Date: Saturday, September 27 (rain or shine)
Location: Governor's Island
Time: The event will begin at exactly 3:15 PM. Arrive early and remember to budget time for weekend subway service delays and lines to get on the ferry. The event will be over at 4:06.
Wear: A Red, Blue, Yellow, or Green t-shirt.
Bring: An umbrella and an uninflated balloon.
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Monday, September 22, 2008
On Henry Darger and Canada

Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Friday: Art Time
LORRAINE LECKIE
MySpace: www.myspace.com/lorraineleckie
RICK SNYDER
MySpace: www.myspace.com/ricksnyder
THE LOOM
MySpace: www.myspace.com/theloommusic
In addition to these musicians (none of whom I am yet familiar with), the museum exhibits are open, including the exhibit "Dargerism: Contemporary Artists and Henry Darger" (closing September 21st). For those unfamiliar with Darger, see the Wikipedia entry on him. His outsider art has become relatively well-known and influential, and it should be well-worth it to see this exhibit!
After this, I plan on attending another art gallery, Canada, located at 55 Chrystie St. between Hester and Canal St. All I know of this gallery is what's on the website, specifically that it is hosting an Opening Reception this Friday from 6-9 pm.
Monday, September 15, 2008
Absinthe and Beyond: Artistic and Physical Energy

Absinthe features a series of performances and theatrics, tied together by a slinky MC cabaret singer hostess and two comic, acrobatic performers. A 2006 review of the show on NY Times gives an adept synopsis of the show, but also reveals that the performers and their acts are varied with the show. The NY Times review features the act of a man in a bathtub, which was entirely absent from the performance I saw Friday. Regardless, the acts highlighted an unbelievable array of the acrobatically impressive and skilled to the comic and the bawdy. A more recent review of Absinthe, along with another Spiegelworld show, La Vie, from 2007, can be seen here. As the review states, be prepared for the intimacy of the show and possible audience participation.
The act which my date was called to participate in involved the "married couple" comic hosts who introduced their act as a demonstration on how to correctly make use of bananas in erotic play. Their performance consisted of shooting banana bites from their mouths across the stage into the mouth of their partner -- and also an attempt to shoot banana bites into the mouth of my date. As their act wound down, the bites became chewed up, processed banana sludge which they continued to switch back and forth.
This sort of jarring physical humor was balanced with acts purely gorgeous and breathtaking in their grace, from a hula-hooping gymnast/contortionist to a roller-skating couple whose finale included the woman attached to her partner by neck-braces and her whirling in the air, turning her entire body while only supported by her neck.
And the act which I was included in: an incredibly robotic, mechanical-styled dancer who lip-synced snippets of the song, and in a "low battery" pause, took my hand to have me "power him up" and stage-snuck a kiss on the lips with me.Needless to say, it was a fun, fully captivating evening.
And, not to diminish my enjoyment of and satisfaction with the evening, the weekend continued in the same vein. Saturday I went dancing with a few friends of mine at Cattyshack, a ladies' club in Park Slope.
We stayed there, mostly dancing, until closing time at 4:00 am. The spirit of dancing camaraderie bordered on the libidinous. While there, we all donned creatures-of-the-night personas, temporarily paused in a collective dance trance, transported to a world apart from our daily cares.And the next evening, Sunday, I found myself in a friend-of-a-friend's apartment in Harlem for a dinner party. In addition to my friend, I had only met one other person before. The evening felt like a throwback to a college dorm night, where a group of people sat discussing life and love and work. Having this sort of evening engaging in ponderous, meaningful and personal conversation was refreshing.
And so this weekend perfectly encapsulated my idealization of NYC culture at its height: a heady mix of the personal and anonymous, where we can both, and even simultaneously, lose ourselves and intimately connect, on emotional and physical levels.
Tuesday, September 9, 2008
This Week in Performances
Shows ongoing until Sep 15th (closing) - danscores by Ofelia Loret de Mola: Available Space.
Friday night, (shows ongoing until Nov 2nd), Absinthe at Spiegeltent.
Saturday night, Midnight Juggernauts show at Le Poisson Rouge. (with Grandmaster Flash)
Available Space Dance Performances: From the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council website:
September 8–10 & 12 at 12:30pm, September 13–15 at 8:00pm
City Hall Park, near the entrance at Broadway and Warren Street
Subway: R, W City Hall, 2,3 Park Place, 4,5,6 Brooklyn Bridge/City Hall
World Premiere
Ofelia Loret de Mola, a Mexican choreographer, collaborates with actors, musicians, and a visual artist to transform a swath of City Hall Park into a carnival that evokes the grit and cheap sparkle of a Mexican circus. Beginning on and around the chess tables, the dancers perform as circus characters illustrating chess in a political subtext to live music. The audience travels with the performers from the west side to the east side of the park where they are later led by a marching band to the Brooklyn Bridge.
Available Space is presented as part of Celebrate Mexico Now 2008, the 5th annual citywide festival of contemporary Mexican art and culture produced by CN Management. The festival closes on Sept. 15, celebrating Mexico’s Independence Day.
Saturday, September 6, 2008
Joyce "Evening Stars at Battery Park"
Yesterday evening's performance featured the choreography of Lar Lubovitch, and his aptly-named group, the Lar Lubovitch Dance Company. The performance featured white-clad dancers who pranced and pirouetted with amazing synchronized gracefulness and agility. My two friends and I meanwhile split a bottle of white wine (and I give a shout out to all the other wine-drinkers at events like this; without one of their corkscrews, we ourselves would have been "screwed") and a simple bread, fruit and cheese spread. The dancers' costumes were made of rather diaphanous, flowy material that easily caught the wind and highlighted their sculpted physiques. Seeing them up there made me feel a little self-conscious of my wine and snack consumption while sitting idly to such a majestic, coordinated performance; it also inspired me to focus on pursuing dance classes for myself, which we'll see if anything actually comes of it...
What I particularly liked about this evening was that, as a free and outdoor performance, the crowd featured a diversity of attendees, including young children and dogs, and it had a very laidback al fresco vibe. The children in front of us mostly migrated to the side of the audience and enacted their own little ballet, unconcerned with anything but their own enjoyment of the moment. This sort of non-restrictive, open ambiance is the advantageous aspect of seeing outdoor performances. On the down side: tonight's show is canceled because of the inclement weather, though tomorrow's should still go on. Read more about this and other River to River events at http://www.RiverToRiverNYC.com.
Afterwards, I went out for drinks along 14th St. with a couple of friends, stopping first at Beauty Bar, a retro bar with beauty salon stylings, free manicures, and 50's era music. We moved on To Blind Pig, the polar opposite to Beauty Bar, a wood-paneled sports bar only two doors down. Unfortunately, my friend and I ended up missing the Bunny Rabbit show. We promptly fled the dank college houseparty vibe of GlassLands to find ourselves caught in the evening rainstorm and proceeding under partial cover of my friend's picnic blanket to the nearest pizza shop. I'd say it was a successful, rain-soaked Friday night!
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Post-Labor Day Fun
Now, having scaled Mt. Marcy and Mt. Algonquin, I am left with pleasant memories, stunning pictures, sore legs, and a newfond appreciation for my bed and a hot shower.
Now back in NYC: With the gorgeous weather that prevails, I am not yet read to call summertime quits. Upcoming notable events I am considering:
Friday, September 5th: Bunny Rabbit performing live at GlassLands Gallery. 11pm-4am.
Saturday, September 6th:
-- Monster Island Arts & Music Block Party, Williamsburg, 2-10pm.
-- Circus Amok, Riverside Park. Performances start at 2pm and 5pm.
-- Art Parade, West Broadway at Houston St, starts at 4pm.
Friday, September 5th. GlassLands Gallery, located in Williamsburg at 289 Kent Ave. between S. 1st and S. 2nd St. Bunny Rabbit - visit her Myspace page if you aren't familiar with this chick rapper reminiscent of Peaches. And her Youtube page, a conglomeration of Bunny Rabbit and Black Cracker, called Bunnycrack.
Saturday, September 6th: Monster Island Arts & Music Festival. 2-10pm, Third Annual Block Party. Located in Williamsburg, at Kent Ave. and Metropolitan Ave. FREE. See Secret Project Robot for more on its mission statement, which "stress[es] the importance of the art party as a way to create an inclusive and tangible environment" and "... push[es] every event beyond the norm..."Circus Amok is "a New York City based circus-theater company whose mission is to provide free public art addressing contemporary issues of social justice to the people of New York City." (see website for further info). Click here to see video clips of the circus, featuring the woman dubbed the Bearded Lady. Click here for the schedule. Circus Amok plays regularly!
Art Parade 2008, at West Broadway and Houston. The event is organized and sponsored by PAPER Magazine, Creative Time and Deitch Projects. This year, the fourth annual art parade will feature over 900 participants!