Thursday, November 12, 2009

Photo Exhibit - Museum of the City of New York

Only in New York: Photographs from LOOK Magazine
Tuesday, November 17 @ 6:30 pm
$6-$12

Museum of the City of New York
1220 Fifth Avenue
at 103rd Street
New York, NY 10029
Celebrate the new exhibition and publication of Only in New York: Photographs from LOOK Magazine with the curators and authors Donald Albrecht and Thomas Mellins. Reaching a peak circulation of nearly eight million in the late 1960s, LOOK was a national publication with a focus on the fascination and allure of New York. The curators will explore LOOK’s approach to photography and present a selection of highlights. Reception to follow. Reservations required.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Bowling @ Harlem Lanes

Bowl till 2am at Harlem Lanes
The 24 alleys and nice I'm-drunk-and-need-snacks-now menu options make Harlem Lanes the perfect destination for those uptowners who don't feel like trekking out of the neighborhood for tenpin goodness. 2116 Adam Clayton Powell Blvd (Seventh Ave) at 126th St, third floor (212-678-2695 harlemlanes.com). $8.50 per person per game, shoe rental $5 per person.

Movies at the MOMA - Free on Fridays

Browse art or watch movies for free at MoMA
Leave Andrew Jackson at home and visit MoMA for free between 4 and 8pm every Friday night. You’ll still need to get in line for entry and film tickets, but get there as the clock strikes four and you’ll be fine. 11 W 53rd St between Fifth and Sixth Aves (212-708-9400, moma.org). 4–8pm, free.

Cindy Sherman Exhibit - ICP

CINDY SHERMAN
Born Glen Ridge, New Jersey, 1951
Lives and works in New York


In 2007, Cindy Sherman produced a suite of fashion images that appeared in Paris Vogue. Modeling clothes designed by Nicolas Ghesquière for Balenciaga, Sherman assumed the guises of various characters we have come to associate with the rarefied and sometimes grotesque world of high fashion. Some of the playful caricatures from the Paris Vogue editorial reappear in a group of large-scale, multifigure works that suggest scenes of fashionista revelry. In one of these pictures Sherman appears twice, as a pair of bobbed, bespectacled, and Balenciaga-clad women standing in front of a graffiti-covered wall, and seems to skewer the fashion world's patronizing appreciation of downtown grit and seediness. In another, she plays the parts of four different women who raise plastic beverage cups and vamp for the camera. That we notice only minor distinctions among their makeup, hairstyles, and outfits speaks less to Sherman's ongoing reliance on herself as model, and more to the herd mentality that ironically pervades an industry celebrating individuality and personal style.

Cindy Sherman
Untitled, 2007-2008
© Cindy Sherman
Courtesy the artist and Metro Pictures, New York




Oak Room’s jazz brunch - FREE

Be cool at the Oak Room’s jazz brunch
There may be no sweller way to spend Sunday in New York than with cool jazz from world-class performers like Karen Akers, whose Cole Porter show runs through October 24. The Oak Room at the Algonquin Hotel, 59 W 44th St between Fifth and Sixth Aves (212-419-9331, algonquinhotel.com). Sun 11am (seating), 1pm (show). Free.

Dancing @ Body & Soul

Blow off some end-of-the-weekend steam at Body & Soul
New York veterans Joe Claussell, François K and Danny Krivit pack the massive dance floor of Webster Hall’s main room with deep and soulful house, classics, Afro-Latin rhythms and anything else they feel like at their ever-popular monthly Sunday tea dance. Webster Hall, 125 E 11th St between Third and Fourth Aves (212-353-1600). 6pm, $25, advance $15.

Tour the Plaza Hotel

Tour the Plaza Hotel
Take a 45-minute guided peek into the luxurious Plaza (including some areas normally off-limits to tourists) on this tour led by art and architecture critic-cum-author Francis Morrone. (Call ahead; reservations are required.) The Plaza Hotel, 768 Fifth Ave at Central Park South (212-546-5477, fairmont.com/theplaza). Tue, Sat 3pm. Free.

Monday, September 28, 2009

In The Heights - October 22nd 8pm

Arts Initiative News IN THE HEIGHTS
Thursday, Oct. 1 & Oct. 22; 8pm

Richard Rogers Theatre
226 W. 46th Street


In the Heights tells the universal story of a vibrant community in Manhattan's Washington Heights a place where the coffee from the corner bodega is light and sweet, the windows are always open, and the breeze carries the rhythm of three generations of music. It's a community on the brink of change, full of hopes, dreams and pressures, where the biggest struggles can be deciding which traditions you take with you, and which ones you leave behind.

Students, Faculty & Staff with CUID:
$47.50 tickets here

Thursday, September 24, 2009

A Week in the Life of a Professional Photographer Seminar

B&H Event Space, 420 9th Ave. 2nd Floor, New York, NY 10001
A Week in the Life of a Professional Photographer, Sponsored by Olympus

I'm Alive When I Photograph with Antonin Kratochvil, Sponsored by Canon
Sunday, October 25, 2009 | 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM
Speakers: Antonin Kratochvil
Event Type: Photography

Antonin Kratochvil’s life story is one of struggle and adventure. Born the son of a persecuted photographer in Communist Czechoslovakia, Kratochvil escaped under the wire at age nineteen to begin a life-long exploration of the world. Forty-three years later his photographic archives testify to the breadth of his curiosity and the strength of his personality; his pictures are raw with emotion and redolent of place and humanity. Whether photographing the extremes of war or coaxing Bono to reveal himself to the camera Kratochvil digs deeper with his lens than most would dream possible.

Kratochvil is still exploring. In his presentation at B&H Photo he will talk about his unfinished journey, illustrating his story with pictures from his archive and answering questions about how to overcome convention to surprise and inspire the viewer with a different view.
Speakers
Antonin Kratochvil

Antonin Kratochvil was born in Czechoslovakia in 1947. He left in 1967 and for some years afterwards led the life of a refugee; he settled in the United States eventually.

Kratochvil has said in interviews that his distinctive photographic style – celebrated both for its intensity and for its unconventionality – grew directly out of the circumstances of his life. He is one of the most versatile photographers alive. Street children in Guatemala and Mongolia, the onset of war in Afghanistan and in Rwanda, Tibetan refugees, the war in Iraq, the environmental catastrophe in Amazonia, the actor Harvey Keitel, Czech beer culture, the Department of Homeland Security and its effect on American civil liberties: all these have been among his subjects. It has been said that no photographer has won World Press Photo Awards over a wider range of categories than Kratochvil. The Infinity Award for Photojournalist of the Year and the Leica Medal of Excellence are only two of the many awards he has won over the last thirty years. His short film Road Work (part of Operation Homecoming) was Oscar nominated in 2008.

www.antoninkratochvil.com

Harlem Studio Museum - Target Free Sundays

The Studio Museum in Harlem
144 West 125th Street, New York, New York 10027
tel 212.864.4500 fax 212.864.4800

Current Exhibitions

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Sasha Smith,
Up, Up and Away, 2009, Courtesy the artist

Expanding the Walls: Making Connections between Photography, History and Community is an annual, seven-month, photography-based program that uses the James VanDerZee (1886–1983) archive—housed at The Studio Museum in Harlem—as a springboard for conversation and art-making.

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Derrick Adams, Joe Louis Boxing Gym (Police Athletic League, 119th & Manhattan Ave), 2009, Courtesy the artist

Throughout the twentieth century, Harlem has been regarded as a beacon of African-American history and culture.