Days 2009
Stereo audio files, speakers, amplifiers and additional equipment
Members preview of Bruce Nauman: Disappearing Acts | MoMA
October 19th, 2018
Days 2009
Stereo audio files, speakers, amplifiers and additional equipment
Members preview of Bruce Nauman: Disappearing Acts | MoMA
October 19th, 2018
This poster on the window of a barber shop in Port Authority Subway, kept poking me; something about his sideways glance, unintentionally funny face and the ”Love, Mother” logo made me smile, every time.
Both the barber shop and the poster are gone now, but not without a trace: a brief search returned an interesting post on ”Jeremiah’s Vanishing New York” website as well as what ”this sideways glance” was all about.
July 2nd, 2017
We were on our way back from a lunch break when my co-worker, who had been in the City much longer than I, pulled me aside:
”Wait, have you seen this?” ”C’mon, you’ll love it!”
In, he dragged me, through a revolving door and before I knew it I was facing a giant revolving globe amidst a stunning art deco interior with just a touch of brass, as if Jules Verne had walked by and left his mark, and I could hardly contain my excitement. For the lobby we had walked into belongs to The Daily News Building, the iconic skyscraper built in 1929–1930 to become the headquarters of the New York Daily News paper, up until the mid 1990s. But it gets better: this, as I discovered by looking at the photographs on the wall, was the very building that served as the offices of the ”Daily Planet”, the newspaper where none other than Clark Kent and Lois Lane, played by Christopher Reeve and Margot Kidder, worked as reporters in the 1978 Superman and its 1980 sequel.
I am still in awe!
Today, the New York Daily News has moved on, but the building is still home to its broadcast subsidiary, WPIX.
The News Building was designed by architects Raymond Hood and John Mead Howells, in the Art Deco style. Other Art Deco designs by the same architects include: the American Radiator Building, Rockefeller Center (Hood) and McGraw-Hill Building (Hood).
The News Building
42nd St., between 2nd & 3rd Avenues
June 22nd, 2017
We were there too, with a couple of hundred more admirers, sharing the same space with one of the most important musical minds of the century – and the century before, enjoying a casual conversation about his life, friends, lineage [”covers a lot of things… but the important thing about lineage is the connectiveness”], lessons learned from his father, Ben, like mental chess or, the most important of them all, how to listen…
[”Father had a record store…”]
[”…After a whole day in a music store he went home and listened to music. If he had records in the store and couldn’t sell them, he wanted to see what’s wrong with them. So he brought them home and listened to them. His idea was, if he could find out what’s wrong with them he could buy the right records… Pieces he brought home were mostly modern pieces; it could be Shostakovich… Bartók, and he would listen to them over and over… he became kind of expert on modern music… and his little store in Baltimore became the place to go when you were looking for modern music…”]
Paul: ”I love the story of John Cage saying to you: ”It’s good… But there are too many notes!”
Philip: ”No, he never said it was good…! Don’t make it better than it was!” ”He said: ”Philip…. Too many notes!” And I said: ”John, I’m one of your children whether you like it or not…”
Thoughts, pauses, reflections, life fragments, anecdotes, friends; his epic Einstein on the Beach; the inspiration he took from Rothko’s vision; his creative combination of live performance with film in La Belle et la Bête; his memories of Moondog, the mighty Viking of 6th Avenue… the fact that he worked as a plumber and, more adventurously, as a taxi driver to fund his music.
[”At some point, I began to ask myself where did the music come from; then, I decided to write music because it would be a way to learn where it came from. But it turned out not to be true… I spent the rest of my life trying to answer that question… and I still can’t…”]
Paul Holdengräber, founder and director of Live from the NYPL talk series, was the host.
Philip Glass | A Mind of Music, NYPL
June 15th, 2017
The red brick of Charles Scribner’s Sons building is bathed in a warm blood orange colour.
Formerly a printing plant and corporate HQ of the historic printing house which produced works from such legends as F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Edith Wharton, Thomas Wolfe, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, and Ring Lardner.
Now renovated and transformed into a modern office space.

Scribner’s on 43rd Street, Hell’s Kitchen.
June 8th, 2017
Bright red and yellow shades applied liberally. Nature’s palette. Looking out the window, oftentimes I wonder what divine hand could draw a picture like that…!

Hell’s Kitchen
June 8th, 2017
The legendary Steve Ditko passed away late last month (found unresponsive in his Midtown apartment on June 29, 2018) but reports of his death reached the world only yesterday (July 6, 2018). He was ninety years old.
Rest in Peace Dear Sir. Thank you for your amazing work!
The Final Chapter – Art by Steve Ditko (1927-2018)
In every possible way (#times_square #twilight_zone #no_filter #that’s_one_pair_of_legs_too_many)

June 2nd, 2017


1/ Vik Muniz’s part of a larger work ”Perfect Strangers”, 72nd Avenue Subway Station.
2/ Jeff Koons’ inflatable seated ballerina, on view at Rockefeller Center in May-June 2017.
Two balloons. One of them, a work of art.
June 2nd, 2017
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