
Dope on the Slope has a post about a collage made by Berkeley Carroll second graders called "Recycled Bouquet" that was made out of recycled grocery product packaging. Click here for a close-up view of one section of the work." He says it is installed on the north wall of the Key Food on Carroll Street and Seventh. I think he must mean the exterior wall…It must be big like a mural. Can’t wait to take a look…
All posts by louise crawford
SWINGLES FROM STEVE’S KEY LIME
Omigod, omigod. Now this is exciting. Steve of Key Lime fame left a comment on the post I wrote about him last week. He liked it, he liked it. Here are the facts about his ice cream bars. YUM. I’m wondering if the Park Slope Food Coop will have them.
Thanks for the mention, actually we’re calling these things "Swingles",
after the botanist who catalogued the key lime (Citrus aurantifolia
Swingle). We switched to a great Belgian chocolate and are using an
organic coconut oil as a thinner (the chocolate must be thinned for
dipping) and the results are positive all around. Only complaint we get
is when someone is asked to share. Again, thanks for the mention!
NO WORDS_DAILY PIX BY HUGH CRAWFORD
HOT HOT SEVENTH HEAVEN
Incredibly HOT weather for Seventh Heaven, Seventh Avenue’s annual street fair. It seemed to me that it was less crowded than usual. The heat was probably the main reason. OSFO and I were out there at high noon and each have a sunburn to show for it. For some reason, this year we found ourselves going from 3rd Street to 16th Streets. Never made it below 3rd Street. OSFO enjoyed the space walk "ride" and the big slide up on 16th Street.
Here’s what we noticed:
—Jed Parish performing in front of Slope Cellars
–Interesting world music in front of John Jay High School
–Skirts from Fofolle
–Cool key rings and jewelry from Bonbon Oiseau
–Gorgeous dish towels from India
–Rides up on 16th Streets
—Rare Device’s sale table
–Bird and Baby Bird’s sale table
—Naidre’s cupcakes and stuff
–Boxing and Tai Chi demo in front of Slope Fitness Collective
–Hepcat bought a super bright flash light
–Pink Corvette model car for Dad
–Chinese dragon painting for Grandpa
–Sand in a cat-shaped bottle for Grandpa
–Lots of jewelry
–Lots of bags
–Lots of Andean stuff
–Lots of Chinese buddhas
Canaries in the Goldmine: The Emerging Arts in New York City
Got this in my inbox today from my good friend in Kingston, NY. Funny because it was written in Williamsburg, Brooklyn by the director of the Galapagos Art Space.
Recently
two developers walked into the Brooklyn apartment of my friend and told
him he had nothing to worry about – they weren’t going to tear down the
building he was living in for at least another year. My friend, a
filmmaker, thinks he can’t possibly afford to stay in New York, and
he’s not alone.The canaries in New
York City’s real estate gold mine – the emerging arts – are no longer
talking about the next show they hope to land, they’re talking about
the next city they think they can land in once their current lease runs
out.But for many that lease on life
has already run out. Affordable habitat in the cultural ecosystem is
becoming hard to find. For everyone.Within the next few months, ten off-Broadway theaters will permanently close *.
The
price of real estate has risen so far that, from a cultural point of
view, in three to five years we’ll be experiencing a fundamentally
different idea of what it means to live in New York City and be a New
Yorker. City Hall must find ways to incentivize rebuilding the emerging
arts infrastructure that’s evaporating in our white-hot real estate
market, or it won’t be built.
The past:
For the last fifty years the emerging arts in New York City have attracted the one smartest kid from everywhere.
These young cultural migrants scratched out a two or three-day-a-week
freelance career, lived cheaply and brazenly and learned the street
smarts that would one day transform their art or adopted industry. Not
everyone who begins as an artist ends up with a career as an artist,
and the result for New York City has been a significant contribution
from the arts to the culture of aggressive and intelligent management
that helped make New York the leader in the arts, finance and media
industries.The present:
In
a New York too expensive to incubate young artists many of these best
young minds will fly right past our exploding real-estate market and
rezoned artistic neighborhoods to cultivate and grow cultural and
economic opportunities in other, less expensive cities. It’s important
to remember that these young artists have no loyalty to New York;
they’re from places like Des Moines after all.Many
in New York City believe that the vital underground of emerging
artists’ environments is here to stay ‘just because’. This is wrong. New York doesn’t have to be
the cultural capital of the emerging arts, or of the financial or the
media industries for that matter, New York needs to continue to earn
its place and it can easily price itself out of that role **. London is
only one of many capable cities who are very busy trying to beat us at
our best industries.
(To read about our need to expand Galapagos Art Space click here)
Continue reading Canaries in the Goldmine: The Emerging Arts in New York City
BROOKLYN THE PLAY
Brooklyn is oh so hip, it’s even the location of a new play that just opened at the Public Theater starring Sandra Oh (of Sideways and Gray’s Anatomy) called "Satellites." Garnering great reviews, the appearance of this new play demonstrates that that Brooklyn is more than just a place but a state of mind or at least the zeitgeist of the moment.
This house will not stay still. Floorboards might as well be skateboards in the old Brooklyn brownstone that is the setting for "Satellites," the tough-minded, softhearted and very likable new play by Diana Son that opened last night at the Public Theater
Thanks to the ingenuity of the set designer Mark Wendland, rooms slide sideways, backward and forward in this study of big-city identity crises from the author of "Stop Kiss." A seemingly solid structure splits again and again into a house divided, as distinctions between outdoors and indoors, between public and private, melt and dissolve. For Nina (Sandra Oh) and Miles (Kevin Carroll), a couple who have just moved from Manhattan with their newborn daughter, home has all the stability of a runaway taxi.
Urban flux indeed. The kinetic set for "Satellites" isn’t just the latest example of a designer strutting his virtuosity. Ms. Son is examining a world in which traditional ethnic, social, economic and sexual boundaries have become so porous that people are never quite sure who or where they are at any given moment. It feels absolutely right that the ground should shift so literally beneath the feet of Ms. Son’s wandering, wondering characters.
TEMPO PRESTO ON THIRD STREET
I saw one of the old Mojo employees with a Tempo Presto t-shirt on. He was inside the old Mojo on Third Street – I think Tempo had a booth in front of the store during Seventh Heaven. I asked him if he was going to be working at Tempo Presto when it opens and he said he wasn’t sure: he likes working at Tempo Presto on Fifth Avenue. Oh, so he works at Tempo Presto already. He said the shop would be opening in Fall 2006. "They’re going to be doing a lot of construction." he added.
So a Fall opening for Tempo Presto. It’s got me wondering what’s happened to our Third Street friend Corey. Will he be working at Tempo Presto, too?
DAD’S DAY
Dad’s day definitely got short shrift around here. Not because anyone has anything against Hepcat. It’s just that Teen Spirit and OSFO know that Hepcat doesn’t think much of Hallmark holidays. Maybe they’re embarassed to pay too much attention to it. They know that the best way to celebrate it is to ignore it in Hepcat’s case.
OSFO did make Hepcat scrambled eggs and bacon for breakfast. She did NOT give him a card. Teen Spirit had a card but he never got around to signing it. Hepcat appreciated OSFO’s tasty breakfast.
I managed to drum up some enthusiasm for the day. Got Hepcat a nice card and a small gift. But Hepcat seemed bent on ignoring it.
We did have a combo Father’s Day/June birthdays party at our house. My dad came and he appreciated the attention from Teen Spirit and OSFO who did have gifts for grandpa. I guess they know that he, unlike Hepcat, appreciates that sort of thing.
OSFO gave him a Chinese dragon painting painted by a guy at the Seventh Heaven street fair. She asked him to write "Grandpa" in calligraphy. She also gave him a sand bottle in the shape of a cat because he likes cats. Teen Spirit gave him a cool key ring with a horse on it (Granpa is a big horse racing guy).
It was Bro-in-law’s first Father’s Day. He’s been dad to Sonya since last August. Happy Father’s Day to you and many, many, many more to come.
The Rosenblums: Dinner and Drinks at Black Pearl
Speaking of Slope restaurants, it’s time to put in a good word for Black Pearl. We had a very impromptu birthday party for Hepcat there a few weeks ago (very impromptu). Black Pearl was incredibly accomodating. They cheerfully created a huge table for our party of 15 or so. The service was great and so was the food.
My writer’s group has been going there for drinks and sometimes food after writer’s group for about six months now. I’ve been very impressed with the service, the food, and the cocktails. It’s a fairly quiet place; a good place for conversation.
The other night after writer’s group, a group of us went in and I asked the Maitre’ D if he remembered me. "Of course. We call you guys the Rosenblums because your party drank ten bottles of Rosenblum’s California Zinfindel," he said.
That’s a lot of wine. I didnt’ realize we drank so much. Hey, it was a nice party.
OTBKB SHOWS UP ON CURBED
So there was something in Curbed.com about me and Brooklyn Record on June 12th. Hepcat told me about it today – practically a full week later. COMMUNICATION. Hellw? There were also a bunch of not altogether pleasant comments about me but you can check those out for yourself.
Brooklyn continues as a hotbed of hot blogging action with today’s launch of Brooklyn Record,
a new Gothamist sort of site for the old borough. Published by
Brownstoner, its mission is to "cover Arts, Restaurants, Events,
Politics, etc." We will, of course, be reading, even as we await the
inevitable deathmatch with OTBKB.
· Brooklyn Record [BrooklynRecord.com]
TEEN SPIRIT’S SUMMER VACATION
I’ve been thinking a lot about what Teen Spirit is going to do this summer. As usual, we will go to Sag Harbor for a week and Northern California for much of August (visiting Hepcat’s family farm). But I’m worried about July. Teen Spirit has never gone to sleep away camp. He loved Park Explorers, a local day camp in Prospect Park, but he’s too old for that now. He talked about being a C.I.T., which I thought was a great idea but now he’s not sure.
He says he wants to hang loose. He’s talking about getting a job. Anyone have some work for 15-year-old Teen Spirit? He’s smart, interesting, into music, well read…likes computers. The only work experience he’s had is babysitting for his sister and a boy who lives a few blocks away. He once distributed flyers for the Shangri La store and he’s had stoop sales.
I found this on Callalillie. She doesn’t have kids but she was musing on what she’d like her kids (when she has them) to do on their summer vacation.
How would I like my children to spend their summer vacations?
I am not really sure, though I would love to be able to give them
experiences like those that I had. Usdan Usdan Center for the Creative and Performing Arts exposed me to some incredibly
smart and creative people. Experiencing college campus life
(quasi-college) in high school was invaluable for me. But mostly, I
want my kids to have fun and smile and not worry about things, because
that is what summer vacation is traditionally for. And when they are
old enough, their lazy butt needs to get a job.
Anyone have ideas for Teen Spirit this summer? Maybe I should look into that Usdan Center.
YOU KNOW THAT GREAT PLACE ON COURT STREET?
The City section did a piece on that old timey fruit and vegetable shop on Court Street in Boerum/Cobble Hill. I think there’s a connection between that shop and the fruit truck on President Street. I think they used to be in business together but they had a falling out. Maybe I made that up. But I don’t think so.
CARMINE CINCOTTA, 53, was in his usual position at the back of Jim
and Andy’s, a narrow slip of a produce store on Court Street along the
Boerum Hill-Cobble Hill fault line. A folded copy of a newspaper rested
on a box of kiwis in front of him, open to the crossword."Fielding novel?" he grunted,
eyes peering over the tops of his black spectacles like a college
professor. "Anyone know any Fielding?" The question was addressed to
the store’s handful of customers."Tom Jones?" suggested the man next to him.
Mr. Cincotta turned and gazed at him with infinite weariness. "That’s the only one you know, isn’t it?" he said.
The
customer laughed; an old friend of Carmine’s, he knew and appreciated
these rules of engagement. At the far end of the store, magnificently
detached from his son’s daily performance, stood Mr. Cincotta’s father,
Jimmy, 80, gazing serenely out of the window at the passing parade, as
though the two of them inhabited different stores entirely. Short and
round, the older Mr. Cincotta is the physical opposite of his tall,
lean son, as though they were related not by blood but by their years
together on this small stage.Since 1970, when Jimmy Cincotta
moved permanently into the place on Court Street that he and a partner
had been renting as a storage area, Jim and Andy’s has been a fixture
on Court Street. Through subsequent decades, bars have become bodegas,
which in turn have become restaurants and real estate offices. But the
store, with its brown sign and simple facade of fruit and vegetables
piled on crates — no Dean & DeLuca styling here — has remained a
constant. The interior consists of cracked black-and-white linoleum
tiling, peeling walls and, if you venture far enough back, a glimpse of
a tiny "office" piled with papers, into which Carmine Cincotta is apt
to retreat when business is slow or he feels the need for a little
privacy.The older Mr. Cincotta has been in the fruit and
vegetable business since he was 13, back in 1939. He began by helping
his father, whom he unashamedly calls a "peddler," using a horse and
cart to travel around the neighborhood."On Mondays,
Wednesdays, and Fridays I’d work that side of Court Street," he said,
indicating what is now called Boerum Hill, "and on Tuesdays, Thursdays
and Saturdays I’d work this side" — he stabbed in the direction of
Cobble Hill. Neither nomenclature existed back then; both areas were
still part of the vast sweep of "South Brooklyn."It was hard
work. He would be up at 3 or 4 in the morning to head to the old
produce market on West Street in Manhattan, then catch a few hours’
sleep before hitting the streets until 6 or 7 p.m. He would remain
outside in all weather, unless the temperature dropped below 30
degrees, when he would take the horse back to the stables. If it was
hot, there was no respite."I remember my favorite horse,
Dolly," he said. "She was strong, unbelievable. You get some days in
July or August and that tar is really soft, and she was pulling twice
her weight. The wheels would go right in."By 1970, when Mr.
Cincotta gave up his last horse, the network of stables and blacksmiths
and feed merchants required to sustain them was disappearing. "That’s
when everybody started getting really fussy," he said. Residents began
objecting to the smell of horse manure, the last stables were being
gobbled up for parking lots or residential developments, and finding a
blacksmith became almost impossible."I remember when we used
to put four shoes on a horse for $6," he recalled. "The last horse was
$50, and the guy had to come in from out of town."Mr. Cincotta
had not planned for any of his children to enter the business; he
worked so hard in large part to put Carmine and his brother, Philip,
and sister, Nancy, through college so they might go on to better
things.Carmine Cincotta had no plans to join his father
either, though he also had no plans of any other description. "I was
totally clueless," he said. "I’m the only person who got a history
degree from Baruch when it was almost 100 percent a business college…
NO WORDS_DAILY PIX BY HUGH CRAWFORD
NO WORDS_DAILY PIX BY HUGH CRAWFORD
MOJO SCOOP: WHAT’S GOING IN ON 3rd And 7th AVE
OTBKB’s got the scoop. Tempo Presto is going into what was the Mojo Cafe. Tempo, a well-reviewed restuarant on Fifth Avenue has a take-out shop right next to the restaurant. The shop going in on Seventh Avenue will have cafe seating, gelato, coffees, and "lots of desserts" says owner Michael Fiore, who encouraged OTBKB to spread the word.
The arrival of Tempo Presto is good news for Third Street. Now three corners have restaurants:
Sette, Miracle Grill and now Tempo Presto.
Tempo Presto – cafe, ice cream, goumet Italian food – sounds great.
TONIGHT: TUVAN THROAT SINGERS AND LAURIE ANDERSON WOO HOO
Saturday, June 17 – THAT’S TONIGHT AT CELEBRATE BROOKLYN
7:30pm
LAURIE ANDERSON / CHIRGILCHIN
For this rare outdoor hometown appearance LAURIE ANDERSON will perform new, old and improvised music and stories, joined by fellow musicians Skuli Sverrisson and Peter Scherer. Tuvan throat singers of CHIRGILCHIN open.
Photo by Astrovine
HOTEL ALTERNATIVE IN PARK SLOPE
She remodeled the garden apartment in her brownstone and now rents it out with three day minimum stay. Formerly a set designer, Wendy has an incredible eye for interior design and the garden "hotel" she created is gorgeous, airy, and filled with beautiful things. Just the kind of place you want to stay in when you’re visiting beautiful Brooklyn. She’s had guests from all over the world. And the word is getting out about her spacious and comfortable alternative to a hotel in Park Slope.
Wendy Ponte hugs daughter Adelaide Ponte Upton, 10, in the basement room she rents to tourists. Tourists visiting New York are leaving behind Manhattan’s bustling hotels for the charm of Brooklyn’s brownstones.
Homeowners from Park Slope to Bay Ridge are renting their apartments to
visitors on a short-term basis, taking advantage of a growing number of
tourists lured to Brooklyn by its slower pace and cheaper lodging."A lot of people vacationing to New York are beginning to realize that
Brooklyn is a viable, cheaper alternative to Manhattan … and it’s a
growing market for people like me," said Wendy Ponte, a freelance
writer who rents a one-bedroom apartment out of her Park Slope
brownstone."People more are wanting to stay in Brooklyn rather than the city. A
lot of them have kids and would rather stay in an apartment setting
within a community than in Manhattan."Ponte, who started renting out her apartment last February, lists her
apartments on Web sites like Craigslist and Cyberrentals.com – and the
response has been overwhelming.Others report similar results. "Every week I’m booked. I’ve been booked
up 100% since I started this two years ago," said Margo Lewis, 41, an
event producer who rents out a Fort Greene apartment."I’ve had people come from Australia, Germany, England, Japan and other
parts of the United States, just wanting to stay in Brooklyn. They view
Brooklyn as a way of life, an icon of the United States."Both Lewis and Ponte use the rentals as secondary income – and have benefited handsomely.
"I can earn up to $3,500 a month based on my weekly rental," said
Lewis, who has a three-night minimum stay of $250; $850 for a week, and
a maximum of $2,500 for a month.Jason Nagy, the director of marketing for FindRentals.com, said the
industry for vacation alternatives to hotels is getting bigger and
bigger. "This is definitely a growing trend because people want better
deals than hotels"
THE GHOURDS
I heard a band on Weekend Edition and coulda sworn it was The Band but it was a band called The Ghourds. The Band is one of my fave bands EVER. Maybe the The Ghourds are good, too. Here’s what they had to say about their music, which they describe as music for the unwashed and well-read.
Many have attempted to personify, lablefly, quantify, verbalize and sanctify the concoction of musical quilts these here gourds have somehow knit together. In a saucepan of slow roasts they have conjured tempo’s, tango’s, waltzes, zydeco, old timey, two step, lowgrooved, long winded, short tailed, tiny, phat, stompin gizmo’s of tunes tripped out of lonely, solid teeth and wet green earth. Bugs all bedazzled with this comic tear soaked golden throated close harmony caved in a corner with hat drippin’ rain. Lo and behold lo and behold they was just lookin’ for they lo and behold.
With obscure references to everything from desmond dekker, black adder, folk mythology, Oregon motels, baby gramps, Curtis Mayfield songs, Spanish poetry, u.s. currency, leadbelly, isopropyl alcohol, various controlled substances, sex, food, arachnids, insects, archetypal psychology, NFL, liquid gold, Sufis, preachers, old testament bible stories, mud, betrayal and masturbation’s, The Gourds seem to let their music fry just long enough before they turn it over and brown it on the other side.
There is just absolutely no way to categorize this music, these songs, without tearing up the English language. On any given night, in any given bar, somewhere out in Eugene or Amarillo or Jacksonville or Lincoln. In new York city, Chicago, Dallas, San Francisco, Seattle or Austin. One can sit listening to a gourds show without a clue as to where in the hell it’s gonna go. They are quilters in the true sense of the word. Scraps, fragments, leftovers, images strung together in a continuous scrabble of sheets draped over old wood like charm. This is first and foremost a music of joy. From there itís anybody’s guess what the friggin’ hell it is.
One thing is for sure though. They know what it is. But damned if these bunch of loblolly’s can tell you anything about it. They just do what they do and it comes out all gourd-like and silvery and wood-like and watery.
PAUL McCARTNEY TURNS 64 TODAY
When I get older, losing my hair, many years from now,
Will you still be sending me a Valentine, birthday greetings, bottle of wine?
If I’d been out ’till quarter to three, would you lock the door?
Will you still need me, will you still feed me,
When I’m sixty-four?
Hmm——mmm—mmmh.
You’ll be older, too. Aaah, and if you say the word, I could stay with you.
I could be handy, mending a fuse, when your lights have gone.
You can knit a sweater by the fireside, sunday mornings, go for a ride.
Doing the garden, digging the weeds, who could ask for more?
Will you still need me, will you still feed me, when I’m sixty four?
Every summer we can rent a cottage in the Isle of Wight if it’s not too dear. We shall scrimp and save.
Ah, grandchildren on your knee, Vera, Chuck, and Dave.
Send me a postcard, drop me a line stating point of view.
Indicate precisely what you mean to say, yours sincerely wasting away.
Give me your answer, fill in a form, mine forever more.
Will you still need me, will you still feed me, when I’m sixty four?
by John Lennon/Paul McCartney
WHICH BANK WILL IT BE?
I’ve been observing the transformation of what was Good Footing on the corner of Union Street and Seventh Avenue into what is obviously a small new bank/ATM station.
I wonder what bank it will be. Commerce. Washington Mutual?
It was interesting to see the metal insides of the ATM machines going in. The windows are obviously very thick. The tell-tale clue that it’s an ATM bank: the cutouts in the walls just above waist level.
Other news: What was the Korean market on the north corner of Garfield is going to be a real estate office, I forget which one. ANOTHER REAL ESTATE OFFICE.
I LIKE HELLO BROOKLYN DOT COM
DOES EVERYONE KNOW ABOUT HELLOBROOKLYN.COM? THAT’S WHERE I FOUND THIS. IT’S AN AMAZING BROOKLYN RESOURCE AND, MOST IMPORTANTLY, WHERE I GO FOR MY BROOKLYN MOVIE TIMES.
CIRCUSundays in June returns to the Waterfront Museum and Showboat Barge (June 4, 11, 18, 25) at 1:00PM and 4:00PM.

CIRCUSSunday
brings the circus to Red Hook every Sunday in June featuring
professional performers from around the globe who will dazzle, mystify
and make you laugh.
CIRCUSSundays is presenting an unprecedented variety or performers this summer and every Sunday features an entirely new show. Click Here for this season’s schedule.
The Museum Walls will showcase the art exhibit: FLOATAGRAPHS: From a CIRCUSunday
Peter Angelo Simon debuts a new body of photographs from a 2005 visit
aboard the Waterfront Museum and Showboat Barge. Artist Reception: June
18th from 6:30 – 8:30 PM.
Purchase tickets online or call our tickets hotline (877) 238-5596 to place your order. Two shows daily.
BROOGLE: Daily Brooklyn News from Google
|
PRINCE IN PROSPECT PARK: 10 p.m. THURSDAY NIGHT AT CELEBRATE BROOKLYN
BREAKING NEWS FROM Hepcat on location in Prospect Park.
THERE WAS A BIG SURPRISE AT TONIGHT’S CELEBRATE BROOKLYN CONCERT AND HIS NAME IS PRINCE (the artist formerly and currently known as Prince).
MACEO PARKER, considered one of the architects of funk music, played gritty saxophone (he’s played with James Brown,
Parliament-Funkadelic, Bootsy Collins, and Prince) and rocked out with his band. The crowd loved it.
Now, according to Hepcat, they are shouting for an ENCORE (I can even hear it over the phone). OMIGOD: IT’S PRINCE. IN BROOKLYN. I can barely hear Hepcat on the phone. He’s very excited. What a great night at Celebrate Brooklyn…sorry I missed it.
More: "He was wearing a white zoot suit kind of thing," says Hepcat. He doesn’t know what song he was singing but it was great. Hepcat didn’t have his camera but took some shots with his cell phone. We don’t know how to download those.
Back story: Hepcat was at the Park Slope Food Coop earlier in the evening and over the PA system someone said: "I have it from a reliable source that Prince is playing at Prospect Park!" Wide spread murmuring. He told me when he got home. Then he went to the park. You know the rest.
CHUCKY CHEESE CLOSED FOR HEALTH DEPT. VIOLATIONS (I.E. MICE)
Check out Dumb Editor’s story in the Brooklyn Papers. This news stopped me short. And it’s big news for those of us who detest Chuck E. Cheese.
Chuck E. Cheese has a cute mouse for a mascot — and lots of dirty mice in the kitchen.
The fast-food restaurant and arcade, housed on the third-floor of Bruce Ratner’s Atlantic Terminal Mall, was shut down last week by the city’s Department of Health after inspectors found — oh, the irony — mouse droppings throughout the kitchen.
Make that a lot of mouse droppings.
“Approximately 30 mice droppings on paper goods storage shelf near kitchen entrance,” read the June 8 inspection report, a copy of which was obtained by The Brooklyn Papers.
“Approximately 10-20 mice droppings on shelf floor of rear exit. Evidence of mice or live mouse present in facility’s food and non-food areas … Approximately 60-70 mouse droppings on floor in electrical closet in kitchen.”
KUDOS TO JACK WALSH OF CELEBRATE BROOKLYN
Kudos to Jack Walsh, the Producer and Director of Celebrate Brooklyn and the man responsible for last night’s Prince appearance at the opening event of the Celebrate Brooklyn concert series.
Prince only appeared for seven minutes singing the closing track ("Get on the Boat") on his new CD. “To have somebody like Prince show up
just makes it all the more special for everyone involved," Walsh told the New York Times.
“I sent an email to
a friend in the concert business,” he said, “and it got forwarded to
the right person. It was on a whim, but the response was immediate.
Somehow it just worked out.”
From the New York Times:
The song’s James Brown groove suited the occasion, and gave Mr.
Parker the chance to recreate his horn arrangement from the album.
Prince sang some upbeat lyrics extolling racial harmony, and took a
fleeting solo on guitar. Then he struck a dramatic pose, tossed his
guitar pick and a white towel into the audience, and strutted off.
The Times article said that Prince’s appearance was a surprise to Maceo Parker, the show’s headliner. But it seems that someone at the Park Slope Food Coop knew about it before everyone else. Hepcat reports that someone announced over the Park Slope PA system at around 8 p.m. Thursday night: "I have it from a reliable source that Prince is performing at Celebrate Brooklyn tonight."
BROOKLYN VEGAN HAS THE SHOTS
Noel Mendez took the pictures and Brooklyn Vegan has them on his site in all their glory. Prince at Celebrate Brooklyn Thursday night.
LITTLR FUGITIVE TO OPEN BROOKLYN FILM WORKS: Movies Al Fresco in JJ Byrne Park
LITTLE FUGITIVE, a film directed by Morris Engel and Ruth Orkin in 1953 about a boy who runs away to Coney Island opens Brooklyn Film Works: Movies Al Fresco in J.J. Byrne Park. June 27 at 8:30 p.m. Lawn chairs, blankets, and picnics encouraged.
Curated by Louise Crawford. Concession by Stone Park Cafe. This series is brought to you by the generous in-kind and financial support of Scharf Weissberg, Showman Fabricators, Rosebrand, and Methodist Hospital.
"Between neorealism and the nouvelle vague stand Morris Engel and Ruth Orkin, whose independent feature Little Fugitive (1953) has been credited — by Francois Truffaut,
who ought to know — with providing both spiritual imprimatur and
nuts-and-bolts strategies for the French New Wave. Engel and Orkin were
both still photographers, with Engel particularly distinguished as a
colleague of Paul Strand and a pioneer photojournalist with magazines
like PM, Fortune, Collier’s. Orkin also had ties to Hollywood and cinema in general — she had worked for MGM,
her mother was a silent star, and she had edited some experimental
shorts, an experience that would be crucial in the pair’s future
collaborations. Engel and Orkin provided a production template for
future independent filmmakers by doing double and triple duty on their
films. For their first feature, Engel, Orkin, and Ray Ashley are
credited with direction, Engel and Ashley with production, Ashley with
screenplay, Orkin and Lester Troob with editing, and Engel with
photography."
BIG STORY: BROOKLYN TREE HOUSE FOR RENT
| Adam Dougherty shows off tree house for rent. |
From the Daily News:
People are going out on a limb for housing in Brooklyn.
Williamsburg sculptor Adam Dougherty put his South Fifth St. backyard
tree house up for rent as a gag – but learned that in Brooklyn’s
sky-high real estate market, it was no joke.Since last Saturday, the Craigslist.com posting
has drawn more than 30 prospective buyers, renters and vacationers –
even though Dougherty never had any intention of branching out into
property transactions."I thought people would immediately take this as a joke, that it would
get flagged," said Dougherty, 29. "But the sincerity of some of these
people!""I can’t blame ’em," he added. "I mean, $150 for a place to stay in New York? That sounds like a dream."
It was no dream to Gabriel, a "young artist currently sleeping in my van."
"I’d be up for a summer of sleeping outdoors," he e-mailed Dougherty.
Then there was Ryan, who figured out there probably wasn’t any running
water in the tree house and typed this question: "If I need to, can I
shower at your house?"Although the ad said only "$150 – Tree House," most who responded
assumed the dollar figure was either for a weekend stay or the actual
sale price, Dougherty said.The year-old pinewood triangular house hovers 23 feet over Brooklyn, and fits up to 17 people at once, he said.
The 12-by-12-by-10-foot shelter is empty, except for a light hooked up
to a 23-foot extension cord that runs down to his apartment.Tree houses are "sort of nostalgic," said Dougherty, who occasionally
takes his girlfriend up for a rendezvous. "They’re to escape your
parents, or for your friends to talk about dirty things. This is my way
to escape and sort of return to my childhood."Aptsandlofts.com President David Maundrell said Williamsburg real
estate continues to go through the roof – so cheaper alternatives
aren’t such a bad idea."It’s summer so you don’t need to be inside. There’s no utilities to
worry about, and since its high up it’s like a penthouse," Maundrell
said. "That’s not bad at all."
RENEGADE CRAFT FAIR IN WILLIAMSBURG
Renegade Craft Fair in McCarren Park JUNE 17 and 18, 2006. Go here for info.
The Renegade Craft Fair is a unique DIY event organized by Sue Blatt + Kathleen Habbley.
When this event began in 2003, there was nothing else like it. We took
up crafts as a hobby after college and decided to try selling our stuff
in local fairs. To our surprise, no events were catering to the
burgeoning DIY craft community or even prohibited crafts all together.
So we thought of organizing a fair of our own that tapped into this
movement and provided a laid back, fresh venue for artists and shoppers
alike.The
timing of the Renegade Craft Fair was perfect since it coincided with
the resurgence of crafting as a new generation of people have reclaimed
crafts and put a contemporary spin on them. At the RCF you’ll find all
sorts of cool stuff ranging from comic books to cool craft patterns,
and gigposters to reconstructed clothing.
In its first year, we had
originally hoped for 40-50 local people to join, but when applications
started pouring in from all over the country, we had to jury the first
fair and we ended-up having 75 vendors showcasing the coolest crafts
around. We knew we had filled a void and began brainstorming how we
could make the fair bigger and better. The Renegade Craft Fair now
takes place in Chicago and Brooklyn, NY, each with over 150 vendors,
and we hope to one day add a west coast event to our schedule. We also
plan on opening a storefront within the next year, so keep a look out
for us if you’re in Chicago!
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