Astonishing. Graffiti artists are still doing the ol’ “sneak into a museum and hang unsolicited work” trick. The latest, Mat Benote, fancies himself a “Fine Art Graffiti Artist” and has actually already pulled this stunt at the Guggenheim. His latest conquest was the walls of the Brooklyn Museum, and one of his minions wrote to [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: art, Art Museums, Arts and Entertainment, Brooklyn Museum, Fine art, Graffiti, museum, Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation
Time was when a person could have walked into a coffee shop and simply ordered a cup of coffee. Whether one took his/ her coffee with cream and sugar or without sugar or without cream (in my case, black: sans both cream and sugar…very black) coffee was usually coffee and people seemed content to have [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: art, Beverages, coffee, Environmentally friendly, New York Times Company, Nurse Jackie, Showtime, starbucks
People standing on 42nd Street watch fireworks explode over the Hudson River during Macy’s annual 4th of July fireworks show on July 4, 2009 in New York. (AP Photo/Peter Morgan) Yahoo! News Sphere: Related Content
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: art, Hudson, Hudson River, Hudson River School, Macy, new york, new york city, United States
Staten Island may not lay claim to many distinctions but can finally boast of one: Island Tattoo, New York City‘s first tattoo museum. This is certainly a radical move for that ignored borough (suspected as being a covert part of New Jersey), often dismissed as lacking in the finer graces of NYC’s bohemian dwellings, commuter [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: art, brooklyn, Grasmere, New Jersey, new york city, nyc, staten island, Tattoo
One of the most popular exhibits at the 1964 World’s Fair held in Flushing Meadows Queens was the New York State Pavilion. Commissioned by the state of New York, the pavilion was designed by the architect Philip Johnson and was the Fair’s largest and most controversial; indeed, it was in fact more famous for being [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (1) Article tags: Andy Warhol, art, legend, Nelson Rockefeller, new york, Pop art, Robert Moses, Robert Rauschenberg, Shea Stadium, Visual Arts
MANHATTA (1921) is a film that, for decades, has been more famous as a topic amongst film historians than for actually ever being seen (or even heard of) by anyone. It shared the mostly unseen worship that silent films such as F.W. Murnau‘s NOSFERATU and Robert Wiene‘s THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI evoked in the [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: art, Arts, Charles Sheeler, cinema, film, legend, Movies, Museum of Modern Art, new york city, Paul Strand, Robert Wiene
After the success of his novel IN COLD BLOOD, Truman Capote decided to throw a party. More in his element amongst the glitter of celebrities than at the keys of his typewriter, the magnificent gnome was a party animal if there ever was one. But unlike the typical soiree of the flowery 60s, where the [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Andy Warhol, art, Audrey Hepburn, entertainment, Frank Sinatra, In Cold Blood, legend, literature, manhattan, Mia Farrow, new york, Truman Capote, Washington Post
George Balanchine’s “The Nutcracker” is back in town for its annual presentation of festive dance; since 1954, a Christmastime goody. The New York State Theatre comes alive as the characters Clara, Herr Drosselmeier, the Sugar Plum Fairy, the Nutcracker, and an assorted cast of enchantment, emerge through Tchaikovsky‘s immortal music. There have been countless productions [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: art, ballet, Clara, dance, entertainment, George Balanchine, holiday, new york, New York City Ballet, nutcracker, Пётр Ильич Чайковский
The 400th anniversary of the birth of John Milton was celebrated on December 9 with events throughout the world. Readings of his works, exhibits of his manuscripts and, of course, presentations of his masterpiece Paradise Lost were featured. At Cambridge University (where Milton studied at Christ’s College), the faculty read the entire text (all 10,000 [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: art, Arts, Cambridge University, commemoration, Garden of Eden, historic, John Milton, literature, new york city, Paradise Lost
This year’s Rockefeller Center Christmas tree hearkens back to an earlier time in American history when this nation found itself in the grips of another, more infamous depression…the Great Depression, to be precise. In 1931, a family in Hamilton, New Jersey planted a 7-foot Norway spruce outside their home, the years watching it grow to [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: art, art deco, christmas, Christmas tree, culture, Great Depression, holiday, New Jersey, Norway Spruce, rockefeller center, rockefeller center christmas tree
Wonders never cease in my tiresomely fashionable Park Slope, Brooklyn neighborhood. Little surprise they “clepe us” liberals and gentrified-beings (which, I interpret, means post-yuppies living in a state of suspended post-modernism) and with “swinish phrase” soil our routine pretensions, making us “traduced and taxed” of other neighborhoods. (My apologies to Hamlet. Like him, verbose speculator [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: ads, art, Barack Obama presidential campaign 2008, barack-obama, brooklyn, England, Park Slope, Park Slope Brooklyn, Planned Parenthood, politics, sarah-palin, Shepard Fairey, United States
A new production of Orson Welles‘ WAR Of THE WORLDS will be performed at the Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts on October 26. Directed by “Star Trek: The Next Generation” star John de Lancie, with a production that allows the viewer to see how and why so many people panicked when they heard the [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: art, brooklyn, Great Depression, historic, John de Lancie, Lost World, Orson Welles, science-fiction, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Television movie, THE NIGHT THAT PANICKED AMERICA, theatre, WAR Of THE WORLDS