Walking in Manhattan
December 8th, 2018
If I were a photographer, I’d wish my photos would look like these.
From an exhibition at Howard Greenberg Gallery (November 2018 – March 2019), which coincided with the publication of ”Vivian Maier: The Color Work”, the first book devoted to her colour images.
Vivian Maier (1926 – 2009)
How my brain feels at the end of this week.
Art:
1/
Autumn Rhythm (Number 30),
2/
Monoceros, Ibram Lassaw
|ronze and manganese bronze fused over galvanized wire
3/
Untitled, Clyfford Still
Oil on canvas
Kouros, Isamu Noguchi
Marble
4/
Attic, 1949, by Willem de Kooning
Oil, enamel and newspaper transfer on canvas
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
February 17th, 2018
– Hello? This is 2018 calling; may I please speak to…
– Oh, hello 2018, sorry to interrupt, we’ve been expecting your call. Please hold for 2019, it’ll be right with you shortly!

December 31st, 2018
*for David,
his silent camera & that ”magic thing” called life
Words of Wisdom from Charlie Brown
December 14th, 2018
The City may be celebrating the most wonderful time of the year but December usually finds me exhausted, ready for hibernation, in absence of which a fair amount of introspection will have to do. One more year has just been added into my bag of experiences and, amazing it has been, I feel the weight. It was perhaps a cosmic coincidence or I was just subconsciously seeking to get into the ”Christmas Spirit” rather than sinking deeper into my ”Christmas Blues” that brought me to church not once, but three times this month. As an atheist, church is not part of my usual routine, but a sequence of seemingly unrelated events managed to get me there – thrice. Emphasis added on ”seemingly”, because all three events had something in common: music & song. Ethereal, transcendent, lyrical, divine song.
First, it was Ambient Church:
Group Immersions into modern contemplative and devotional music through site-specific audio and visual performance // is their Facebook statement and I couldn’t describe it better.
In celebration of 25 years of American ambient label Kranky, this nomadic audiovisual experience traveled to four cities – Portland, Los Angeles and Chicago, before coming to St. Ann & the Holy Trinity (est.1847) in Brooklyn Heights, on December 15th. The headliner was progressive power trio of Brooklyn Forma but my personal luminary of the night was Christina Vantzou, a Kansas City, Missouri born composer and filmmaker of Greek descent based (of all places) in Brussels, Belgium.
You can listen to Christina’s dreamy, abstract music on her website and her latest work, album No. 4 here.
Then, on December 22nd, came Paul Winter’s 39th Annual Winter Solstice Celebration, a multi-media event featuring musicians, vocalists and the 25 dancers and drummers of the Forces of Nature Dance Theatre. This annual phantasmagoria, which I’ve only just discovered, aims to offer a contemporary take on ancient solstice rituals, when people gathered together on the longest night of the year to welcome the return of the sun and the birth of the new year. The mere fact that it takes place in the largest cathedral in the world, makes it an unforgettable experience, albeit a bit overwhelming, in my view. Except for the howling – that was awesome. Click on the video below, to listen.
Finally, on Christmas eve, there was caroling in Gramercy Park. Where, once a year for a single hour, the exclusive park normally open to a small circle of key holders only, welcomes everyone with open doors and Christmas Carols sang by the choir of Calvary-St. George’s Church, a choir so melodic we had to follow them to their next round at the Christmas Eve Service, inside the church. I thought we would stay for a couple of songs, then leave quietly. Instead, we stayed for the whole service in what became one of the most uplifting experiences we could possibly hope for, this Christmas. Which goes to demonstrate that when religion is inclusive rather than imposing, and the church keeps up to date and young, it can only gain – if not devotees, at least a couple of new friends.



*Title borrowed from Hozier’s homonym song.
Christmas Eve 2018
(Unsurprisingly) Bergdorf Goodman!
There should be an ”International Awards for Shop Xmas Windows” ceremony somewhere, if only to affirm that outdoing this B&G extravaganza is practically impossible. Except of course by B&G, who are somehow outdoing themselves every time! Hard to believe one can actually buy some of these items inside (I could probably afford a small box of macarons from Ladurée)…








Manhattan, 5th Avenue
December 9th, 2017
… I hear you ask. The City has been hit, once again, by a jolly wave of Christmas Fever. There are parties and ice sculptures, young Santa wannabes and grumpy valet Snowmen, tea and sympathy (and cookies) with curious Creatures, Christmas trees in public spaces, earworm inducing sugary tunes and lights – zillions of dazzling lights everywhere!







HAPPY HOLIDAYS EVERYONE!
December 24th, 2018
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