All posts by louise crawford

Irving Penn

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"Do you know who died?" my husband asked ominously. 

My whole body tensed up. The way he said it scared me. I poised for bad news. 

"I guess you don't."

Who died?" I said

"Irving Penn," he said sadly, incredulously, finally. 

I knew he was old. 93. But Irving Penn is one of the greats, the master, an artistic hero in our house and we were really moved by the passing of this man who has been making great editorial and art photography (what's the difference, really) for a lifetime.

Brooklynometry has a post called Requium for Irving Penn in which she writes:

Sigh, the Prince of Palladium is on to other things. I am so deeply
moved by his images, even more than the portraits, the cigarette butts
which he sanctifies with an alchemy of lens, emulsion and precious
metal, teaching, as Kvond has, that there is no negative, saying, do not be afraid. Is there any more radical faith or more transcendent immanence?

Go to her blog to see his photo of cigarette butts.

Around here we treasure his portraits, his still lifes, his book of ambulant studio photography, "Worlds in a Small Room" and yes his cigarette butts.

At Brooklyn College: They’re Going to Pave Paradise and Put Up A Parking Lot

According to the Daily News via Ditmas Park Blog Joni Mitchel' song will be coming true once again.

The
Campus Road Community Garden at Brooklyn College will be uprooted this
winter to make room for a new parking lot, and Flatbush residents
aren't happy about it.

"The school already has a parking lot,"
said Toby Sanchez, 75, who helped found the vegetable and flower garden
in 1997. "We're upset. We're all really good friends and we have a good
time gardening. We've become one big family."

Brooklyn College
officials said the decision to bulldoze the garden was necessary in
order to expand their athletic track to meet NCAA regulations. The new
track will encroach on an old parking lot, so a new lot will be placed
directly where the garden sits now.

Not A Great Weekend to Ride the Subway: 20 Lines To Suffer Delays

From the New York Daily News:

The subway system will be thrown into mass turmoil this weekend as
nearly every line will see delays and diversions due to widespread
repairs.

Of the 20 lines that operate on the weekends, 18 will suffer some types of serious delays between Friday and Sunday, MTA officials said.

"I'll take my car this weekend — I'm not going to deal with it," said Norman Ellis, of Bayside, Queens.

He frequently uses the R train to get to work, but the line will skip
all stops between 34th Street-Herald Square and 36th Street in
Brooklyn.

Six lines — the 5, A, F, G, L and E — will resort to free shuttle-bus service at various points along their routes.

Another seven lines — the 1, 2, 7, B, N, J and R — will skip a
section of stops, and the 4, 6 and Q lines will run express at times,
missing more stops.

Also, the D line will run on the N tracks during midday hours tomorrow, missing 12 Brooklyn stops.

The MTA says there are good reasons for the nerve-wracking diversions.

"At this time of year we're performing work along the outdoor lines
that cannot be done during harsh weather," said New York City Transit
spokesman Charles Seaton.

"It doesn't happen every weekend, but there are times when you'll see this much construction activity along the lines."

The E line will skip every stop between 34th Street and the World Trade Center Saturday and Sunday.

And F and G riders in Brooklyn will have to resort to free shuttle
buses instead of speedier subways for a combined 15 stops near Prospect
Park.

Also, hipsters beware: L trains will skip every stop between Lorimer Street and Myrtle-Wyckoff avenues over the weekend.

Electric Literature Presents: The Soapbox Reading Series on Oct 13 and 20th

The editors of Electric LIterature, a bi-monthly anthology of short fiction, select stories "charged
with wit and emotional gravity right from the first sentence." You
choose how you want to read them. We deliver content in every viable
medium

Choosing from America's best contemporary
writers and embracing new forms of distribution the folkElectric Literature has big plans: to facilitate
a renaissance of the short story. Cool. For starters, there's a lunchtime event in Washington Square Park on October 13 and October 20.

Where: Washington Square Park, (west
of the fountain).

When: Tuesday October 13th, 2009 and Tuesday October 20th, 2009, Noon –
1:30pm

Oct 13th:
Colson Whitehead and Carmiel Banasky

Oct 20th: Stephen O’Connor and special guests

The Electric Literature Soapbox Reading
Series is exactly what it sounds like: Writers will read their work atop a box
in the middle of Washington Square Park.

Washington Square has a long and storied history of both arts and activism.
To celebrate the area, the Soapbox Reading Series is an inclusive event for a
diverse audience of passersby, office workers, cops, shoppers and literary
enthusiasts sharing in a common, transportive experience.

The Soapbox readings will entertain and promote literary fiction by
connecting authors directly with the public, while celebrating the diversity of
the city and its cultural wealth.

No rain dates, so pray for sun!

Colson Whitehead, a
2002 MacArthur Fellow, is the author of four novels and a book of essays about
New York City. His most recent book is Sag
Harbor
.

Stephen O’Connor
is the author of Rescue, short
fiction and poetry; Will My Name Be Shouted Out?, memoir and social criticism; Orphan Trains, narrative history, and Here Comes Another
Lesson
, short fiction, forthcoming from Free Press. His fiction and
poetry have been in The New Yorker, Poetry Magazine, Conjunctions,
TriQuarterly, Threepenny Review, New England Review, The Missouri Review,
The
Quarterly
, Partisan Review, and many other places. His essays and
journalism have appeared in The New York Times, DoubleTake, The
Nation
, AGNI, The Chicago Tribune, The Boston Globe
and elsewhere. He teaches fiction and nonfiction writing in the MFA
programs of Columbia and Sarah Lawrence.

Carmiel
Banasky
grew up in Portland, Oregon and received her B.A. in Creative
Writing from the University of Arizona. In Oxford, Mississippi, she taught
preschool and, in her spare time, attempted to organize a pro-choice movement.
She failed. Eventually, she found her way to New York City to finally focus on
writing. Currently, she is studying with Peter Carey and Colum McCann at Hunter
College, where she also teaches creative writing. She has two stories published
with Glimmer Train Stories, one of won first prize in their Family Matters
contest. Other stories can be found online at The Boy Bedlam Review.

Leon Freilich, Verse Responder: Michael Chabon Read at Same Time as Amy Sohn

Michael Chabon Read at Same Time as Amy Sohn

While Amy Sohn was serenading Richard Meier at his glass
shack Thursday night, Gersh and I were across the street–at the library–
listening to Michael Chabon reading from his new true-life
tribute to family life (his own). 

With his "Bad Mom" wife away–she admitted in NYT loving him more
than their children and got howls or protest along with a book
contract out of the remark–twenties women
felt uninhibited in drooling over the matinee-idol-looks
novelist.  Young men, who made up the rest of the
SRO audience, were equally fascinated, but by
Chabon's snapshot-to-generalization conclusions
about the rocky course of parenthood.

If any part of his Manhood for Amateurs reaches the screen,
as did his Wonder Boys, in which Michael Douglas riffed
on Chabon's autobiographical put-upon hero, a younger
and smoother-faced actor will have to be found.  Is there a
third-generation-acting Douglas emoting in the wings?

Happy Ending: Chihuahua Found

Sam, chihuahua mix, longish body, wearing blue collar,
microchipped OA11262E33 at 24 Hour Pet Watch. Very sweet and
affectionate. Has orangish paint on ear. Collar has cartoon dogs on
it. Tag was on order but hadn't arrived yet; had tag from Animal
Alliance of NJ but I just switched collars.

May have gotten out – missing about 3 o'clock in front of
my house, 226 Sixth Avenue Brooklyn between President & Carolll
Streets (Park Slope) NY 11215. I did not notice for an hour that he
was not here. Offering a reward.

Sam was found!

I Love My Note From President Obama About Nobel Peace Prize

Oh, what a humble man. And god yes, he deserves this prize for beginning to change the world's perception of the US and its foreign policy.

Don't you just love our president?

I do agree with him that the prize is a call to action to pursue peace and justice around the world.

Louise —

This
morning, Michelle and I awoke to some surprising and humbling news. At
6 a.m., we received word that I'd been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize
for 2009.


To be honest, I do not feel that I deserve to be in the company of so
many of the transformative figures who've been honored by this prize —
men and women who've inspired me and inspired the entire world through
their courageous pursuit of peace.


But I also know that throughout history the Nobel Peace Prize has not
just been used to honor specific achievement; it's also been used as a
means to give momentum to a set of causes.


That is why I've said that I will accept this award as a call to
action, a call for all nations and all peoples to confront the common
challenges of the 21st century. These challenges won't all be met
during my presidency, or even my lifetime. But I know these challenges
can be met so long as it's recognized that they will not be met by one
person or one nation alone.


This award — and the call to action that comes with it — does not
belong simply to me or my administration; it belongs to all people
around the world who have fought for justice and for peace. And most of
all, it belongs to you, the men and women of America, who have dared to
hope and have worked so hard to make our world a little better.


So today we humbly recommit to the important work that we've begun
together. I'm grateful that you've stood with me thus far, and I'm
honored to continue our vital work in the years to come.


Thank you,


President Barack Obama

The Ache of Possibility: New CD From Capathia Jenkins and Louis Rosen

It's
been almost a year since Louis Rosen and Capathia Jenkins performed in 
New
York City but they  haven't been idle. They recorded a new album called ACHE
of
POSSIBILITY (Di-Tone), and they have number of performances lined
up here in town for this November.

 

First,
the new album:

Here's what Louis Rosen had to say in an email:

ACHE
of
POSSIBILITY features twelve new
songs—eight that
I wrote music and lyrics for, and four with words by
our favorite collaborator, the renowned poet Nikki Giovanni. These are songs of
love and politics and choices. All were written between June 2008 and January
2009, and Capathia and I hope the album captures something of the mood and
spirit of this moment—the ACHE
of
POSSIBILITY.

 

Available for
Pre-Release purchase and downloads at http://cdbaby.com/cd/jenkinsrosen2,

www.amazon.com,
or www.capathiajenkins.com/CJLRosen.html.

 

Digital
Distribution
at itunes.com, rhapsody.com, amazonmp3.com and all other major online sites
begins
November
1st.

 

All other major
music outlets including
barnesandnoble.com
and borders.com, November  10th, the official release date.)

 

Now, the
concerts:

We're launching
the ACHE
of
POSSIBILITY by bringing our
largest band yet—an octet featuring some of the best musicians in
New
York—into JOE'S  PUB at THE
PUBLIC THEATER
for
four concerts:

 

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER
8, 7
pm

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER
14, 7
pm

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER
21, 7
pm

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER
22, 7
pm

OTBKB Music: Tonight’s The Night

As I said previously, tonight there are three very good
shows all in different parts of town and all at about the same time,
which means you only get to choose one.  But when you have three good
choices, whatever choice you make will be a good one.

Or_The_Whale_In_Ivy_72ppi_Small Or, The Whale:  I first saw this
seven member San Francisco based group
in Austin about six months ago.  They have a wonderful new album out
with the easy to remember title of Or, The Whale.  Call their sound
high energy alt country and rock with great harmonies.

Or, The Whale,
Pianos, 158
Ludlow Street (F Train to Second Avenue,
take the First Avenue exit, walk three blocks to Ludlow and Stanton),
10 pm, $10

Main Sister
Sparrow and The Dirty Birds: A large band (nine pieces) with a
horn section and they've been packing them into The Rockwood Music Hall
all summer.  SS&TDB play blues, soul and whatever else comes their
way with energy.

Sister
Sparrow and The Dirty Birds
, The Canal Room, 285 West Broadway
at Canal Street (A or C Train to Canal Street), 9pm, $10

Winterpills-roof Winterpills: This
Northampton-based band plays ambient rock often
called chamber pop, probably the reason their last album was called
Central Chambers.  But the Winterpills rock out as well, especially on
their song Broken Arm.  But since this show is being held at The
Calhoun School, expect to hear the PG rated version of that song.

Winterpills,
Mary
Lea Johnson Performing Arts Center
, 433
West End Avenue at 81st Street (1 Train to 79th Street), 8pm, $10

 –Eliot Wagner

William Forsythe: Innovative Choreographer at BAM Fri & Sat

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Tonight and tomorrow night at BAM: William Forsythe's innovative choreography at 7:30 pm.

"Forsythe
is the foremost choreographer today, and every performance in his
oeuvre challenges space, movement and the logic of music. These are
works of enduring and unforgettable force."
—BOMB Magazine

For
three decades, choreographer William Forsythe has upended traditions
and defied expectations, producing works of enduring power. Last at BAM
with the politically daring Three Atmospheric Studies (2007 Spring Season), Forsythe returns with Decreation,
a work that challenges our notions of dance in the 21st century and
asserts his place as one of the world's most innovative choreographers.
A piece on love, jealousy, and the soul, Decreation explores the forces that shape and rend our relationships—with one another and ourselves.

BAM Howard Gilman Opera House
65min, no intermission
Tickets: $20, 35, 50, 70

Straight No Chaser: Thelonious Monk Film at Brooklyn Lyceum Saturday Night

 
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Straight No Chaser, a documentary about Thelonious Monk, will be at the Brooklyn Lyceum on Saturday night at 9:30 in celebration of Monk's 92nd birthday. I worked on an early iteration of this film as an assistant editor at Christian Blackwood Productions in the 1980's. That was my very first job after college (and a year in England and Israel).

Fourteen hours of European concert performances, as well as interviews with Monk filmed in 1967-68 by Blackwood, form the basis of Straight No Chaser.

Christian_blackwoodIn the 1980's, Blackwood and documentary film legend Charlotte Zwerin, who co-directed Gimme Shelter and other films with the Maysles, raised money to make this film about Monk. I assisted her when she was editing a trailer to show funders. 

At that time, they were having trouble getting the rights to Monk's music and that was a posing a major obstacle to getting the film made. Christian Blackwood died in the early 1990's before this film was completed.

With Blackwood, I attended Monk's funeral at St. Peter's Church in Manhattan. He filmed the funeral and it was an utterly amazing experience to be there. Our exposed 16mm film was confiscated at one point during the funeral. It was later returned and I believe Monk's funeral is included in this documentary.

Blackwood was a documentary filmmaker and gifted hand-held 16mm cinematographer, who was able to deftly interview his subjects while shooting them. It was quite a trick. Blackwood was an incredibly handsome, smart and charming  man with a special interest in tarnished celebrity and movie history. He was the most debonair of men, very elegant and a wonderful dresser (he wore white suits in the editing room). What a pleasure and a privilege to have worked with such a talented and stylish man.

While he may be best known for Straight No Chaser and film about the making of the Death of a Salesman movie with Dustin Hoffman,  Blackwood directed 80 films, mostly documentaries, over a 25-year career.

All By Myself, his feature length doc about Eartha Kitt, features several of her songs in performance, and
riveting interviews with the singer as she recounts the high/lows of her life beginning with the fact that her mother quickly abandoned and her blacklisting in Hollywood during the Vietnam War. He also made films about the making of films like Private Conversations and Observations Under the Volcano. Other films include, Memoirs of a Movie Palace, Tapdancin', My Life for Zarah Leander, and Roger Corman: Hollywood's Wild Angel.

Straight No Chaser will be at the Lyceum on Saturday night at 9:30.

Believe it or not, I've never see the film which I believe credits Zwerin and Blackwood as co-directors.  I hope to make it over to the Lyceum to catch it. They have a great screen.

Sharon Mesmer, Brooklyn Poet Laureate Contender, Reading at Poetry Punch

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Sharon Mesmer, author of "Annoying Diabetic Bitch" and "Holy Mother of Monkey Poo," is one of the poets reading on October 15th at 8 p.m. at Poetry Punch at The Old Stone House. Don't miss this great event,a fun, friendly and festive way to hear some great poetry. With punch.

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According to the Brooklyn Paper, Mesmer is on the short list to be Brooklyn poet laureate.

Brooklynites are a demanding bunch — and they’re demanding a new poet laureate.

Last month’s death of the borough’s laureate, Ken Siegelman, has left the poetry world reeling, but after covering his death, and offering Borough President Markowitz a short list of candidates for
Verse Maker in Chief, The Brooklyn Paper received a stunning number of
e-mails — more, in fact, than we’ve ever received on a poetry-related
story.

Park Slope poet Sharon Mesmer, a lively poet who’s not afraid to
write poems with titles like “Annoying Diabetic Bitch” and “Holy Mother
of Monkey Poo,” is leading with 44 percent of the ballots. In second
place is fellow Sloper, Lynn Chandhok, with 36 percent.

“Wait — does this mean I have to write a sonnet to Marty Markowitz?”
quipped Mesmer, author of three collections. “Oh well, a poet’s gotta
do what a poet’s gotta do. Problem is, the only thing that rhymes with
Markowitz is ‘have a schvitz.’” (Why is that a problem?)

Mesmer’s sense of humor was often cited by her supporters as
evidence that she belongs at the zenith of the borough’s long-clawed
poetry community.

Indeed, Maria Damon wrote us with her own poem about Mesmer:

Sharon Mesmer is the one

She’s the one who’s all the fun!

Sharon Mesmer, she’s your girl

She’ll make Brooklyn the center of the world!


Momasphere: Fun to See Inside Richard Meier and Hear Amy Sohn

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What a fun event put  together by Momasphere at the Richard Meier on Prospect Park West. The reading/cocktail party with author Amy Sohn was VERY well attended by an attractive crowd of mostly women though there were some men there, too.

Amy Sohn read two very funny sections of her satirical book, Prospect Park West. One excerpt took place inside the Prospect Park Food Coop, her fictionalized version of the  Park Slope Food Coop. She also read a fun section about two moms talking at the Tea (or Teat) Lounge.

Sohn, who looked lovely in a champagne colored dress,  read very entertainingly with perfect comic timing and a terrific Australian accent for the male celebrity character.

During the Q&A, Sohn answered a question about the challenge of balancing motherhood with being a writer. She mentioned that she writes at the Brooklyn Writers Space and would talk to anyone who wanted to know about it.

Someone asked about reaction to the novel by Park Slopers. Sohn said that people come up to her all the time to say that they actually know the people whom the characters are based on. "But they don't," Sohn added.

Sohn was asked about Sarah Jessica Parker's optioning of the book. "It's a script option" for Parker's production company and HBO for a weekly television series.

Asked about her background Sohn explained that she was born and bred in Brooklyn Heights and has lived her entire life in Brooklyn. "I love Park Slope and I love living here," she said.

Sohn is currently at work on the sequel to PPW, that is due to be published next year. Crossing her fingers, she said that she's hoping to make her deadline. "This one will be called Richard Meier On Prospect Park West,"  she joked.

Proceeds from the event will go towards a Sunset Park charity called Children of the City

Since 1981, Children of the City has
been serving the underprivileged children in the inner-city communities
of Southwest Brooklyn. Starting out as a children’s prevention outreach
in the early years, our services have evolved to include trauma
intervention, counseling, an after-school and summer program, courtroom
and legal advocacy, social work, guardianship, financial counseling,
youth mentoring, and other as-needed services to help children and
their families achieve success in education, social relationships,
home, financial and career. Together we reach the children at home, at
school, on the streets and playgrounds, and at our facility.

Children of the City founder Joyce Mattera was at the event. She said that she lives "on the only brownstone street" in Bay Ridge and people tell her that she belongs in Park Slope. "After hearing the book, I'm not sure that's such a good thing," she said.

A representative from Corcoran spoke about the condos in the Richard Meier building, which range in price from the mid $700,000's for a studio to $5 million for something quite large. 

Oh, about the Richard Meier apartment: the event was in the living room/kitchen of a Plaza Street facing apartment on the third floor—a columned space that can comfortably seat 100 people. The kitchen had an enormous counter/island with some gorgeous looking appliances that sort of disappear seamlessly into the walls.

Dang it: I never made it into the bedrooms which were open for viewing and I hear the bathrooms were incredible—and very bright. 

But I did have two glasses of wine courtesy of SIP Fine Wine, poured by a bartender wearing a black Sipster t-shirt. The food was courtesy of Melt. Yum. There were sliders, summer rolls and AMAZING marshmallow, whipped cream and strawberry desserts.

Best of all: Mark Simmons, the ever so charming executive chef at Melt and a former Top Chef on Bravo TV's Season 4 was at the event serving sumptuous hors d'oeurves.

Kudos to Melissa Lopata and Ellen Bari, founders of Momasphere, for producing such a classy event. Momasphere is "an up and coming organization that creates innovative
evening events and programs for moms of all ages, while also giving
back to the community.  Proceeds of the events go to various charities
that use human rights to advance social justice for women."

Full disclosure I paid $10 for a ticket to this event and was given a cute red Richard Meier on Prospect Park West shopping bag with some goodies inside, including mojito flavored lickable oil from Babeland.

History of a Doomed Restaurant Space

Playacrop
An OTBKB reader wrote in with this history of a cursed space at the corner of President Street and Fifth Avenue. I have no memory of Bebe's. Why don't I remember Bebe's?

Was Bebe's this space's first incarnation as a restaurant? I feel like
I remember something either before or after Bebe's. Because I was
already thinking of that space as a doomed location by the time N&D
opened there.

Or maybe it was that Bebe's closed briefly for
remodeling? I do seem to remember that there was a sort of long
recessed lighting element on the back wall that originally was just a
solid color. After the remodeling they put in a plastic U.S. flag in
the recessed area. The timeline has been Ralph's Cleaners
> Bebe's > Night & Day > Biscuit > Lookout Hill >
Playa?

 Jeesh. Could it be that with the additional patio area out back
there's just too much rent to cover to stay afloat? I just don't
understand how nothing seems to stay afloat here. It's seemingly a
great location.

Also: How did Star of India last next door FOR YEARS
with, like, two tables a night while the corner space's restaurants at
least did some business.

Oct 18: Indulge Your Voyeurism and Envy on Prospect Heights House Tour

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3926604765_e1975042d5

The Prospect Heights biennial house tour will be on Sunday,
October 18th from noon until 5 p.m. Don't miss your chance to go inside some gorgeous and grand brownstones.

What a fun way to indulge in healthy voyeurism and real estate envy.

The self-guided tour will
include 11 wonderful homes and apartments in a neighborhood that was recently recognized by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission on June 23rd when it created the expansive Prospect Heights Historic District.

Prospect Heights was also recently featured
on the show “This Old House” and was commended by LPC Chairman Tierney
for its “architectural integrity and diversity, scale, tree-lined
streets and residential character.”

Landmarks Preservation Commission. This Old House. Double kudos.

The tour will
include all this and more and will showcase the unique character of
Prospect Heights even as the imposing and controversial Atlantic Yards project proposes to make its own mark on the neighborhood.

Tickets may be purchased for $20 prior to the day of the tour at the following locations:

Advance tickets and additional information are also available by calling (718) 393-7653.

Tickets may be purchased on the day of the tour for $25 at the Forest Floor.

Prospect Heights is easily accessible by either the 2/3 Train to Grand Army Plaza or the Q/B Train to Seventh Avenue.

Photographs of the homes on the tour can be viewed online.

 

FTC New Guidelines For Bloggers

The Federal Trade Commission  published final guidelines
Monday that dictate, among other things, that “bloggers or other
word-of-mouth marketers” must state when payments, free products or
“other material connections” have been exchanged between them and the
companies whose products they review or otherwise promote on their
sites.

The FTC announcement states that “while decisions will be reached on
a case-by-case basis, the post of a blogger who receives cash or
in-kind payment to review a product is considered an endorsement.”

I'm all for it.

Greetings from Scott Turner: Walk the Walk

This greeting is late because I screwed up and didn't put it up yesterday. But hope you'll still stop in at Rocky Sullivan's in Red Hook for the pub quiz tonight. As always Miss Wit, t-shirt queen is sponsoring this post. Greetings, Pub Quiz Walk Five Hundred Milers…

Okay, any mention of a walkathon is gonna elicit a Proclaimers reference.  Or Nancy Sinatra.  Some things are automatic, like crying at the end of Old Yeller or that gag reflex whenever another Mike for Mayor ad comes on the t.v.

It won't be 500 miles, but two-and-a-quarter miles.  It's the fifth annual Develop Don't Destroy Brooklyn Walkathon, colloquially named Walk Don't Destroy 5.

I'm walking in it this year.  You know the drill — Ratner, lousy development project, sixteen skyscrapers, a basketball arena, a Russian oligarch
team owner, billions of taxpayer dollars wasted, no appreciable numbers
of affordable housing or newly-created jobs, overwhelming traffic,
exploitation of Brooklyn Dodger mythology, environmental and
health concerns, blighted wasteland created by Ratner and not time,
lack of democratic process, eminent domain abuse.

Wow..that's the shortest I've ever summed it up.

Stopping
Ratner's boondoggle and replacing it with a project that makes sense
for the surrounding communities.  This is a crucial time — the project
will either proceed after New Year's 2010 or it'll be a goner.

Whether you've followed this from afar or heard me talk about it up close, you know what's at stake.  DDDB's legal bill are hefty.  Along with dozens of other community groups, DDDB has been fighting the Atlantic Yards for six years.  Six years

The Walkathon is what DDDB does to keep going.  Walkathons…bake
sales…benefit concerts…the passing of many hats…small checks from
concerned citizens.  DDDB has never had the hundreds of millions of
private and government money available to Forest City Ratner for their endless p.r. assault.   The money raised at this year's Walkathon goes to DDDB's legal fight.

These are tough times.  Too many people and groups have their hands
out.  This is mine, on behalf of DDDB.  If you can help out, either by
sponsoring my walk or heading to DDDB's website and signing up to walk yourself, that would be grand.  You can get more info on the issues there as well.

That's the spiel.  I don't make it lightly.

Also, there's this:  a week from Friday, on October 16th, the legendary 1970s London punk rockers
The Spunk Lads will be playing Freddy's Bar & Backroom.  They're
all living in Brooklyn now, and support DDDB's fight against the
Atlantic Yards.  According to the Lads' lead singer Nick Knickers, "wot if they'd
tried this in Camden?  I'd bloody well fall over effin' basketball fans
and condo buggers and end up with me 'ead in bandages.  Bloody
'orrible, that!"

Sez it all.

The Spunk Lads will be headlining DDDB's Pre-Walkathon Party.  Also on the
bill are the John Sharples Band, comedian Pat O'Shea, Judy Gorman,
Steve Espinola and Neil deMause.  Starts at 8 in the evening.

You never know when it'll be the last chance to see the world's most
exciting band, still at it over thirty years after they single-handedly
— well, eight hands between them — birthed the London punk scene. 
Little is remembered of their early days, but much is enjoyed when they
play shows today — rare as that is.  'Loos are wrecked as well.  Call in the American Standard people…it'll be a busy night in Brooklyn.

Don't miss it.  You've been warned.



Back to our regularly-scheduled Quizmail screed next week.

Issue Project Room: Poetry to the Infinitive Power(s) on Friday

Issue Project Room will be open for business on Friday night for a pre-planned benefit event called POETRY to the INFINITIVE POWER(s), an evening of poetry, dance, live AV projections,
and music. All proceeds will benefit ISSUE Project
Room's move to 110 Livingston.
 
Founder and Artistic Director, Suzanne Fiol died on Monday after a one year battle with cancer. The organizers of tomorrow's event say that "it is not memorial; it was, in fact, planned as a benefit party. We plan to carry
on in this spirit, and ask you to join us in celebrating Suzanne's
life and achievements."
 
Over the past days there have been stories about The Times, the Voice, the Post,
and other media outlets and blogs. ISSUE Project Room sent this list by email.
 
Suzanne Fiol,
Avant-Garde Impresario, Dies at 49

(Ben Sisario, New York Times)  
 
(Christopher McIntyre, New Music Box) 

 

R.I.P. Suzanne Fiol, Founder
and Director of ISSUE Project Room

(Zach Baron, Village Voice)

 

ISSUE Project Room's
Suzanne Fiol is Dead at 49

(Gersh Kuntzman and Will Yacowicz, Brooklyn Paper)

 

(Benjamin Sutton, The L Magazine) 


In Gowanus, ISSUE Project Room Founder is Mourned

(Nicole Brydson, Brooklyn the Borough)

 

Suzanne Fiol, A Force of Nature Who Guided ISSUE Project Room

(From Neil Feldman, Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn)

 

Thank You, Suzanne Fiol

(Patrick Hambrecht, Vice)

 

For Suzanne Fiol

(Alex Ross, The Rest Is Noise)

 

(Peter Matthews, Feast of Music)
 
(Glenn Kenny, Some Came Running)
 
(Matana Roberts, In the Midst of Memory)
 
(Kurt Gottschalk, Spearmint Music)
 
(Edwin Torres, Harriet)
 
Read what people are writing about Suzanne on twitter.
Read what people have written on Suzanne's facebook wall.

Bagel Hole Takes the Cake

I think this story is from my sometime employer The Associated Press. It was sent to me by Leon Freilich, OTBKB's Verse Responder:

In the bagel battle between boroughs, Brooklyn reigned supreme.

That's according to Serious Eats, which conducted a blind bagel taste test and found that Bagel Hole on 7th Avenue in Park Slope schmeared the competition.

The contest was narrowed to the three most bagel happy boroughs — deduced by Serious Eats as Manhattan, Queens, and Brooklyn. 

Bagel
tasters picked a schlew of shops, from the obvious — H&H,
Ess-A-Bagel, Murray's and Brooklyn Bagel — to smaller locales like Hot
Bialys in Queens and Terrace Bagels in Brooklyn that were close
contenders for the top bagel spot.

All
the doughy gems were subject to the same criterion — which in an
nutshel, was consumption quickly out of the oven.  As a sidenote of the
study, Serious Eats found that bagels lose their texture and taste a
mere 30 minutes after their baked.

Six by Six Gallery in East Village

Hugh was at Paper Slam yesterday to pick up the Brooklyn Reading Works posters. He saw the six by six gallery and thought it was a cool idea. Paper Slam has paid us nothing to appreciate their new gallery. we just thought it was cool

The Federal Trade Commission  published final guidelines
Monday that dictate, among other things, that “bloggers or other
word-of-mouth marketers” must state when payments, free products or
“other material connections” have been exchanged between them and the
companies whose products they review or otherwise promote on their
sites.

The FTC announcement states that “while decisions will be reached on
a case-by-case basis, the post of a blogger who receives cash or
in-kind payment to review a product is considered an endorsement.”

Each month, Six by Six Gallery will exhibit a new collection of original art, each and every one of them on a six inch square canvas.

This small and consistent size allows the gallery to show the works of a large and diverse group of artists every month. It also allows collectors the opportunity to curate their own selection of artwork at an identical size that will look great when hung together.

The inaugural exhibit represents over 100 pieces of art from artists from across the country with prices ranging from $40-$500. The artists who exhibit at Six by Six Gallery will enjoy an unprecedented 80 percent commission on all of their work that sells. The gallery is currently accepting artwork for all future monthly exhibitions. To participate, artists purchase an Artist Submission Package at www.sixbysixgallery.com. There are two versions available: The standard submission package, which sells for $40, is housed in an eye-catching, gift-ready red gable box. It includes a six-inch square canvas, a brochure with all the instructions, packaging for the safe shipment of the artwork, and promotional postcards for the exhibit. For local New York artists there is a scaled down version of the submission package available for $20 that can be picked up in person at the gallery. The purchase of either gallery submission package guarantees the artist a one-month exhibition of their work at Six by Six Gallery.

Oct 15: Fun Poetry Party at Brooklyn Reading Works

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So what is Poetry Punch?

It's BRW's annual poetry party curated by Michele Madigan Somerville. It's a fun, friendly, festive way to hear some great poetry. And there's punch. 

How about a nice poetry punch?

When is it?

On
Thursday October 15th at 8 p.m. come hear Edmund Berrigan, Louise
Crawford, Bill Evans Sharon Mesmer, Wanda Phipps, Joanna Sit, Michael
Sweeney and Jeffrey C. Wright.

Where?

At
the Old Stone House. 3rd Street between 3rd and 4th Streets in Park
Slope. Suggested donation of $5. includes punch, wine and snacks.
718-768-3195

How about a nice poetry punch?

Suzanne Fiol Obit in NY Times: “Avant-Garde Impressario and Artistic Rudder”

There is a nice obituary in the New York Times today.

Suzanne Fiol, an impresario of avant-garde culture in New York, who founded the performance space Issue Project Room and served as its artistic rudder, died on Monday in Manhattan. She was 49 and lived in Brooklyn.

Marty Markowitz sent out this statement about the death of Suzanne Fiol.

“It is with great sadness that we learned of the passing of Suzanne Fiol, the heart and soul and extraordinary visionary behind Issue Project Room, a symbol of the forward-thinking culture that makes Brooklyn the Creative Capital of New York City, and contributes so much to our city’s intellectual life. I was thrilled to help in a small way to move Suzanne’s vision of an innovative arts space at 110 Livingston Street —what she imagined as a ‘Carnegie Hall for the avant-garde’—closer to reality, and I hope that comforted her during the later stages of her illness. I am confident the dedicated staff at Issue Project Room and all Brooklynites will see to it that her great work lives on. I join all New Yorkers in mourning this tremendous loss, and our thoughts and prayers are with Suzanne’s family, friends and colleagues during this difficult time.”

Playa is Closed: Doomed Restaurant Location on Fifth?

Playa, the restaurant owned by the folks that brought you Barrio on Seventh Avenue, located in the doomed restaurant spot that is the corner of President and Fifth Avenue, is now CLOSED.

Another one bites the dust on that corner.

Definition: A doomed restaurant spot is a location that has seen repeated restaurant failures. But the curse can be reversed when a successful restaurant goes in. For instance, Yamato Sushi broke the curse on  their location on Seventh Avenue near 1st Street. For years, a restaurant couldn't last in there for more than a year.

Sometimes the curse is broken when a completely different kind of business goes in. The storefront that houses Dashing Diva on Seventh Avenue was a doomed restaurant spot for years. Its final food-related incarnation was as Maggie Moo's.

Who can forget Maggie Moo's?

I thought Playa was a attractive place with its paper lanterns and bright yellow color scheme. I think it served pan-South American food and maybe the identity wasn't that clear. But I enjoyed my two visits there and thought the food was tasty. There were usually a decent number of people in there.

I walked by on Saturday night and it was closed. The tables and chairs were stacked. It said closed to me big time.

I wondered if they were just making changes to the place or if it was closed for good. Maybe a Barrio, Playa's Seventh Avenue sister, will open in that space, I wondered. 

Previous restaurants in that spot were: Night and Day, Bisquit and Lookout Hill. According to one OTBKB reader: "Brownstoner didn’t mention Bebe–my favorite of the restaurants in the doomed restaurant spot. Bebe appeared in the brief time slot between Ralph’s Cleaners and Night and Day. The bar was great, the staff was great, the food was great—4 duck dishes! The story is that they were closed because they were operating without the appropriate licenses. Playa did have a bit of an identity problem. That certainly wasn’t their fault; the beach theme was pretty clear. But more than once, I overheard passers-by saying, “Look! PLAY-uh!” and chuckling about what they thought was a shady name." 

A source close to the
restaurant gives the following account of Playa's shuttering: The guy
who ran the three businesses before Playa was brought in as a partner
on the new venture because he owned the space's liquor license.
However, he's now in a legal dispute with the landlord and pulled out
of his partnership in Playa, taking the liquor license with him. Playa
couldn't turn a profit without the booze license, hence the closing.

I think the building is owned by Robin Hirsch, who owns the Cornelia Street Cafe,  a very successful restaurant and cultural space in the West Village in Manhattan. He opened Night and Day and was a partner in Bisquit BBQ.

All About Fifth: Interview with Aunt Suzie’s Irene LoRe

In the coming weeks and months, Fifth Avenue Business Improvement (BID) blog, All About Fifth, will have interviews with merchants along Park Slope's Fifth Avenue. After all, who knows All About Fifth like the store, restaurant and bar owners along the the avenue?

Their first interview is with Fifth Avenue powerhouse and BID Executive Director, Irene LoRe, Owner of Aunt Suzie's Restaurant.

Here’s Comes the Bride Zuzu’s-Style in Time Out

Time Out asked Zuzu’s Petals to make a well-priced bridal bouquet for their wedding issue. 

Zuzu outdid herself: Amelia roses, cool water roses, Saint-John’s-wort,
scabiosa, thistle and nigella create a lushness of textures within a
simple color palette, at $175. 

See the link: http://newyork.timeout.com/articles/weddings/78984/bridal-bouquets.

Zuzu’s Petals: 374 Fifth Ave between 5th and 6th Sts, Park Slope, Brooklyn; 718-638-0918

Bright Nights: Celebrating the Manhattan Bridge Tonight

Bright Nights is a curated program of digital artwork that
celebrates the projected image, draws attention to the iconic
architecture of the Manhattan Bridge, and electrifies the arts friendly
DUMBO neighborhood. The program will be projected onto the Anchorage,
to coincide with the 100th birthday of the bridge and the 10th annual Walk21 conference in October 2009.

Four internationally renowned Brooklyn-based artists created new
works that interpret the unique physical, spatial, and historical
components of the bridge. The artists were chosen for their ability to
energize a public space, in celebration of the major thoroughfare’s
100th birthday.