Sunday, August 10, 2008

Ora Pro Nobis



When I first moved back to New York after college, I began to notice that the word, "pray" had been scratched into a multitude of surfaces in places as diverse as office buildings, Macy's windows and the Empire State Building. After seeing a multitude, I forgot about them until last week, when I saw this in the subway, on the wall, across the rails. It's a miracle they got there.

Saturday, August 9, 2008

Rats, Rats, Rats





A recent sighting in the west side Meatpacking District. How to get rid of rats, New York style.

Friday, August 8, 2008

Thursday, August 7, 2008

The Waterfalls 3





I'm still thinking through the Waterfalls. I've visited several times after discovering one of the best ways to see one of them is the Governors Island FREE ferry.

I've been thinking about the shapes the water makes and how hard it is to get a good photograph. Still, I keep on going seeing if each time something new unfolds.




Govenors Island is fun too. Lots to do, walking and picnicing, historic buildings and forts, a straight on view of the Statue of Liberty's face, occasional concerts and more art. And on Fridays the bike rentals are free.

Emergence by Figment transforms "Building 14" (c.1900) on Governors Island into an interactive, three-dimensional living exhibit, featuring contributions from more than 30 artists/art collectives working in a diverse range of media, including sculpture, installation art, aerial kinetic sculpture, photography, sound art, and interactive multimedia. Using the theme, "Creative Pioneers in Uncharted Territory," exhibitors will use the context, history, and recent steps towards revitalization, or "emergence," of Governors Island as the source of inspiration and departure for the creation of participatory art exploring the human condition.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Please Play




A new work by David Byrne, of Talking Heads Fame, Playing the Building is a clever idea. Take one old and slightly decrepit space, add sound, make it interactive and invite the public. This sound installation converts the physical infrastructure into a giant musical instrument. Devices are attached to the the metal beams and pillars, the heating pipes, the water pipes — and are used to make these things produce sound. The activations are of three types: wind, vibration, striking. The devices do not produce sound themselves, but they cause the building elements to vibrate, resonate and oscillate. All the devices are attached to an old organ which the public can play.

It was first done in Sweden in 2005 but the New York version is much grittier and has more pathos. Sponsored by Creative Time, you can catch it at the Battery Maritime Building, 10 South Street at Whitehall Street.

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

New York, NY



There's a first for everything. An avid cook and a former student of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden's course on unusual fruits and vegetables and true fan of molecular cuisine, I'm not surpised by much in the food world. Yet right here on East Broadway, the marvelous hot fuschia Dragon Fruit. May be the next New York phenomena...

Monday, August 4, 2008

Friday, August 1, 2008

Anime Tofu













I recently ate at WD-50, one of New York's outposts of molecular cuisine. The food was incredibly tasty, very elegant and it was also very funny. I started thinking about how our relarionship to food has changed. Divorced from "eat to live", like everything else these days, food seems to be all about entertainment. These two images represent this trend as well. One is high end artisinal tofu packaging; a thrusting fist asking, "Are you Jonile tonight?" The other is an obento lunch box; the contents artfully arranged to resemble the Mona Lisa, seaweed hair and clothes, framed by a sliced egg omelette. O brave new world that has such tofu in it.