answered some questions about the exhibit via email.

Were you aware of the building's history when you moved in?

I knew Larry Rivers, of course: We bought our space from him for a pretty fair price at the time. He was quite good to us. My folks had known him from back in the 1950s on. My dad, Rudy Burckhardt, made some films with him in them. ("Mounting Tension," 1950, also with Jane Freilicher and John Ashbury.) I knew Fred Wilson and Whitfield Lovell a bit through some mutual friends. I seem to have known that Claes Oldenburg had been here, too.


[Herb Aach in his studio circa the 1970s]

What compelled you to research and put together this exhibit?

Based on that little I knew, I thought I should make time with Fred, who moved in in 1976, and tape his recollections. Somehow, as with someone so close at hand, we never got to it! I found out the name of Jean Dupuy, who had lived in our 2nd floor space in the 1970s and found an out-of-print book he published chronicling these amazing informal exhibitions he put on in the space. That was a big revelation. It explained the mysterious Golden Section spiral carved in my studio floor (by Gianfranco Mategna, in 1973).

I figured I should gather all this material and one day an enterprising graduate student would write a paper on it: I'm no writer, that's for sure. My wife Kathy Butterly mentioned my interest in this stuff to Eric Brown at the Tibor de Nagy Gallery and he proposed it be an exhibition. My main excitement was to track down any past residents still around, tape interviews, and form an Rashomon-style oral history, à la "Please Kill Me," one of my all time favorite books.

In retrospect, it makes sense, as Tibor de Nagy represents me, my wife and the estate of Larry Rivers. Don't know why I didn't think of pitching it to them first!


[Claes and Patty Oldenburg in loft, 1965]

What was your favorite thing that you learned about the building/previous tenants?

It's hard to choose. In talking to Claes Oldenburg, he mentioned that [Warhol star] Ultra Violet would rehearse in her boyfriend at the time John Chamberlain's loft. And I though that sounded like a great parallel Warhol/Velvet Underground kinda thing. I didn't dig much more up on that, even with Ultra Violet's help. "Everybody was in a band then" she said.

I found Yayoi Kusama's description of a wild gay orgy staged in her mirrored room for German television pretty great, even if it sounds a bit unlikely in truth. Or that the wonderful body-building doc and Arnold [Schwarzenegger] vehicle "Pumping Iron" was edited in the building by filmmaker Bob Fiore in the mid 1970s. Or the huge party in Patty Mucha Oldenburg's loft, where the punch was spiked with acid, perhaps by John Giorno.


[Allen Ginsberg's last photo, 1997]

Do you think a creative environment like this can continue to exist in the East Village of today/the future?

Well, speaking for my wife and I and Fred and Whitfield and others in the building, yes, although, clearly it's not what it used to be. I think the creative types in the neighborhood tend to find each other even with the changes in the area.

I know when my kids started school in the East Village, I met a lot of artist parents who have held on, and that was quite encouraging. I grew up on East 14 Street and 3rd (over the Jefferson Theater!) in the 1970s so my nostalgia is tempered with some appreciation for the good changes. I don't miss being mugged all the time and never felt it was good for my creative juices. I still find a lot to love in the East Village.

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From 1971, Inside Dope by Rudy Burckhardt with Larry Rivers, who owned 404 E. 14th St. for many years, and Brendan Atkinson.



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The following artists will be represented in the exhibit:





GALLERY SUMMER HOURS
MONDAY - FRIDAY
10 AM - 5:30 PM

DIRECTIONS
724 Fifth Ave, between 56th and 57th Streets
12th Floor

A catalogue will be available and will feature transcriptions of interviews conducted by Burckhardt with many of the artists, poets and filmmakers who have resided at the building from the 1960s through present day.

Sunday, November 22, 2015

Week in Grieview


[A mobile for the former Mobil station on Houston and C]

RIP Steven Steinberg, the third generation owner of New York Central Art Supply (Tuesday)

Renovating the LES apartment of Jim "The Mosaic Man" Power (Monday)

The annual New York Cares Coat Drive is underway (Wednesday)

RIP Walter Przedpelski, who lived 91 years in the same apartment on East Ninth Street (Thursday)

The upscale hotel bar with a pool named for the late environmentalist Adam Purple (Wednesday, 42 comments)

Part of the former Alphabets storefront will serve as sales office for Ben Shaoul's 100 Avenue A (Monday

Out and About with Karen Platt (Wednesday)

Ongoing construction at condoplex on Avenue A enters the swimming pool phase (Thursday)

East Eighth Street and Avenue C, home to 5 restaurants in recent years, is now on the market (Tuesday)

Handing out the litter summonses (Wednesday)

Autre Kyo Ya coming soon to the former Barrel space on Stuyvesant Street (Monday)

An assessment of the dangerous East Houston-Avenue B/Clinton Street intersection (Thursday)

The apartment where the golden rule "is that no one else can tell anyone else to be quiet" (Tuesday)

Holiday lights arrive on East Ninth Street (Thursday)

Live music ends for now at Elvis Underground (Monday)

Demo work starts on the southeast corner of Fourth Avenue and 10th Street (Friday)

New Stuy Town owner pledges to keep a grocery story on East 14th Street, but it may not be Associated (Monday)

Thanksgiving at Odessa (Friday)

4 St. Mark's Place is for sale (Friday)

The former Peter Stuyvesant Post Office is pretty much gone (Monday)

Icon Realty made 5x what it paid in sale of two East Village buildings (Friday)

Renovations at Village 7; reclining seats coming soon (Saturday)

Maison Kayser opening a large bakery on 13th and Broadway (Thursday)

A #lovewall for St. Mark's Place (Tuesday)

The new residential building at 321 E. Third St. (Wednesday)

... and here are two of the mosaics that French street artist Invader has placed around the East Village in recent days ... on East Fourth Street and First Avenue...



... and Avenue A and East Third Street...



There are more, like on the former Chase branch on St. Mark's and Second Avenue ... and there's a Lou Reed mosaic on St. Mark's Place between A and First Avenue. BoweryBoogie has an LES rundown here.

And tomorrow night is the The 5th annual Last Waltz tribute to benefit Food For Life at Tompkins Square Park...



Find details here.

Sunday, September 2, 2018

Week in Grieview


[Weekend view of the Odessa on Avenue A]

Stories posted on EVG this past week included...

Tuesdays at Sophie's (Tuesday)

Local elected officials urge Boys' Club officials to postpone sale of the Harriman Clubhouse (Monday)

A look at the East River Park Track, due to reopen Sept. 10 (Wednesday)

The EVG podcast: More hawk talk with Laura Goggin (Friday) ... Health scare for remaining red-tailed fledgling in Tompkins Square Park (Tuesday)

Report: DOB fines Kushner Cos. for falsifying dozens of permit applications (Tuesday)

Reader report: Body found in car on 12th Street (Friday)

An empty lot awaits the future home of the new Mt. Sinai Beth Israel Hospital on 13th Street (Monday)

Baking news: Westville Bakery coming to 9th (Friday)

Check out this week's NY See strip (Thursday)


[The front doors of the former Grassroots Tavern on St. Mark's Place]

The Village Voice has ceased publication (Friday)

Summer's end (Wednesday)

Churro Cone by ChikaLicious bringing another dessert option to Avenue A (Monday)

Video: The dog days of summer (Wednesday)

Renovations for rooftop cottage on 1st and 1st (Friday)

Brooklyn Bagel & Coffee Company opens Tuesday on 8th Street (Thursday)

A good happy hour (Tuesday)

A new look outside for the 11th Street Bar (Tuesday)

How you all doing tonight? Grand opening at the New York Comedy Club on 4th Street (Thursday)

Chi Ken, the Taiwanese Popcorn Chicken Store, no longer coming to St. Mark's Place (Thursday)

New lobby unveiled at 250 E. Houston St. (Monday)

All about EVE, the Peter Stuyvesant Post Office-replacing rentals on 14th Street (Thursday)

... and speaking of EVE...


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Thursday, September 3, 2009

EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning Edition



The return of the Fedora (Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)

38 Delancey ready for action! — Except for the part about not having a Web site (BoweryBoogie)

Matt Harvey talks to Richard Hell about "Destiny Street Repaired (NYPress)

A new Figaro Cafe for Bleeker? (NY Barfly)

Fight turns deadly at Project Rescue shelter on the Bowery (Runnin' Scared)

OTB is broke; has a fleet of 87 cars (The New York Times)

Former police cadet robs Avenue A bank branch (Daily News)

Crooks posed as cops for ATM holdup on 13th Street and Avenue B (NY1)

The history of Wigstock (Ephemeral New York)

The Post rips off another blog (New York Shitty)

"Kiss Loves You" plays Friday at the Anthology Film Archives (Slum Goddess)

Save the date for the Lost New York conference (Patell and Waterman's History of New York)

Old Yankee Stadium continues to be torn down (Demolition of Yankee Stadium)

The lead to yesterday's TGI Friday's feature in the Post:

It's Friday night, and an unruly parade of tipsy, young New Yorkers spills out from a popular Manhattan bar and onto the sidewalk, blocking foot traffic and drawing complaints from irate neighbors.

But this isn't the East Village, and the bar in question isn't Le Souk.

The year is 1965, and the new hot spot is T.G.I. Friday's -- Friday's for short -- on the northeast corner of 63rd Street and First Avenue.


And now on newsstands...

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Report: East Village gallery a no-show on opening night, leaving artists without their work

Photos yesterday by Steven 

Twenty-five artists set to participate in a group show this past Friday night arrived to find the East Village venue papered up and their art locked inside. 

The four-day event was to take place at the East Village Art Collection (EVAC) at 215 First Ave. between 12th Street and 13th Street. The artists reportedly have said they have yet to receive any notice from the gallery. Attendees who bought tickets for the event received notices and refunds from Eventbrite minutes before the start of the show, per comments on EVAC's Instagram account

Here's what some of the artists had to say to PIX 11, who first reported on the gallery ghosting:
"We came here with a purpose to get our work out there and to make something of ourselves, and they took advantage of that and they stole from us,” said Charlotte Art, a Flint, Michigan-based artist. "I had a lot riding on this. And I'm a mother of four. 'How dare you' is what I have to say." 
"We got a notification one minute before 7 p.m., and the event was at 7:30 last Friday," said Melissa Driscol, whose brother-in-law’s art was part of the exhibit. “Not an email, not a phone call, not a text, just to tell the artists, 'Hey, this event isn’t happening." 
"We've been calling and Instagramming and emailing and phone numbers have been disconnected," said Christine Ditolvo, whose friend from Vermont had art in the exhibit. "It's really sketchy."
The EVAC Instagram account described the event like this: 
The Immersive Art Experience is a 360º, digital, physical, and musical art exhibition in NYC with East Village Party Vibes. 

THE EVAC invites you to step foot into the expansive universe of art to be surrounded by paintings, canvases, holograms, photography, fractals, and sculptures. 

Live Music and drinks for this special night. 

You as the guest will be able to connect and experience art on a different level like never before. The East Village Art Collection is unlike any gallery in the world. We focus on quality and unique art experiences. We are the opposite of boring. Art is everywhere! 

VIP doors open at 7:30 PM VIP entitles you to a private viewing prior to doors opening to the general admission. Upon your entry, you will be greeted with a cocktail of your choice, where you will be able to interact with the artists in a more intimate setting. You will also have access to the downstairs VIP lounge area with a couch. 
After the weekend, a sign arrived on the EVAC's front door noting, "Due to an unforeseen medical emergency, the gallery is closed at this time."

The small print reads, "all artwork will be returned as soon as possible."
In an EVAC Instagram comment, one of the artists, who traveled here from Florida, said the other artists were also from all around the country — as well as one from South Africa. 

Per the artist in the comment: 
So now they have our art. Paintings and photographs ranging from $5,000-$10,000 each in value. The gallery's phone goes to a voice mail, and their personal cells have been disconnected. No one knows why. Did they go out of business? Did they have an emergency? Or are they just scum bags? All I know is there were lots of broken hearts and dreams last night mixed with embarrassment. We all had invited peers, friends, and art collectors to this event to see a mess of us just standing on the sidewalks, looking at each in disbelief.

The EVAC website features a ticker with daily cryptocurrency prices by market cap. It states that it is "dedicated to providing a quality gallery space for artists of all mediums while merging physical art with the rapidly growing digital world."

The venue debuted in April 2021 under the guidance of Steve Hirsch, whose LinkedIn profile described him as EVAC's director of operations, having a 25-plus-year career in apparel design and merchandising and being "an industry innovator."

East Village artist and entrepreneur P.J. O'Rourke, with the help of Hirsch, had established his FlyeLyfe brand at this space. However, as we reportedO'Rourke found himself locked out of the space after one day in business, with the venue pivoting to the EVAC.

O'Rourke told EVG contributor Stacie Joy: "I went back to get my stuff ... Not only had they locked me out, but my belongings were also inside, and my partner told me it was his. They papered up the entire store, and a couple of weeks later, they are trying a fly-by-the-seat art gallery while leaving my livelihood at stake."

Hirsch would not comment on this sequence of events, stating at the time, "Mr. O'Rourke's statements are not facts." 

As for the canceled show this past weekend, the artists told PIX 11 that "they are now out thousands of dollars for their artwork and travel expenses, as well as a $500 submission fee."

"We just want the art back," Driscol told the station.

Monday, April 18, 2016

[Updated] A look at the rest of tonight's CB3-SLA meeting docket


[45-47 Avenue B]

CB3's SLA committee meeting is tonight 6:30 in the CB3 office, 59 E. Fourth St. between Second Avenue and the Bowery.

To date, we've look at several applicants:

98 Favor Taste, 37 St. Mark's Place

Unnamed pizzeria, Avenue C and Eighth Street

Vietnamese restaurant, 119 St. Mark's Place

Desi Galli, 172 Avenue B

And one applicant we looked at is no longer on the agenda. The owners of the Brazen Fox had plans to open another bar-restaurant directly across the street from their current two-level bar-restaurant on Third Avenue and East 13th Street.




We do not know why they are a scratch from the meeting. In any event, this would be a tough sell... a full liquor license with a sidewalk cafe for a space (Gothic Cabinet Craft shop) that was not previously licensed within a saturated area... from applicants who already operate a successful space right across the street. Not sure what the public benefit is here.



And there was neighbor opposition to the application as well... based on the flyers on the block...



Meanwhile, here's a quick look at some of the other East Village applicants on tonight's meeting agenda...

Applications within Saturated Areas

• Fish Market Inc, 45 Ave B (wb)

A venture called Lamia's Fish Market is in the works for the long vacant storefront at 45 Avenue B between East Second Street and East Third Street. The questionnaire (PDF) on file for public viewing at the CB3 website shows a restaurant with 40 tables seating 160 people. The proposed hours are 4 p.m. to midnight Monday though Friday; 11 a.m. to midnight Saturday and Sunday.

Lamia Funti is the name of the applicant. Media outlets have identified her as the co-owner of Le Souk on La Guardia Place along with her husband Marcus Jacobs. He was reportedly an owner of Le Souk at 47 Avenue B... Le Souk was a years-long thorn in the side of neighbors, as widely reported here ... and here ... and here ... and here. In October 2009, the State Liquor Authority cancelled Le Souk's liquor license. (Read the SLA release here.)

Updated 4/19

The committee voted to deny the application. The Lo-Down has the details about the operators here.

• Baker's Pizza (Baker's Pizza LLC), 201 Ave A (wb)

The pizzeria that opened back in February between East 12th Street and East 13th Street is seeking a beer-wine license.

Sidewalk Cafe Application

• Lionsbeerstore (Beer Factory LLC), 104 2nd Ave

• Biang (Wen Zi Inc), 157 2nd Ave

The previous tenant at this address, Alder, had an eight-table, 16-seat sidewalk cafe.

New Liquor License Applications

• AGN Restaurant LLC, 166 1st Ave (op)

This is the former North River/Nite Owl space near East 10th Street. The owners of the Belfry on East 14th Street are looking to open a bar-restaurant here serving American comfort food, according to the questionnaire (PDF) on file at the CB3 website.

The proposed hours are 11:30 a.m. to 2 a.m. Sunday through Wednesday; until 4 a.m. Thursday through Saturday.

• Proto's Pizza (Fifty East LLC), 50 2nd Ave (wb)

Items not heard at Committee

• Virgola (Virgola 3 LLC), 221 Ave B (wb)

They were denied at the February meeting ... this will be the second Virgola location in the East Village.

• Dumpling Go (Dumpling 2 Avenue Inc), 188 2nd Ave (wb)

The restaurant has been closed for the past week. Looks like a renovation, though there aren't any signs for customers.

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

A visit to The Baroness

Text and photos by Stacie Joy 

I am a wee bit nervous as I approach the Baroness and her eponymous latex shop at 530 13th St. (between Avenues A and B). I’d never worn latex before and tend to go through life in jeans and tees, which is a definite no-no at the elegant, well-appointed and provocative showroom where the Baroness designs, creates, fits and sells her line of custom, bespoke, and ready-to-wear latex fashion.
It is always a challenge to step outside one’s comfort zone, but the Baroness’ no-nonsense yet encouraging and confident demeanor guided me through the process. And I saw myself differently in the mirror…speaking of which, the fitting room mirror at the atelier is kind and the dressing room space is set up to allow for best-case scenarios when trying on outfits.

Due to COVID-19, people are not dressing up that much, there are fewer parties and events, and although the Baroness wears latex on the regular, most people would be looking for something special, maybe for a holiday? In that light, I ask the proprietrix to show me what the store has for Halloween as we chat about her history in the neighborhood and her passion for latex.

Can you speak a bit about the history of the shop and how it came to be? What drew you to the East Village and what has kept you here? Are there any special challenges to living and working in the neighborhood? 

When I first started my business (almost 30 years ago) I ran it from my studio. Then the building required work on the front wall, which would mean a total disruption, so I set out to look for another workspace. I needed to keep it close-by as I had been spoiled and feared that if I had to travel too far I would not.

I was very fortunate to find more than an atelier, the ideal workspace came with a shop at street level. Prior to my moving in the space had been poorly used but that both allowed and necessitated renovations including knocking down walls, replacing flooring, establishing lighting and electrical outlets (all in the perfect locations). As our workspace is below-ground, I painted it in lighter tones of purples, pinks and greens and had work tables and closets built so everything was at hand. 

Upstairs I chose soft blues, pinks and purples forgoing the traditional red and black of other fetish shops. I wanted it to be a place that would welcome women and make them feel safe. The dressing room was huge and hung with fabric and fitted with flattering mirrors. 

What I hadn't realized is just how much help it would be for my fit and designs as I now saw more varied body shapes in my elegant latex fashions.

Being on a side street and in the East Village meant that although I had limited foot traffic (which didn’t matter much as The Baroness is a destination) my rent was also lower than in other parts of New York. After all the work involved in renovating and establishing myself on East 13th Street it was easiest to stay put as we have for the last 12 years (despite the steady yearly increase in rent).

Of course, now with COVID-19 and having the boutique closed for months, everyone has been affected and there are many empty storefronts throughout the neighborhood. My business has been particularly affected as many of my customers now have limited funds and the usual parties and events that they would wear latex for have been canceled or simply postponed until next year. I am fortunate that much of my business comes from elaborate custom creations commissioned by loyal longtime clients and that my landlady has been most understanding during this troubled time. 

Latex is both more complicated (in construction of the garments) and more simple (in cleaning and caring for the clothes) than I’d realized. What made you choose latex as a fabric, and what can you tell beginners about wearing it?

My background has always been in clothing, fabric and art, and my motto is "any occasion to dress is an occasion to overdress," so when I discovered latex my life was instantly transformed

Once I began to work with latex, I enjoyed learning and exploring its mysteries. The largest being how to make it! Everything is glued and when I started, I was one of only three latex designers in North America. Latex is still a niche market and now The Baroness boutique is the ONLY shop in the U.S. that makes and sells only its own latex!

What I tell latex virgins (my absolute favorite customers) is to give in, to allow their senses to take over, to inhale the vanilla milk-chocolate aroma, to savor the sensual feeling of it against your body or the touch of another latex-clad enthusiast, to marvel in the gleam, the shine, and the highlights and lowlights of this amazing material as they watch it in motion. There is no material more sensual than latex. 

On the practical side I inquire as to their budget, their intentions, and where they will wear it to help in their choice. I explain and demonstrate how to shine  and care for their latex along with assuring them of my lifetime guarantee. 

I believe wearing latex should be comfortable not only on the body. If you want discomfort, buy it super tight, our sizes range from extra-small to extra-large, along with queen size and custom for both men and women, but also to your personal style and body image. If you aren’t comfortable in what you wear you will never look the best you can and probably that garment will be relegated to the back of the drawer or closet.
You go all out for Halloween. What do you recommend for people who may be interested in wearing latex for a holiday event but have little experience?

Halloween is my birthday and even as a child I fantasized about watching a gathering of well-dressed people. When I moved [from the UK] to the U.S. and discovered it was a holiday where everyone dressed, my dream came true.

Halloween is (as you may imagine) one of our busiest seasons, although this year is obviously an exception. We usually do the best when it falls on a Friday or Saturday and there are many vanilla parties. The most common requests are either Catwoman or a dominatrix, although we also have made an assortment of custom creations including Britney Spears, various cosplay characters, crossdressing and regular ensembles that are so unusual for the customers life as to be considered a costume, but which I hope shall be the start of their latex addiction!

Your shop sign announces You Want Latex. As the Baroness, aside from latex, what do you want?

You missed the sign’s other side, which says "You Need Latex!" What I want currently is what everyone wants: An end and cure for the virus. That, and for a world dressed in Baroness latex!

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You can keep up with the Baroness via social media @LatexBaroness, and from now through Halloween the Baroness’ popular waist-cincher (available in both black and purple) is on sale for $100 off while supplies last.