Sunday, December 28, 2014

Week in Grieview


[Photo from Christmas Day by Derek Berg]

A look at Matcha Cafe Wabi, now open on East Fourth Street (Friday)

Video: "11 Minutes of Hell" on the Lower East Side (Wednesday, 54 comments)

Demolishing the last two East Village gas stations (Monday)

DF Mavens arrives (Tuesday)

Checker's opens on First Avenue (Monday)

The number of chain stores increased this past year in NYC, though not in the East Village (Tuesday)

Back Forty abruptly closes (Tuesday)

Remembering Joe Strummer on the anniversary of his death (Monday)

A really good sunrise (Saturday)

Sleepy's coming to Third Avenue (Monday)

Another holiday season with Jonathan, the cheery Christmas-tree salesman of First Avenue (Tuesday)

The gut renovation of 137 Avenue C (Tuesday)

$13 billion hedge fund latest 51 Astor Place tenant (Tuesday)

Shakespeare & Company ultimately got kicked out for a Foot Locker (Wednesday)

McSorley's does not have the oldest liquor license in the East Village (Friday)

The Year Without a Trailer Park Santa Claus (Friday)

EVG turns 7 (Wednesday)

… and a dog in a bag at East Village Cheese…


[Photo by Derek Berg]

A 1980s 'Night Walk' in downtown NYC


[Screengrab from the "Night Watch" trailer]

The Times has a feature today on Ken Schles, who spent part of the 1980s living and taking photographs in the East Village.

He now has a follow-up to his 1988 book "Invisible City" titled "Night Walk."

Here's a description of the book:

Schles revisits his archive and fashions a narrative of lost youth: a delirious, peripatetic walk in the evening air of an irretrievable downtown New York as he saw and experienced it. Night Walk is a substantive, intimate chronicle of New York's last pre-Internet bohemian outpost, a stream of consciousness portrayal that peels back layers of petulance and squalor to find the frisson and striving of a life lived amongst the rubble.

Here's a trailer for the book...



Schles, who now lives in Fort Greene, "rejected the recent tendency to view the East Village of the 1980s as a golden age of louche glamour," according to the Times. "A lot of dysfunction has been romanticized," he said.

The book "is dedicated to the memory of those who died in the scourge of AIDS and violence that gripped the East Village during the 1980s."

Saturday, December 27, 2014

Today's hawk posing





Top two photos via Bobby Williams... and via EVG reader BaHa...



And now, the waxing crescent moon



Local astronomy buff Felton Davis had his gear set up earlier on Second Avenue and East Third Street ... here's a shot of the waxing crescent moon via Brian Van ...

X marks the spot above 1st Avenue



Or maybe a belated xmas message? Photo this afternoon via Grant Shaffer

Can't wait for this open house on St. Mark's Place!



Spotted the other day at 128 St. Mark's Place…

Things people were talking about on East 2nd Street this morning



A few people were wondering what happened to this car between Avenue A and First Avenue...

This morning's spectacular sunrise



The view from East Second Street… Photo by Caz Lulu via Facebook…

There's 1 more free concert this year in Tompkins Square Park



This afternoon...

Friday, December 26, 2014

Still crazy like a Fox...



Television is playing Sunday night at Irving Plaza... ahead of that, here's "Foxhole" from 1978...

EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning Edition


[Photo earlier this week on East 2nd Street by Bill Buchen]

A crime of passion from the 19th century that played out on East 13th Street and Avenue A (Ephemeral New York)

More details about DF Mavens, opening today on Second Avenue and St. Mark's Place (DNAinfo)

The Manhattan Borough President's Office now accepting applications for Community Board membership (DNAinfo)

Still time to see Art & Ephemera from 98 Bowery, 1969-89 (The Lodge Gallery)

Update on the new Dirt Candy on Allen Street (Eater)

The end of Cafe Edison (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)

Please do not push your sofa out a 6th-floor window (BoweryBoogie)

Animals, the Wayland's sandwich shop on Avenue C and East Ninth Street, has started local delivery — Monday-Friday from Noon-6 p.m.



and noted…

Pumpkins — not just for Halloween anymore



They also make for decorative additions to street lights, like seen here on Second Avenue and East Ninth Street … photo via John Coakley.