Category Archives: arts and culture

Tuesday Night at 7PM: Only the Blog at Two Moon

 

“Overhead, the two moons worked together to bathe the world in a strange light.” ― Haruki Murakami, 1Q84

Only the Blog at Two Moon presents The Family Thing with novelists Peter Matthiessen Wheelwright and Leora Skolkin-Smith.

In his gorgeous debut novel, Peter M. Wheelwright grapples with “The Family Thing,” the inescapable tangle of religion, genetics, geography, deep time, secrets and lies.

Leora Skolkin-Smith’s acclaimed novel, Hysteria, is set against the backdrop of the social turmoil of the 1970′s and tells the story of a young woman suffering from a physical and sexual delusion. Publisher’s Weekly called it: “Poetic, strange and evocative…A poignant prose-poem.”

Come hear these two acclaimed authors read and discuss their work at the lovely Two Moon Art House and Cafe, Park Slope’s newest cultural spot with wine, coffee, delicious soups, sandwiches, salads and desserts.

Park Slope Gooped by Gwyneth Paltrow

Actress and blogger Gwyneth Paltrow comes by her love of Brooklyn honestly because her dad was born at Brooklyn Jewish hospital in 1943. She writes, “A lot has changed…A lot of this has been good change in the form of art, culture, neighborhood-defining restaurants, shops and more.”

It also seems that the opening of the Barclay’s Center is now the new reason Manhattanites go cross the bridge. Unlike BAM, I don’t think they’re offering Barclay’s Buses. In other words: take the train. Paltrow writes: “This week, we’ve gooped Brooklyn, rounding up some of the best spots for your perusal/exploration (or in case you need a bite on your way to the new Barclays Center).”

What is a goop, you ask? Goop is the name of the blog that Gwyneth started in the fall of 2008 “to share all of life’s positives.” It is a weekly email that contains all of Gwyneth’s must-see, must-do, must-haves, including the following that also happen to be on my list.

A. Cheng, a fashion forward shop featuring very wearable clothes on Park Slope’s Fifth Avenue

 

 

 

Al Di La Trattoria, everyone’s favorite Park Slope restaurant

 

 

 

Bird carries Philip Lin, Alexander Wang, JBrand, and up and coming designers, too. Pricey but fabulous on Fifth Avenue

 

 

 

Brooklyn Larder has the most fabulous cheeses, prepared foods, breads and so much more. On Flatbush.

 

 

Franny’s on Flabush serves innovative and delicious pizza in a noisy, fun atmosphere.

 

 

Smitten by the Voice of Jack Davenport

Standing in the Community Bookstore, viewing a shelf of new paperbacks with  my back to the front desk, I heard a familiar voice, a fabulous voice, a compelling voice discussing James Woods’ nasty review of Tom Wolfe’s new book, Back to Blood, in the New Yorker.

Who was that fabulous and handsome man, his voice so smart and sexy, discussing the New Yorker while  buying books?

Who was that man?

It was Jack Davenport, who is best known for his role in the Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl movie. But I know him from Smash a fabulous television musical drama (fizzy soap opera) about the Broadway theater world that follows a fascinating collection of B’way professionals who live to have a S M A S H. The stellar cast includes Anjelica Huston, Katherine McPhee, Debra Messing, Christian Borie, Megan Hilty and JACK DAVENPORT, who plays the slightly sadistic, hot headed but equally fascinating theatrical director Nigel Wills.

Omigod, the voice is just seared into my brain.

Once Davenport left the bookstore, I asked Ezra Goldstein, c0-owner of the bookstore: “Who was that man?” He filled me in briefly. Turns out Davenport lives in Park Slope and shops frequently at the Community Bookstore. Goldstein suggested to me that Davenport is an avid and engaged reader. Obsessed, I did some research on the man. The voice was born in 1973 in Suffolk, England, and is the son of actors Maria Aitken and Nigel Davenport.

He studied Literature and Film Studies at the University of East Anglia. His first big break came after he wrote to John Cleese  to be a PA on Fierce Creatures and he ended up playing a zoo keeper. His first major role however was that of public school educated barrister Miles in the BBC television series “This Life” (1996). Film roles include Ultraviolet” (1998) where he played a modern-day vampire hunter, The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999) as Matt Damon’s love interest, and Pirates of the Caribbean.

I am literally counting the days until Smash returns. God, I love his voice.

Binders: A Poem by Leon Freilich

Binders full of women–just the start!

Mittman’s got dozens of folders showing heart.

One’s for job opportunities for the poor–

Credit each million in tax cuts as jobs-four.

Another binder calls for moving the Treasury

To Switzerland, away from the D.C. Trashery.

Big and heavy’s the folder for civil rights

Proving the nonexistence of minority plights.

Don’t forget the personal gold-trimmed binder

Showing Mitt, not O, is more caring and kinder,

And when His Mittness is sworn in (could be liable),

Romney will take the oath on the Mormon Bible.

October 23: The Family Thing w/ Peter Wheelwright & Leora Skolkin-Smith

“Overhead, the two moons worked together to bathe the world in a strange light.” ― Haruki Murakami, 1Q84

Only the Blog at Two Moon presents The Family Thing with novelists Peter Matthiessen Wheelwright and Leora Skolkin-Smith.

In his gorgeous debut novel, Peter M. Wheelwright grapples with “The Family Thing,” the inescapable tangle of religion, genetics, geography, deep time, secrets and lies.

Leora Skolkin-Smith’s acclaimed novel, Hysteria, is set against the backdrop of the social turmoil of the 1970’s and tells the story of a young woman suffering from a physical and sexual delusion. Publisher’s Weekly called it: “Poetic, strange and evocative…A poignant prose-poem.”

Come hear these two acclaimed authors read and discuss their work at the lovely Two Moon Art House and Cafe, Park Slope’s newest cultural spot with wine, coffee, delicious soups, sandwiches, salads and desserts.

First Edition Book Club Launch Party at Greenlight

Are you one of those people who obsesses over getting a signed first edition of a new book? Then the Greenlight Bookstore’s First Edition Club, the first of its kind in New York City, is for you. Each month, subscribers will receive a first edition, signed by the author, of a newly released hand-selected book that Greenlight feels is both enjoyable and valuable.

To mark the launch, Greenlight Bookstore in Ft. Greene is hosting a discussion of the value of physical books with several experts on the subject on Friday night at 7:30 PM at the bookstore.

Erik DuRon is a member of Greenlight’s selection committee and a 13-year veteran manager, bookseller and book-buyer at Bauman Rare Books, the nation’s leading dealer in rare and antiquarian books. Heather O’Donnell, an alumni of Bauman’s, recently launched Brooklyn-based Honey & Wax Booksellers, dealing in rare books in literature and the arts.

Emily Russo is the chair of the Greenlight First Editions Club selection committee and a veteran of the stellar First Editions Club at Odyssey Bookshop in Massachusetts. John Freeman is the editor of Granta magazine and former president of the National Book Critics Circle, as well as the author of The Tyranny of Email.

A champagne reception will follow the discussion, during which questions will be answered and subscriptions purchased

.

We Return From California

A quick trip to California always packs a punch. We left Thursday morning at 5am for Kennedy Airport and have been on the go ever since.

First stop was the family farm in the San Joaquin Valley, a step into an alternate universe of farmland, artful gardens, eucalyptus trees, oleander bushes, grape vineyards, tomato fields, walut orchards and much more to tempt the senses.

What smells. What bounty. What beauty. Coincidentally, there was an interesting article in the New York Times Sunday Magazine special food issue about the Central Valley of California.

Next stop was Monterey, the small coastal city that rises out of Monterey Bay to pine forested hillsides and sweeping bay vistas. Home to a world renown aquarium, historic adobe architecture, the old sardine factories of Cannery Row that inspired John Steinbeck and a bustling fisherman’s wharf.

Our niece was married Saturday afternoon at the beautiful and historic Old Whaling Station not far from the Wharf. She was the flower girl at our wedding so there was a touch of the surreal about attending her wedding all these years later. Something very lovely and heartwarming, too.

On Monday we drove to San Francisco for a quick visit with relatives, lunch at a great pizza place off of Filmore Street and dinner at our favorite pan Latino restaurant Cha Cha Cha on the Haight.

Monday night we arrived at San Francisco Airport 8:30 o fly the red eye to Kennedy to find that the flight was delayed three hours. It wasn’t as bad as it sounds to waste five hours at the airport. We got home at 11AM on Tuesday morning.

Discombobulated and exhausted, we order Chinese for lunch and try to remember what we were doing before this whirlwind trip to California.

 

Poetry: A Cure for the Common on Thursday Night

Thursday, October 23rd, Brooklyn Reading Works presents Poetry: A Cure for the Common, the annual BRW poetry night curated by Pat Smith (pictured left at the Wonder Wheel) at 8PM at the Old Stone House (336 Third Street between 4th and 5th Avenues in Park Slope).

Sultry Michele Somerville gives you Sappho and some Black Irish smack, soulful Debbie Deane steals your heart at the piano, Alex Crowley brings the TV Personalities, Bourbon & Brutalism, Margaret Young spins scenes from show-biz and I do the news from the middle of my night. Five bucks gets you beer, wine, snacks and a nice break from all of your hair on fire anxiety. Oct. 18, 8PM at the Old Stone House.

Call Me Exhausted: First Marathon Reading of Moby Dick

Now here’s your chance to finally read, in its entirety, Moby Dick. It’s the first-ever New York City marathon-style reading of Herman Melville’s classic novel, Moby-Dick, Or, the Whale.

The event will span three days, three bookstores, two boroughs, and feature over a hundred readers, including authors Jonathan Ames, Rick Moody, Sarah Vowell, Touré, Mark Kurlansky, Joshua Cohen, Aryn Kyle, David Goodwillie, Will Hermes, Lev Grossman, Eileen Myles, Elissa Schappell and more; joined by booksellers, editors, bloggers, journalists, and other Melvillians. The full crew is listed and updated here.

This epic event will span three days over the weekend of November 16–18, chosen because the book was first published in the United States on November 14, 1851. The event will begin the night of Friday 11/16 at WORD bookstore in Greenpoint, where there will be a pre-marathon presentation of the “Etymology” and “Extracts” from 5PM to 6PM, with the event officially starting with the most famous first line in literature “Call me Ishmael”, at 6PM.

The night will be fueled by clam chowder from Littleneck restaurant. The marathon reading will pick back up on the morning of Saturday 11/17 at 10AM Housing Works Bookstore Cafe in Soho.

Around 11:30AM Amy Virginia Buchanan’s Pequod Players will present a dramatic performance of chapters 37–40: Ahab, Starbuck, and Stubb’s monologues and chapter 40, “Midnight, Forecastle.” Saturday will be fueled by more Littleneck chowder before moving back to Brooklyn to continue the night at Molasses Books in Bushwick (4PM–12AM) with clam and flounder chowder from Brooklyn’s Do or Dine. The marathon will finish back at Housing Works Bookstore Cafe on Sunday 11/18 at 10AM, with the chase concluding around 4PM.

“To hear the book read aloud in its entirety is a wonderful way to experience it for the first time or anew—and the perfect opportunity to read Moby-Dick in a single weekend. It’s going to be a great celebration of a canonical New York City writer, and hopefully the inauguration of a New York City literary tradition. Though an urban reading of the book might surprise some, it’s an apt home, as the novel begins in the “insular city of Manhattoes” and the author was born and died here in New York City,” write the organizers Polly Bresnick and Amanda Bullock.

Stitch Therapy is at Home in the Noella Brew Bar

In 2004, Maxcine DeGouttes opened the bricks and mortar fine yarn shop, Stitch Therapy on Lincoln Place in Park Slope. As described on her website, it really was “a busy hive of creativity, inspiration and support for Brooklyn’s community of knitters, crocheters, and weavers.”

Later, Maxcine moved her shop to Park Slope’s Fifth Avenue sharing a storefront with Brooklyn Mercantile, a sewing, craft and home goods store. In early 2012 when the landlord raised the rent, the two small businesses decided to move on. Brooklyn Mercantile is now online only and Maxcine went to the DeKalb Market, a terribly run market that is now, thankfully, closed.

Happily, Maxcine/Stitch Therapy has landed in the front part of Noella Brew Bar, an attractive, brick-walled cafe on Seventh Avenue near Berkeley Place. There you can find her  iridescent hues of kettle-dyed fibers, tweedy wool and hand-painted, hand-spun yarns. Maxcine is also on hand to teach the passion of her life, knitting.

At Noella, Maxcine has replicated the atmosphere of her cozy old store on Lincoln Place. Customers can still benefit from the encouragement and shared knowledge, which Maxcine loves to give. Even better, you can now get a nice cup of tea or coffee and a pastry or sandwich, while you ponder your next knitting project.

Atten to Your Children: A Subway Poem by Robin Hirsch

I got an email from Park Slope’s Robin Hirsch, who owns the Cornelia Street Cafe, a venerable and delightful restaurant and performance space in the West Village. Robin is also the author of a memoir, Last Dance at the Hotel Kempinski: Creating a Life in the Shadow of History and a book of poems, FEG: Ridiculous Stupid Poems for Intelligent Children

When he’s not running a restaurant or writing books, Robin also curates a vibrant calendar of music, theatrical and literary events downstairs at the Cornelia Street Cafe. He wrote to say that a poem he wrote was published in the Metropolitan Diary section of the New York Times. 

“In the old days (e.g., the last time I had something in this column), the Times used to send a bottle of Champagne. Now, malheureusement, one has to make do with ye olde fleeting fame–sans Champagne.”

Who knew they used to send out champagne? Times have changed.

Robin created a piece of found poetry based on the electronic signs in the subway. The poem is a literal transcription of an electronic sign at the Avenue of the Americas-34th Street Downtown subway stop. All spelling, capitalization, line breaks are as found. The only editing that Robin did was to take the first line, capitalize it and make it the title..Here’s the poem, which you can also find in the New York Times, that venerable and delightful daily newspaper.

 ATTEN TO YOUR CHILDREN

Adults hold handrail

attend to your

children avoid the

side of the escalator

ride safely escaator

are for passenger

only never run up or

down no large

packages should be

carried on escalator

step on and off

escalator never push

strollers on escalator

nevr sit on step or

handrail never put

umbrella on escalator

steps children should

hold adults hand not

handrail have a great

day

 

Josh Shneider’s Easy Bake Orchestra Tonight at Tea Lounge

Will the entire 19-piece Easy Bake Orchestra with singer Saundra Williams fit into Park Slope’s Tea Lounge, gathering hole of local laptop freelancers. Of course they will. It’s a spacious venue, with a full bar and a full selection of caffeinated treats plus snacks.

How to describe the Easy Bake Orchestra? It’s big band jazz infused with Latin, R&B and sumptous soul. A joyous melodic soup with complex harmonies and a sophisticated swing. The talented Saundra Williams (pictured left) s currently touring with Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings and will sing original songs by Easy Bake’s leader, Josh Shneider.

I saw them in DUMBO not long ago and was impressed. Very.

Tonight at Tea Lounge on Union Street.

Monday Night Music at Sweet Wolf’s in Park Slope

Monday is music night at Sweet Wolf’s, a lovely cafe/restaurant on 12th Street in Park Slope. Tonight, the series, run by Red Beat Music, will present  Levon Henry, described by the organizers as “jazzy, singer/songwriter with a touch of folk.”

Sweet Wolf’s is an unexpected cafe/restaurant in an unexpected place. Located on the very residential corner of Sixth Avenue and 12th Street, you may have noticed the building with its gate posts, gargoyles and a small patio out  front.

By day, Forty Weight Coffee serves coffee and pastry items. For lunch and in the evenings, it’s a full-blown restaurant with delicious food.

As a special incentive for Monday Night Music, bottle of wines will be half price! Tasty bar food will be available and Forty Weight Cafe will offer caffeinated beverages. There’s a one-drink minimum, cash only.

Only the Blog at Two Moon Presents: F*ck! I’m In My Twenties

 

This Wednesday at 7PM come to my new, slightly more casual reading and event series called Only the Blog at Two Moon (Fourth Avenue between 2nd and 3rd Streets in Park Slope).

Reasons: adventurous programming, good conversation, food, coffee drinks and wine in Two Moon, a  lovely cafe and art space on Fourth Avenue.

This Wednesday October 10 at 7PM: see/hear author-blogger Emma Koenig, author of F*ck! I’m in my Twenties. Special musical guest is Small Wonder. Special perk: a show of Hugh Crawford’s LARGE photographs on the walls. That’s Emma above with her mom Bobbi Bass pictured in the New York Times.

Great for peeps in their twenties  b/c they can relate

Great for parents of peeps in their twenties: b/c they can relate

Great for those who don’t know peeps in their twenties: so they can learn about what it’s like to be a peep in your twenties. Also to remember and reminisce. Those were the days, my friend. Those were the days.

And Flavorpill wrote :

Emma Koenig, author of the F*uck I’m in My Twenties tumblr and book (and sister of indie-fave Vampire Weekend frontman, Ezra) has immortalized the experience of overeducated, underemployed twentysomethings. Reading from the recent print release of her best LOL-inducing scribbles, graphs, and charts from the blogosphere, the former struggling New Yorker returns from LA to explore the post-grad woes in public.

Roulette: One Year in Brooklyn

Happy Anniversary to Roulette.

I can’t believe it’s been a year since Roulette, an experimental music collective formerly located in Manhattan, set up shop in Brooklyn.

Clearly they’ve expanded the size and scope of their organization with a new 450 seat theater. But their mission, to provide opportunities for innovative composers, musicians, sound artists and interdisciplinary collaborators, stays the same.

First a little history. In 1978 three composers, Jim Staley, David Weinstein and Dan Senn, launched a new music composers’ collective they named Roulette. Weinstein had recently composed Café Roulette, an homage to Dada and to chance operations in music.

That  75-seat space in Lower Manhattan made a big name for itself in the world of experimental music and new jazz. The move to Brooklyn a year ago signaled an expansion in size, scope and ambition. They write in a birthday note on their website:

This last year was a breath-taking, nerve-wracking, exhilarating realization of the implications of our name. We moved from a 74 seat loft to a 450 seat theater, doubled our budget, presented over 150 music, dance and Intermedia performances, hosted fifty arts and community organizations, and our audience grew from 4,000 to 21,000.

Our new theater is an architectural gem with splendid acoustics and superbly equipped — thanks to the generosity of individuals, foundations, corporations, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, the Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz, Steve Levin, our New York City Council Member, and the New York State Council on the Arts. This season we will install an eight-camera robotic system which will make Roulette one of the few facilities in the city capable of complex videography, instant editing, and live broadcast.

In an astonishingly short time Roulette has become a cultural and social nexus for our neighborhood — the Downtown Brooklyn Partnership identifies Roulette as a keystone organization in its Strategic Plan — and has taken a prominent position in the cultural life of New York City.

The tote bags pictured above, designed by Christian Marclay, are for sale at Roulette.or

Peripatetic Weekend: Fiber Arts, Wallflowers, Jane Austen

Movies

Loopers, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, The Master (now at BAM), Frankenweenie (maybe, it is a Tim Burton film). Plus, there’s a mini-series at BAM called Apocalypse Soon, which includes The Birds, La Jetee, Mad Max, Night of the Comet

Art

Ferdinand Hodler: View to Infinity at the Neue Gallery in Manhattan, brings together his self-portraits; his Symbolist portraits of powerful looking women; his majestic paintings of the Swiss Alpine landscape; and a series of shockingly frank portraits of his lover, Valentine Godé-Darel, documenting her decline and death. Very moving.

Craft

The Kings County Fiber Arts Festival takes place at  the Old Stone House and Washington Park on  Saturday, October 6 from 10AM until 6PM

Books

In addition to the Jane Austen Society of North America’s Annual General Meeting in downtown Brooklyn, there’s a Jane Austen Pop-up shop at the Atlantic Avenue location of Sterling Place.  The  Pop-up was organized by Honey & Wax Booksellers. 

Dance

Political Mother, a dance piece by Hofesh Shechter at BAM this weekend. “A heart-stopping, explosive assault on the senses, Political Mother invokes an atmosphere of struggle and conflict, where repression is met with resistance and survival is paramount.” A heavy metal rock band accompanies on stage. Part of the Next Wave festival.

Get Fleeced at the Fiber Arts Festival in Park Slope

On Saturday, October 8 from 10AM until 6PM, Stitch Therapy and the Old Stone House (Fifth Avenue and Third Street in Park Slope) present the Kings County Fiber Arts Festival this weekend at The Old Stone House, a festival of natural fibers for spinners, knitters and crocheters, offering handspun and painted yarns and rovings of many varieties. Handcrafted knit, crocheted and woven clothing, hats & scarves for the family.

The following artisinal fiber artists will be on hand at the festival: Artikal Handcrafted Millinery, Bay Haven Short Tails, Bittersweet Ridge, Brooklyn Crochet Collective, Cobblerock Ridge Farm, Compassioknit, Crochet shirret Rag Rugs, Decadent Fibers, Fish Hollow, Full Moon Farms, Hellomello Handspun, Humdinger Alpacas, Juliet Martin Designs, Lilac Hill Farm, Looliemom Fiber Arts, Loop of the Loom, Okos Farm Fiber, Pollywogs, Queen Bee Fibers, Utopia Bath, Winter’s Past Farm

Here’s a schedule of activities to expect:

11 am: Pop-Up Yoga NYC: An Ergonomic Stretch for Crafters

12 pm: Finger Knitting Demonstration for Children

12pm – 6 pm: Fabrications, an exhibit by Gail Rothschild in the OSH Great Room

1 pm: Finger Knitting Demonstration for Children

2 pm: Spinning Wheel and Drop Spindle Demonstration by NYC’s Spin City

3 pm: Music by the Famous Accordion Orchestra

4 pm: Fleece Talk – identification and Characteristics w/ Kris Brynes, Winter’s Past Farm

6 pm: Exhibit Reception: Fabrications by Gail Rothschild

PHOTO FROM PARK SLOPE STOOP!

 

Annual Jane Austen Society Meeting In Brooklyn

Sex, Money and Power in Jane Austen’s Fiction is the theme of this year’s general meeting of the Jane Austen Society of North America, which is taking place October 5-7 at the Brooklyn Sheraton and the Brooklyn Marriott.

The scope of the conference, which includes keynotes by Dr. Cornel West and Anna Quindlan, is too vast to elaborate on here, but you can get a full schedule at the Jane Austen Society of North America website. 

In honor of this event, there’s a Jane Austen Pop-up Shop at Sterling Place, an antique store on Atlantic Avenue or as they describe the merchandise: “eclectic curiosities and  essential goods.” Organized by Heather O’Donnell, the special Jane Austen Pop-up Shop will feature rare editions of Jane Austen’s works.

There are free public programs connected with the JASNA event, too:

8:30 PM, Friday October 5th, at The New York Marriott at the Brooklyn Bridge, 333 Adams Street, Brooklyn, NY

One of the world’s foremost sopranos, Julianne Baird, will create a wonderful artistic encounter for Austen lovers. Her Jane Austen recitals interweave songs from the Austen family collection (as well as other standards of the period) with narrations drawn from Austen’s novels.

and this:

The Vassar College Women’s Chorus
3:30 PM, Sunday, October 7, 2012 at the Plymouth Church of the Pilgrims, 75 Hicks Street, Brooklyn

The Vassar College Women’s Chorus will perform works based on Jane Austen texts, specially commissioned by Vassar College and the Jane Austen conference from composers, Eleanor Daley and Joelle Wallach. The Chorus has performed in New York, Chicago, Boston and Philadelphia as well as abroad. The concert will be held at the historic Plymouth Church of the Pilgrims, where Abraham Lincoln prayed and where escaped slaves were sheltered on the Underground Railroad.

From the OTBKB Archives: The Global Bloggage

I wrote this as Smartmom on October 7, 2004 on the original OTBKB, which is now called Third  Street. 

There’s something about a blog that makes a person want, no, need, no, desperately need, some sort of response. It’s a big shout into the universe for attention. A yearning yelp into an echoey tunnel as in: Hello, is anyone there? Does anyone want to play? Is anybody listening? Hello? Hello? Hellooooooooooooooo?

Pathetic, eh?

Actually it’s a little embarrassing. And yet, why write a blog unless someone is going to read it? Isn’t that the whole point of the exercise. And it’s not just Smartmom out there blogging—though her blog is, by all reports, wildly original and fun. There are tens of thousands of blogs at Blogspot alone. Haven’t you ever wondered what that small button on the masthead that says “next blog” means? Try it someday and you’ll see. There’s a whole world of blogs out there, people from all over the world desperate to communicate. When she is supposed to be doing other things, Smartmom has read blogs from Adelaide, Australia; Florence, Italy; Stutgart, Germany; Singapore, Thailand, Lebanon, even New Jersey.

Kind of gets you thinking, doesn’t it. Is all this blogging a cry for help or the proverbial note in the bottle thrown out to the proverbial sea?

Yes, indeed. Blogging has has become one gigundo phenomenon. And Blogspot is probably just one of hundreds of blog-generating sites for those desperate to be heard. In a sense, Blogspot is a global village for the graphomaniacs of the world. Marshall McCluhan could never have imagined such a thing. And he thought television was going to be the big global municipality. Hate to say it, but that is so 20th century, man. Fact is, there are probably millions of blogs out there worldwide. Imagine: a small virtual universe of people striving for connection.

Now that’s really profound, isn’t it? It’s friggin existential. Contemplating it now, Smartmom feels like a tiny, tiny speck in the blog universe. So very small and insignificant. Very, very teeny tiny.

Hello? Is anybody there? Is anybody really listening? Helloooooooooooooooooooooooo…

 

ArtObama Auction Tonight on Atlantic Avenue

Over 100 artists, who support the re-election of President Barack Obama are auctioning their work at an art auction tonight in Brooklyn called ArtObama

Auction proceeds will benefit the Obama Victory Fund 2012  as well as ActBlue. Space is limited, and pre-registration for collectors is strongly recommended.

When: October 3, 7 to 9:30 pm (bidding from 7:00 to 8:30 pm) Where: 382 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn,  NY 11217 Entrance fee: $45 at pre-registration or the door. Can’t be there? Proxy bids accepted through Oct 2nd, 8 pm. To make a proxy bid call 718-781-0354.

Hope to see you there. It should be a really fun night. I was there four years ago when ArtObama raised $60,000. An auction like this can be a chance to get art bargains or legitimize the purchase of a wonderful piece of art because it’s for a good cause.

Tonight? Skies the limit. Painting above by Jayne Holsinger. Value: $1,500.

 

All About Sukkot: Stars Should be Visible Through the Roof

Yesterday I was asked at least five times by different groups of Lubavitch men: “Are you Jewish?” Each time I said “No” and they seemed to believe me. Surprisingly, they didn’t seem to flinch at all when I said: “No.”

As a kid in a secular Jewish family, I loved the idea of Sukkot. I knew what it was even though my Jewish education was somewhat spotty. Building a Sukkah, a make-shift structure, out of branches, leaves, shrubs, and straw seemed so cool. Who wouldn’t want to create a beautiful little playhouse in the courtyard of our apartment building or in Riverside Park.

In Park Slope, you  can spot more than a few sukkahs around the neighborhood. There’s one at Chai Tots on the corner of Prospect Park West and a very architectural one in front of Congregation Beth Elohim (pictured is last year’s sukkah).

The men from an extremely evangelical wing of Hasidic Judaism, the Lubavitch sect, are out in droves in their dark suits trying to pursuade Jews to shake the lulav.

Most of the Jews I know have figured out a usable response to the question from the men on the street. One friend says: “Yes I’m Jewish but I already shook the lulav today.”  Another friend says: “Yeah, I’m Jewish and please leave me alone.”

Lubavitch Hasidism is an international movement with headquarters in Brooklyn. They’re intent on converting other Jews to the Torah way of life and operate an extensive outreach effort to encourage a return to traditional practices. Their Mitzvah Tanks are a frequent sight in New York City.

My “Just Say No” tactic makes me very uncomfortable. I don’t like to deny my heritage or hide who I am. We didn’t survive the holocaust to lie to other Jews on Seventh Avenue about our identities. But it’s a quick and easy way to be left alone. My irritation almost made me forget the way I used to marvel at this holiday. And it got me thinking about what the holiday is all about.

Continue reading All About Sukkot: Stars Should be Visible Through the Roof

It’s a Sukkah, Charlie Brown

Who are these strapping young men and what are they standing in front of?

It’s a sukkah, Charlie Brown and these are the lads who designed it for Park Slope’s Congregation Beth Elohim.

I love the idea that a sukkah or tabernacle, the ritual shack built for the Jewish harvest holiday of Sukkot, could be an architectural experiment. Last year Congregation Beth Elohim commissioned architect Babak Bryan to create their 8th Avenue sukkah. And this year they’ve tapped another firm to give it a go.

Studio Tack, a Gowanus-based firm captured here in a photograph by Patch’s Will Yakowicz, designed and built the structure in three weeks. Sukkahs are often built with branches and leaves. This one consists of natural elements like bamboo from Borough Park and pine from Upstate, New York . A joyous holiday, Jews are expected to eat and pray in sukkah.

In Leviticus, the shelter is described as a “wilderness shelter,” symbolizing the time God protected the Jews, who were thrust into the wilderness after they were freed from Egyptian slavery.

I haven’t been over there yet but from the pictures it looks kind of cool. Sukkot began on Sunday, September 30th and ends on October 7th.

October Goings On

It’s a busy month and it just started. October  includes a good deal of work for Brooklyn Social Media, three readings for Brooklyn Reading Works and Only the  Blog at Two Moon. A little overwhelming, yes. Oh and a wedding in California. Here goes:

October 10 at 7PM: Only the Blog at Two Moon presents  F*ck! I’m in My Twenties. The event has already been blurbed in Flavorpill which I quote here: “Emma Koenig, author of the F*uck I’m in My Twenties tumblr and book (and sister of indie-fave Vampire Weekend frontman, Ezra) has immortalized the experience of overeducated, underemployed twentysomethings. Reading from the recent print release of her best LOL-inducing scribbles, graphs, and charts from the blogosphere, the former struggling New Yorker returns from LA to explore the post-grad woes in public.” Two Moon Art House and Cafe, 315 Fourth Avenue between 3rd and 2nd Streets.

October 18 at 8PM:  Brooklyn Reading Works Presents: Poetry a Cure for the Common curated by poet Pat Smith with Michelle Madigan Somerville, Alex Crowley, Margaret Young and Debbie Deane. The Old Stone House. 336 Third Street between 4th and 5th Avenues in Park Slope

October 23rd at 7PM: Only the Blog at Two Moon Presents: “The Family Thing” with Peter Wheelwright, As It Is On Earth and Leora Skolkin Smith author of Hysteria. Two Moon Art House and Cafe. 315 Fourth Avenue between 3rd and 2nd Streets.

Brooklyn by the Book: New Reading Series in Park Slope

Congregation Beth Elohim and Community Bookstore, two historic Brooklyn institutions, are joining forces to offer a monthly reading and lecture series at Congregation Beth Elohim.

The organizers are calling it Brooklyn by the Book, and are hoping that the events will “provoke discussion, celebrate the life of the mind, and tap into the rich culture of writing and reading in Park Slope and the broader community of Brownstone Brooklyn.” Here’s the schedule.

Wednesday, Oct. 24, 7:30 pm Jerusalem: A Cookbook

Yotam Ottolenghi, author of Plenty, and Sami Tamimi, co-owner of the Ottolenghi restaurants, were both born in Jerusalem in the same year. The chefs will discuss the great food traditions of Jerusalem with Rozanne Gold, four-time James Beard Award winner.

Thursday, Nov. 1, 7:30 pm

On the occasion of the release of Paul Auster’s latest memoir, Winter’s Journal, and the paperback of Don DeLillo’s short story collection, The Angel Esmeralda, the two writers make a rare public appearance to discuss their work.

Thursday, Nov. 15, 7:30pm

The author of the bestselling biography The Beatles discusses his latest book–an engaging look at the life of one of the most important cooks of all time, Julia Child. Lev Grossman, book critic at TIME, calls the biography “a revelation.”

Wednesday, Nov. 28, 7:30 pm Jewish Jocks: An Unorthodox Hall of Fame

The author of How Soccer Explains the World and editor of The New Republic talks with co-editor Marc Tracy about their anthology of essays covering the great Jewish sports figures in history.

Thursday, Dec. 6, 7:30 pm Happier at Home

In Happier at Home, the #1 bestselling author of The Happiness Project experiments with making her home a happier place over a single school year.

These events are free for Congregation Beth Elohim members/$10 suggested donation for non-members.

 

 

Instant, a History of the Polaroid Includes Jamie Livingston

Readers of this blog know how passionate we are about Polaroids, specifically the work of Jamie Livingston and his Photo of the Day project.

Christopher Bonanos, an editor at New York Magazine, has written a history of Polaroid called Instant. Thankfully, Betsy Reid of Legacy Portrait Films texted me early to say that Scott Simon on Weekend Edition interviewed Bonanos about his new book

I haven’t heard the interview yet but I did want to talk about the book.

 According to Bonanos, Polaroid was the Apple of its day. “It was the coolest technology company on earth, the one with irresistible products, the one whose stock kept climbing way past the point of logic,” he writes.

Interestingly, Steve Jobs is said to have modeled the corporate style of Apple on the creative atmosphere of Polaroid.

According to the author, Instant is a business book about what happens when a company loses its innovative spark. The book also showcases the amazing things photographers—from Ansel Adams to Andy Warhol to Chuck Close and even Jamie Livingston—did with Polaroid film.

It is also a technology and pop-culture history. He writes: ” I like to think that it also tells a larger story, about the rise and fall of American invention and manufacturing.”

We’re thrilled that Bonanos included a photograph by Jamie Livingston in Instant. Livingston’s Photo of the Day project consisted of one Polaroid a day from 1978 until the day of his death from cancer on October 25, 1997.

Since Jamie’s death, Hugh Crawford and Betsy Reid re-photographed all  six thousand photographs and created a dedicated website for this work, which went viral in 2008 and is enormously popular all around the world, especially in China where it gets millions of visitors every year.

The Polaroid by Jamie Livingston above is from September 29, 1987.

Week’s End, Weekend

Saturday morning. Everyone is asleep. It’s MY TIME to… meditate, blog, listen to Scott Simon on NPR.

I think this is my most favorite time of the week. The apartment is quiet, the living and dining rooms are empty, the chaotic energy of this household is dulled considerably.

It’s been busy around here lately. It seems like the four of us are running in four separate directions. My daughter is in the thick of her sophomore year of high school. My son is working in Brooklyn and playing music. This weekend he is playing a show at Bard College.

Hugh is helping organize ArtObama on October 3rd and installing a show of his photographs at Two Moon Art House and Cafe next week, which will be up through the end of October. He is also designing a photographic mural for the Brooklyn Public Library for installation in December. He’s busy and we pass like ships in the night.

My weeks are busy, too. The weekdays begin when I  wake early to drive my daughter to her school in Midwood. Our morning drive on Coney Island Avenue listening to the Elvis Duran radio show is an important bonding time for us.

Once home, the business of Brooklyn Social Media takes up all my time now. I’m either on the phone, on the computer, or at a meeting these days. And I’m excited and grateful about every minute of it.

But the onset of the weekend, the early hours before anyone awakens. It’s peaceful here, a time to think. I’m glad for this time, for this soft start to the weekend.

Tom Martinez, Witness: Show at Ninth Street Espresso in East Village

 

Tom Martinez has a show of his photography at the confusingly named Ninth Street Espresso (because it is actually on East 10th Street). It turns out the space is the western half of the now-defunct Life Cafe, a legendary East Village bar/restaurant/cafe on the corner of Avenue B.

Tom’s photos of the Coney Island Mermaid Parade, the Occupy Wall Street May Day march and other New York City moments look great at the cafe, which is located at 341 E. 10th Street right across from the north side of Tompkins Square Park.

Ninth Street Espresso is an attractive cafe for serious coffee lovers who like artisenal beans and the assurance that the growers are well cared for.

Tom took the photograph of Felix Morelo at work on a mural on his way to the show’s opening reception.

In Montauk: Pregnant Photographer Has an Affair

A new indie film by a female director will be having a week-long run at the ReRun Gastropub Theater in DUMBO beginning October 5th.

In Montauk is a romantic/drama about a pregnant photographer who has an affair that presents her with some impossible choices.

According to director Kim Cummings: “The film speaks to artists and women alike who are trying to balance a career and family and finding it a struggle.”

The October 5th screenings will be followed by Q&A with Cummings, the writer/director & stars Nina Kaczorowski, Lukas Hassel & George Katt.