«What happens on the East
Side of the street still affects other people in the neighborhood,» club President David Menegon told DNAinfo New York.
«What happens on the East
Side of the street still affects other people in the neighborhood,» Menegon said.
Not exact matches
However, «if you own both gas stations on both
sides of the
street, are you
still going to do the same thing?
Lilacs tipped with light purple blooms
still grace the
side streets of small towns throughout the American Midwest, but as Lauck recognizes in an elegiac epilogue, fewer and fewer people live there.
Some
of the properties in Hector
Street, London SE18, which follows the goal line and one
side of where the ground used to be,
still have traces
of the old terracing visible at the bottom
of their gardens.
The pact, including relocating 114 plots to the north end
of West
Street,
still meant the loss
of 118 plots The Park District tried to mollify gardeners by announcing that it would pay $ 250,000 to add 332 plots at DuPage River Park on Royce Road, on the south
side.
Local volunteers who maintain the garden and formed the nonprofit Friends
of Elizabeth
Street Garden plan to bring «dozens
of residents from Little Italy, Nolita and the surrounding neighborhoods» to the YMCA on Ninth
Street between Fifth and Sixth avenues in Park Slope, where de Blasio
still exercises even though he lives in Gracie Mansion on the Upper East
Side.
The existing location
of horse stables on Manhattan's West
Side has long been brought up as a barrier to keeping the horses in the park, since they would
still have to use city
streets to get there and back.
James and I took advantage
of the rare sunny day and tried to spend as much time outside as possible — on the sunny
side of the
street of course because it is
still damn cold outside.
We started back down the other
side of the
street,
still in a sort
of Italian car area
of Rodeo.
The Incan irrigation system
still works and water runs through stone canals on the
sides of streets.
We have a brand new Backpacker hostel called Global right in the heart
of Macrossan St as well as Backpacker hostels located in quiet
side streets such as Parrot Fish Lodge but
still within easy walking distance to the central village.
The photographs below may not show it but the main town centre is pretty big and developed in a modern way with every high
street store you can think
of, but it's nice that down each little
side street you can
still find yourself back in time, faced with beautiful historical buildings and reminders
of -LSB-...]
Hotel Pasatiempo is a hidden gem... Just a 2 minute walk to downtown but
still tucked away on a
side street to avoid lots
of noise.
In beach
side towns many
streets are named after the forces who liberated them and there are markers on the sites
of many
of the most significant battles, such as the cliffs at Pointe du Hoc and the Pegasus Bridge, and off the coast from Arromanches you can
still see the remains
of the Mulberry harbour, which was the man made temporary harbour dragged from England that enabled a full scale invasion bypassing the heavily fortified ports.
From the moment you stepped out
of the hotel, it felt as if you were in the mix
of the city, yet
still nicely situated along a
side street to protect against the noise.
-- Nikolay Oleynikov, Tsaplya Olga Egorova, Dmitry Vilensky, and others Claire Fontaine (fictional conceptual artist)-- A Paris - based collective including Fulvia Carnevale and James Thornhill CPLY — William N. Copley Diane Pruis (pseudonymous Los Angeles gallerist)-- Untitled gallery's Joel Mesler Donelle Woolford (black female artist)-- Actors hired to impersonate said fictional artist by white artist Joe Scanlan Dr. Lakra (Mexican artist inspired by tattoo culture)-- Jeronimo Lopez Ramirez Dr. Videovich (a «specialist in curing television addiction»)-- The Argentine - American conceptual artist Jaime Davidovich Dzine — Carlos Rolon George Hartigan — The male pseudonym that the Abstract Expressionist painter Grace Hartigan adopted early in her career Frog King Kwok (Hong Kong performance artist who uses Chinese food as a frequent medium)-- Conceptualist Kwok Mang Ho The Guerrilla Girls — A
still - anonymous group
of feminist artists who made critical agit - prop work exposing the gender biases in the art world Hennessy Youngman (hip - hop - styled YouTube advice dispenser), Franklin Vivray (increasingly unhinged Bob Ross - like TV painting instructor)-- Jayson Musson Henry Codax (mysterious monochrome artist)-- Jacob Kassay and Olivier Mosset JR — Not the shot villain
of «Dallas» but the
still - incognito
street artist
of global post-TED fame John Dogg (artist), Fulton Ryder (Upper East
Side gallerist)-- Richard Prince KAWS — Brian Donnelly The King
of Kowloon (calligraphic Hong Kong graffiti artist)-- Tsang Tsou - choi Klaus von Nichtssagend (fictitious Lower East
Side dealer)-- Ingrid Bromberg Kennedy, Rob Hult, and Sam Wilson Leo Gabin — Ghent - based collective composed
of Gaëtan Begerem, Robin De Vooght, and Lieven Deconinck Lucie Fontaine (art and curatorial collective)-- The writer / curator Nicola Trezzi and artist Alice Tomaselli MadeIn Corporation — Xu Zhen Man Ray — Emmanuel Radnitzky Marvin Gaye Chetwynd (Turner Prize - nominated artist formerly known as Spartacus Chetwynd)-- Alalia Chetwynd Maurizio Cattelan — Massimiliano Gioni, at least in many interviews the New Museum curator did in the famed Italian artist's stead in the»90s Mr. Brainwash (Banksy - idolizing
street artist)-- Thierry Guetta MURK FLUID, Mike Lood — The artist Mark Flood R. Mutt, Rrose Sélavy — Marcel Duchamp Rammellzee — Legendary New York
street artist and multimedia visionary, whose real name «is not to be told... that is forbidden,» according to his widow Reena Spaulings (Lower East
Side gallery)-- Artist Emily Sundblad and writer John Kelsey Regina Rex (fictional Brooklyn gallerist)-- The artists Eli Ping (who now has opened Eli Ping Gallery on the Lower East
Side), Theresa Ganz, Yevgenia Baras, Aylssa Gorelick, Angelina Gualdoni, Max Warsh, and Lauren Portada Retna — Marquis Lewis Rod Bianco (fictional Oslo galleris)-- Bjarne Melgaard RodForce (performance artist who explored the eroticized associations
of black culture)-- Sherman Flemming Rudy Bust — Canadian artist Jon Pylypchuk Sacer, Sace (different spellings
of a 1990s New York graffiti tag)-- Dash Snow SAMO (1980s New York Graffiti Tag)-- Jean - Michel Basquiat Shoji Yamaguchi (Japanese ceramicist who fled Hiroshima and settled in the American South with a black civil - rights activist, then died in a car crash in 1991)-- Theaster Gates Vern Blosum — A fictional Pop painter
of odd image - and - word combinations who was invented by a
still - unnamed Abstract Expressionist artist in an attempt to satirize the Pop movement (and whose work is now sought - after in its own right) Weegee — Arthur Fellig What, How and for Whom (curators
of 2009 Istanbul Biennial)-- Ana Dević, Nataša Ilić, Sabina Sabolović, Dejan Kršić, and Ivet Curlin The Yes Men — A group
of «culture - jamming» media interventionists led by Jacques Servin and Igor Vamos
Collaborative Projects Inc., known informally as Colab, was a loosely organized group
of artists active from 1977 to the mid-1980s, with headquarters in ABC No Rio, a
still existing squat on Rivington
Street in the Lower East
Side.
In Chicago in the early 1970s, we had our own third and best - known generation
of alternative spaces (each city can claim its own artist - run history, probably with a fair share
of boosterism thrown in), such as ARC, Artemisia (both were feminist galleries formed from West - East Bag, a nationwide network
of women artists), and N.A.M.E., with the much - heralded Randolph
Street Gallery opening in 1979.7 This is not to mention
still - running artist - driven efforts such as the Hyde Park Art Center, founded in 1948, and the South
Side Community Art Center, the only surviving Federal Arts Center from the WPA era and the oldest African American art center in the country, famously dedicated by Eleanor Roosevelt on opening day in 1940.
An authentication card signed by Doug Aitken indicating the edition number is included along with: A 23» x 36» double -
sided poster with original artwork by Doug Aitken; A 12» vinyl picture disc contains unreleased tracks by Broadcast and a live recording
of Doug Aitken's original opera the handle comes up, the hammer comes down; A 96 - page visual diary
of the making
of the film including sketches, production photos, film
stills, script fragments, and inspirational found images; Two flipbooks with motion sequences excerpted from the film and the film's projection
of the MoMA facade; A triptych gatefold case contains a CD soundtrack that features the tracks on the picture disc plus tracks by Bibio, Ranphorynchus, Steve Roden, Tim Hecker, and Canyon Country; A DVD includes an edit
of Sleepwalkers cut specifically for this box set and a
street level walkthrough as installed at the MoMA in NYC
It's
still unnerving for me to venture into a big - time museum show at a venue like Pérez Art Museum Miami and view the work
of an artist I used to see tagging the gritty
streets of the Lower East
Side and hanging out at the Mudd Club.
«Björk» (2009) is on view as part
of the solo exhibition Ellen Letcher: Photo
Still at Pocket Utopia (191 Henry
Street, Lower East
Side, Manhattan), which continues through July 15.