• Metronome

    This huge art wall has been an enigma for myself and most New Yorkers and visitors. The piece, Metronome, was commissioned by the developers of the building at One Union Square South, created by Kristin Jones and Andrew Ginzel (who won a national competition), and inaugurated in 1999. It is an investigation of time containing nine elements – every element has a specific meaning.

    The photo only shows the central portion, The Vortex, in brick, measuring 100 feet high by 60 feet wide. Smoke is emitted throughout the day through the center (The Infinity), surrounded by gold leaf (The Source). Note the hand (900 pounds) of George Washington at the very top. To the left (not shown) is an element which always generates speculation: The Passage, a digital atomic clock 15 panels long (five feet high). It turns out to be an elaborate countdown of the day’s time. The entire piece, its elements, and its history are explained in the original press release.


  • IFC Center

    One of the newer venues in the running, the IFC Center (Independent Film Center) aims to be one of the draws for film-geeky New Yorkers. As it says in the interview with the “curator”, some New Yorkers lead a life of going to films day and night – it’s a phase many pass through in their early twenties.

    This place shows a mix of “calendar” movies and indies that bridge the range of the audience in the area, covering both the more interesting of commercial releases and the things you will never see anywhere else. At this time, we are also in the throes of the Tribeca Film Festival, continuing through the weekend, which has basically taken over most of the city’s serious movie houses, both downtown and uptown.


  • Jane Jacobs

    This is the house where Jane Jacobs, who died yesterday, wrote the Death and Life of Great American Cities. From those windows, she observed the urban life of her West Village neighborhood, which she offered as an alternative to the suburban sprawl and car culture taking over the country. Her work became a major influence on urban planning and the appreciation of city life in the US, convincing many Americans that cities were good. She was instrumental in saving the Village and Soho neighborhoods, which were threatened by urban planners who wanted to build the Lower Manhattan Expressway. She was a self-taught outsider who criticized and triumphed over very entrenched authorities. More photos here.


  • Horse Sense

    There’s been an increase in the use of mounted police in NYC – they can be seen in the parks and neighborhoods throughout the five boroughs. It has been found that each mounted police officer is the equal of ten foot police.

    All the horses ask for in return for their service is hay. On a quiet morning, you can sometimes hear the clip-clop of one or more horses, bringing a bit of country to the big city. People who have been mistrustful of police often have a better relationship with mounted police – horses foster a lot of positive feeling, and personal relationships are more likely to be established. It is quite common to see people petting the horses with the permission of the officer and approval of the horse. They are very well trained, as you can see here.

    NYC has been fortunate in that the rate of crime has gone down in recent years to the lowest levels since the early sixties. It is now the safest large city in the USA. The increased use of horses has played a part, as has the type of officers that are comfortable working with them. The large drop in crime has certainly given a very different feel to life in the city.


  • Bond Street Sculpture

    Artistic expression is everywhere you look in NYC – street musicians, chalk painters on sidewalks, urban graffiti art, colored glass appliques on lamp posts, photographs and art being sold or exhibited on the street, etc. Sometimes you need to look up. We spotted these sculptures on the second floor fire escape of the six-story residential loft building at 24 Bond Street, a side street off Broadway in NoHo.* The building was also the home of photographer Robert Mapplethorpe. The creation is the work of resident sculptor Bruce Williams. The male dancers, covered in gold, have been present since 1998…

    *Note: NoHo (north of Houston, as contrasted with SoHo, south of Houston) is an neighborhood between the East and West Village, just north of SoHo.


  • Anniversary


    The Empire State Building is having its 75th anniversary, and we were reminded of that by a wonderful, in-depth treatment in the New York Times – history, photos, video, audio slide show, and the story of Lewis Hines, who took extraordinary photographs of the daredevils who built it, recounting the urban myths and legends that surround the building.

    Since it was for a long time and now is again the tallest building in the city, it has become New York City’s lighthouse. It has an enormous pull to the eye if you are anywhere in the city from which it can be seen, rising above the rest. From street level nearby, it doesn’t look like much, and the neighborhood in which it is set is not terribly remarkable. When you can see it from a distance, particularly at night, the structure reveals itself, and the interior, with a very art deco feel, gives a strong feeling of those brash days when it was built…


  • Real? Fake? Why?

    No one really knows why people throw up their old sneakers over the lamp posts in NYC (and beyond). People have read a lot into it, projecting fears and leading to urban myths, but now the meaning of sneaker-throwing has changed – artists have begun making very realistic wooden replicas of sneakers and throwing them up all over the city and all over the world, for that matter.

    Apparently, all other forms of street art, such as graffiti and stickers, have been done, so the only thing left was this gesture (these were at the corner of St. Marks Place and 1st Avenue in the East Village.) So we are left to wonder, are those real sneakers up there, and what does it all really mean, anyway? Probably just further evidence of youthful exuberance…


  • Time Landscape – A Taste of Nature

    In 1965 Alan Sonfist, an artist associated with the Earth Art or Land Art movement, conceived of this living work of art which recreates New York City’s forest growth of the 17th century (see a synopsis on the sign here). Finally realized in 1978, it has been landmarked. The 8000-square foot plot stands at LaGuardia Place and Houston Street, a busy intersection in the Village/Soho area.

    One wonders how many actually notice this plot. More likely, it is overlooked like so much in life and particularly in a city which provides sensory overload. In the autumn, I can actually grab an apple from the branch of an overhanging tree. One morning, I greeted a man eating berries, which I had noticed before but never knew were edible. These are remarkable experiences given the completely urbanized locale. And to get a taste of nature in Manhattan is so uplifting…


  • FAO Schwartz

    This famous toy store on 59th and Fifth Avenue (read their history here) has life-size stuffed animals that are very realistic and expressive, made in collaboration with the American Museum of Natural History. Some are based on endangered species. They also have mechanical toys, such as child-size sports cars. It’s worth going in even without a child, just to take in the experience of the myriads of rare types of animals posed around en masse (see more photos here).

    The big cats are heavily represented, and they even have a section devoted to many of the famous dog breeds, also life-size, so you could conceivably try having one at home before or instead of having a real one…


  • Music for 9 Basses and 1 Cello

    There was an unexpected musical and visual event this evening – nine acoustic bassists and one cellist rehearsing, forming a long line underneath the Washington Square Arch, which forms a natural outdoor acoustic chamber. A crowd had spontaneously gathered.
    Among audiences, many higher-pitched instruments (such as the violin) typically garner the most attention. However, there are musicians who feel that instruments with a lower range, such as the bass, have a greater visceral impact yet have been largely seen as a supporting instrument. The lack of repertoire for these instruments reinforces this. All of this is what makes such an ensemble a pleasant surprise.

    As it turns out, the group was the NYU Bass ensemble, which suggests that there is a whole world of music being performed that features predominantly very deep notes…


  • While It Lasts

    The first flowering of spring is on the wane, and the earliest flowering plants – magnolias, tulips, and cherry blossoms – were very bright in the sun this morning but are on their way to losing their petals and subsiding into green leaves. The next wave should be hitting us very soon – the lilacs, wisterias, azaleas, and lindens.

    This is a section of Washington Square Park along one of the main entrances, planted for maximum impact on the pedestrians passing by. Spring in NYC is short, and the summers are hot and long, so it’s good to enjoy the best of this weather by getting outside, while it lasts.


  • Dog Run

    The dog runs in the city parks are designated places where dogs can be let off the leash. There are a number of them around the city because owners have banded together to get places to let the dogs run free, in return for policing themselves and picking up after the animals. They love it, especially when many other dogs are there – the more the merrier, because there is nothing dogs like better than socializing with other dogs.

    This one is in Washington Square Park, and people come to watch them run and twirl around in happiness, from the sidelines, like a spectator sport. There are also certain human social cliques that form among the dog owners, by breed and size and temperament, and city people who do not normally interact with strangers will do so on behalf of their dogs, striking up friendly acquaintances that are built around their pet’s interactions. You can see, in the photo here, a human tribal gathering forming to mirror the pack gathering that occurs with the pets…


  • Easter Parade

    I had never been to an Easter Parade before, much less the one in New York City along Fifth Avenue, which they close from 10AM to 4PM for 8 city blocks. Although it is known for its “excesses,” I still was not prepared for what turned out to be quite an outlandish affair. I got off to a beautiful quiet morning opposite St. Patrick’s Cathedral, which had Masses all day.

    The parade is really more of a gathering, with participants and viewers co-mingling all day. The whole event really became more intense as the day went on. The dress ranged from the elegant to the spectacular. I hope you enjoy the collage – I took so many photos and the displays were so varied, it was impossible to settle on one image.
    Brian


  • Peeps

    In the USA, there is a big connection with Easter and candy, especially chocolate in the form of eggs and bunnies, jelly beans, and marshmallow Peeps. This candy store across from Bloomingdale’s was customizing candy baskets today and was very crowded with families and children (interior photos here).

    Peeps are a strange American phenomenon, and we hoped to photograph a nice display of them, but even though they were featured prominently in their window display and ads, the shop was nearly sold out, as are most stores just before Easter. So we continued our quest around town to find more in other likely places, but there were very few left to be had. We eventually tracked down a handful of lonely boxes of traditional yellow ones closer to home. So if you want to see them in their full splendor and read about their history, click here.


  • Spiderman

    The Sony Building on 550 Madison Avenue has a giant, cold air inflated, very realistic Spiderman in the act of crawling on the glass enclosed atrium. This is a public space inside their corporate building but also feeds into their SonyWonder Technology Lab site, geared mostly for kids, where they showcase computer games and other technology that Sony intends to debut in the near future, interactively.

    Sony did very well with the Spiderman films, and many feel that they are the best comic book superhero films made so far. They had very serious writers, such as Michael Chabon, as well as some Oscar award winners on the screenplay. And, of course, how can you miss with Spiderman as the main character? They plan to do a total of five or six, so it seems that Spidey will be in place for the foreseeable future – here’s a link to the next one, Spiderman 3, which is sure to have a lot more good shots of NYC from the viewpoint of someone scaling skyscrapers as necessary.



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