Saturday, September 24, 2011

DOH closes Friend House (again?) on Third Avenue


In late August, the DOH temporarily closed Friend House, the Asian bistro on Third Avenue at 13th Street. They reopened, or so I thought.

In any event, per the DOH website, Friend House has 83 violation points dated Thursday. Among the worst of the violations:

• Evidence of mice or live mice present in facility's food and/or non-food areas.
• Filth flies or food/refuse/sewage-associated (FRSA) flies present in facility’s food and/or non-food areas. Filth flies include house flies, little house flies, blow flies, bottle flies and flesh flies. Food/refuse/sewage-associated flies include fruit flies, drain flies and Phorid flies.
• Personal cleanliness inadequate. Outer garment soiled with possible contaminant. Effective hair restraint not worn in an area where food is prepared.

You always take photos of cranes


Second Avenue and 13th Street this morning.

Today in interesting-looking boiler-service trucks on Seventh Street

Friday, September 23, 2011

Cloudy with rain likely




Photos by Bobby Williams.

Ghost story



Suicide, 1977.

East Village first graders protest the arrival of Starbucks on First Avenue


This comes via our friend Marjorie Ingall:

Here we have a piece of paper recovered from the recesses of the backpack of a student at The Neighborhood School (PS 363) on First Avenue and Third Street.

She translates the sign for us: Starbucks: The Bean Instead.

We understand that two first-grade classmates were drawing these and handing them out to the other kids. Fight the power.

More here.

Previously.

Ominous


Dave on 7th has successfully left the city this afternoon ... And looking back at the skyline ... Don't panic, but run!

A Richard Kern retrospective tonight and tomorrow at the Anthology Film Archives

From the EV Grieve inbox .... from the Anthology Film Archives ... Richard Kern will be there tonight for both the 7 and 9 screenings...

Richard Kern’s controversial, unconventional, and darkly comedic short films earned him immediate distinction in the 1980s underground film circuit. A prime figure in the “Cinema of Transgression” group of that era, Kern is likely more recognized today for his erotic photographs, books, and videos. Looking back it is clear that Kern’s Super-8 films were an attack on the entrenched avant-garde and a close-up examination of highly subversive behavior. Starring the likes of Lydia Lunch, Nick Zedd, David Wojnarowicz, Karen Finley, Lung Leg, Henry Rollins, and Kembra Pfahler, featuring original soundtracks by musicians such as Foetus and Sonic Youth, and widely distributed on VHS during the burgeoning days of alternative and punk music, Kern’s films remain shocking, sexy, disturbed, debauched, violent, and really quite wonderful. These eye-opening works still rattle the senses.

In conjunction with a group show featuring his photographs at the gallery Maccarone (630 Greenwich Street), opening on September 9, and to celebrate Anthology’s preservation of a number of his works, we present this two-program survey of Kern’s most notable films. Along with a few surprises!

[Lydia Lunch in "Fingered"]

To be screened:

PROGRAM 1 at 7 p.m.:
GOODBYE 42ND STREET (1983, 4 minutes, Super8mm-to-16mm)
Newly preserved, with support from The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.
Kern films the storefronts of famous 42nd Street: the fast-food stands, the sex shops, the grindhouse and porn theaters, and interrupts the visit with random acts of violence.

THE KING OF SEX (1987, 5 minutes, Super8mm-to-HD video)
Featuring Nick Zedd. Music by Killdozer.
A man demonstrates his virility.

YOU KILLED ME FIRST (1985, 12 minutes, Super8mm-to16mm)
Newly preserved, with support from The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.
Featuring Karen Finley, David Wojnarowicz, and Lung Leg.
During Thanksgiving dinner, a young woman recalls family milestones that helped shape her outlook on life.

THE EVIL CAMERAMAN (1986/90, 12 minutes, Super8mm-to-HD video)
Featuring Jap Anne and Jackie O. Music by Foetus Corp.
Radical change in Kern’s cinema. The filmmaker tries to manipulate his models who suddenly show unexpected resistance.

THE SEWING CIRCLE (1992, 7 minutes, Super8mm-to-HD video)
Featuring Kembra Pfahler.
Kern films the extreme piercing operation made on performance artist and singer of TheVoluptuous Horror of Karen Black, Kembra Pfahler.

X IS Y (1990, 4 minutes, Super8mm-to-HD video)
Featuring Jackie O and Cristina. Music by Cop Shoot Cop.
A bunch of sexy women play with the preferred toys of primal dominant males: the automatic weapon.

THE BITCHES (1992, 10 minutes, Super8mm-to-HD video, b&w)
Music by Jim Coleman.
Two women, one man, three bitches. Or how to surprise the average porn watcher.

Plus one secret movie!
Total running time: ca. 70 minutes.
–Friday and Saturday, September 23 & 24 at 7 each night.

PROGRAM 2 at 9 p.m.:
MANHATTAN LOVE SUICIDES (PARTS 1 AND 3) (1985, 18 minutes, Super8mm-to-HD video, b&w)
“Stray Dogs” (Part 1): The thwarted and destructive loves of an art lover facing his idol. Featuring David Wojnarowicz and Bill Rice. Music by J.G. Thirlwell.
“Thrust In Me” (Part 3): This provocative film probably shows the synthesis of the Cinema of Transgression by illustrating the worst taboos. Featuring Nick Zedd and others. Music by The Dream Syndicate.

SUBMIT TO ME (1985, 12 minutes, Super8mm-to-HD video)
Featuring Lydia Lunch and others. Music by Butthole Surfers.
A series of decadent portraits in which sex, bondage, blood, and violence collide.

PIERCE (1986, 9 minutes, Super8mm-to-HD video)
Featuring Audrey Rose.
A bored young woman decides to let a friend pierce her nipples.

FINGERED (1986, 22 minutes, Super8mm-to-HD video, b&w)
Featuring Lydia Lunch, Lung Leg, and Marty Nations.
The misadventures of a sex phone operator after she meets a sexually depraved psychopath.

MY NIGHTMARE (1993, 5 minutes, Super8mm-to-HD video)
Featuring Susan McNamara. Music by Joe Budenhauser.
Kern ironically makes fun of the photography profession and the advantages it provides with women.

Plus one secret movie!
Total running time: ca. 70 minutes.
Friday and Saturday, September 23 & 24 at 9 each night.

FAB! Festival a go tomorrow even if it rains

From the EV Grieve inbox ...

This Saturday September 24, 2011 the FAB! Festival will proceed rain or shine! The event will still be held both indoors and out in the event of inclement weather. The FABnyc website will list alternative venues for artists if rain pushes the festivities indoors.

FABnyc brings together the best in downtown arts & culture year-round on Saturday September 24th from 1 pm-5 pm. Preview the fall season for FREE! With multiple stages showcasing exciting new dance, theater, & music performances, a selection of local artisans and gourmet food vendors, film screenings, installations, hands-on activities, and classes all on one block...

Find the site here.

A look back: East Village Summer 2011

Today is the first day of fall. Or, if you wish, autumn. But fall really sounds less pretentious.

This past summer, we posted 1,036, uh, posts.

Here are just a few of them.

JUNE: (311 posts)

At the Howl Festival...


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Three weeks with a pop-up piano in Tompkins Square Park...

[Bobby Williams]

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Another summer of free concerts in Tompkins Square Park ...

[High Teen Boogie, by Bobby Williams]

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First word viaThe Villager that the St. Mark's Bookshop was struggling...

[JVNY]

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We learned about the doorshitter...


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Famed camouflager Liu Bolin camouflaged himself in Kenny Scharf's mural on the Houston/Bowery Mural Wall ...

[Photo by Samdarko Eltosam]

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A June afternoon outside the Mars Bar...

[Photo Bobby Williams]

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The former 35 Cooper Square on June 3 — mission accomplished!

[Bobby Williams]

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The travelers/crusties returned...

[Bobby Williams]

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Open Road Park closed ... and reopened ...


JULY: (316 posts)

Introducing the Flaming Cactus of Astor Place...

[Bobby Williams]

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Walk Man quickly came and went...


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Redrum went missing... and was found...


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How hot was it...?

[EV Grieve reader Rita]

--

Longtime bartender John Leeper retired from the Grassroots Tavern ...


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It was (is!) the TSP Ratstravaganza...


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Did we mention that it was hot?


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We somehow survived Smurfs Week ...


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A-ten-hut! ...

[Bobby Williams]

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Banjo Jim's closed ...


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Farewell, Mars Bar ...

[Goggla]

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Celebrating the life of d.b.a. owner Ray Deter, who died July 3 following a bicycle accident...

[jdx]

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A memorial for Monica Shay ... who was shot and killed at the Pennsylvania country home she shared with her husband Paul.

[Bobby Williams]

AUGUST: (409 posts)

The BMW Guggenheim Lab opened, think tanking ensued.

[Photo by Bob Arihood]

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At the 'Let Them Eat Cake/Eat the Rich/ No Comfort Zone street party' ...

[Photo by Gil Robichaud]

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The NYPD went all out to find the people who beat up Gavin DeGraw ...


--

Cooper Union chopped down some trees at 51 Astor Place...


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Earthquake...

[AC]

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Hurricane Irene wreaked havoc in the aisles at Key Food...


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..and, much worse, neighborhood parks and community gardens...

[Dave on 7th]

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7-Eleven began its Slurpeevasion on the Bowery...


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See you next summer ...

[Bobby Williams]

Community center and supportive housing project underway on East Ninth Street

Yesterday, workers began putting up the sidewalk shed at 710 E. Ninth St. between Avenue C and Avenue D... at the Henry Street Settlement Day Care #3 building...



We reported on this project in May 2010.

The project includes a community facility space on the ground floor and in the basement... the upper levels will house 46 units (28 studios and 12 one-bedroom apartments). The housing will serve homeless young adults and young adults aging out of the foster-care system. An additional 12 units will be set aside for young single adults with a child.

The project is a joint venture among Phipps Houses ... University Settlement/The Door ... and Loisaida, Inc. SLCE Architects created the plans...

And proof that not every single new development in the neighbor is for the wealthy...

Previously on EV Grieve:
Community center and supportive housing coming to East Ninth Street

[Photos by Bobby Williams]

How Cooper Union has been giving back

Many East Villagers are unhappy with Cooper Union these days. There's been a lot of talk about what they're taking away from the neighborhood. Like turning Astor Place into an office park. Or perhaps being unsympathetic to the plight of the St. Mark's Bookshop. But let's be fair. Cooper Union has been giving to the neighborhood...

Such as with the free outdoor air conditioning. (We wrote about this here.)




...free outdoor urinal...


...and free place to rest for a moment...

About the sign to the bicyclist who hit the woman on Avenue A and Third Street


Have you seen this sign on Avenue A at Third Street? Probably a good story behind it, huh?

Well, yes there is! And our friend Jen Doll at Runnin' Scared has the details. It concerns Cynthia Wright, an actress who also teaches at NYU. A cyclist clipped her while she was crossing Avenue A. She sustained multiple injuries, though was able to continue on her journey. The police on the scene made some anti-Bloomberg cycling comments. The cyclist apologized. And now that Wright, a cyclist herself, has had some time to rest and think about what happened...

Her hopes in placing the sign are that the guy, who she describes as a "handsome young hipster guy" with dark hair, helmetless, and probably in his 20s, riding a black bike with a thin frame, will see it and contact her. "It's come to me since," she said, "If I were he, I would be willing to help this person by buying her a new pair of pants, help her with having to see the osteopathic physician, and the other work."

So, if you're reading this "handsome young hipster guy," then you may have to buy some pants and what not.

Read the whole post here.