Monthly Archive for December, 2006

Number Eleven Spring Street


originally uploaded by plemeljr.
there’s more in 11 Spring group pool on flickr

A couple weeks ago, number eleven spring street was torn down to be turned into condo building. This is a Bad Thing.
I’ve been meaning to post on this for a while now, but I’ve wanted to give it some worthwhile thought. I don’t really feel like I’m doing it much justice with all these blockquotes, but I try. Anyways it’s up now.

the wooster collective had some nice words to say on it, being their own work for the most part, they also opened an exhibit to show it off during its last days. They’ve labelled it as a time-capsule and have decided that it is not being ‘destroyed’ at all.

So after the Wooster on Spring exhibition, all of the interior walls of 11 Spring will be covered during the construction process. 11 Spring will become one of the most fascinating art time capsules in history. We love the fact that two hundred years from now, a brick might fall out to reveal an original piece creared by Lady Pink, Shepard, Swoon and 35 other incredible artists.

greg.org also offered some words. He brought up a great comparison with the Warhol piece that has since been lost in another appartment building.

It reminds me of the Warhol hidden somewhere in LeFrak City. Back in the day, Samuel LeFrak commissioned a then-still-unknown Andy Warhol to decorate the kitchen and bathroom of a model apartment in the then-new Queens apartment complex. The model was painted over, and then it was lost. Somewhere, in one of the 5,000-plus apartments, buried under nearly half a century of tenement white, is the first Warhol installation. And soon enough, the works of some of the world’s greatest street artists will be buried under some hedge fund dude’s sheetrock.

speaking of Warhol, I’m reading his journals these days and it’s incredibly interesting … well worth your while.

the nytimes wrote an article on it

In this case the art is not hanging inside the building but is splashed all over the walls outside, in spray paint, wheat paste, rubber, plastic, metal, cardboard and various other unidentifiable substances, a story-high gallery of graffiti and street art that seems to have grown almost organically (and mostly unimpeded by the authorities) over the last two decades.

“In a way the art is all going to disappear, but it’s also going to be sealed up in this incredible time capsule”

Depending on your point of view, the hulking 19th-century brick building at 11 Spring Street in NoLIta, a former stable and carriage house, was either a stunning eyesore or one of the most famous canvases and lodestars in the world for urban artists. When those of the latter view heard recently that the building had been sold and would soon be gutted and converted into condominiums, they considered it the end of an era. Bearing their cameras, they began showing up at the building over the last few weeks in a kind of mournful procession.

After buying the building several months ago, the new owner-developers, Caroline Cummings and Bill Elias, wanted to find some way to bid an appropriate farewell to its past. They admired the artwork, they said, even if there was no way it could remain on a building where buyers would soon be dropping millions of dollars on new condos.

I feel very fortunate to have seen (some of) the great stuff that was there, [more than once]: It’s an incredibly dynamic medium, being street art; while each piece on its own can be great, as a whole it is so much more and it has got a really unique impact to it. I’m sorry to see it go, but I do actually kinda dig the whole time-capsule interpretation on it.

    many great photos are all over the interweb … in case you don’t do the web :

  1. the flickr pool for 11 spring
  2. NYCJPG
  3. a bit in MAKEzine
  4. the gothamist
    I would definitely recommend you take the time and look through at least some of the amazing captures from 11 Spring Street, they’re very impressive. I’m still trying to dig up my old stuff from it.

montreal and maybe polaroid and more for sure

I’m very interesting in working with polaroid at some point in the near future.

in other news, I’m going to being in Montreal for a few days after christmas / before new years. drop me a line if you’d like to get together or something.

I’m really looking forward to my year off. I don’t really understand why it’s such a rarity on this side of the pond, I don’t think it should be. For those not in the know, I’m planning on spending next year working with Habitat (for Humanity), probably in S. America, but I’m not entirely certain where yet. It’s going to be completely different and quite great. I think we get more than a little too comfortable around here, not just with our luxuries but also with the unnecessary evils of our world. At least I feel like I’m getting desensitized to the Bad Things; this, I think, can be dangerous. It’ll be refreshing to get out/away of/from it all for a long while. What I’m really after is some tangible satisfaction in what I do everyday.
In the meantime, I’m working with Ottawa’s local Food Not Bombs, an organic community kitchen (via), anyone else who’s interested should let me know and I’ll be sure to wake you up every sunday morning for 11am.

I’ve been away from my home [one-seventeen] for more than too long and I’m hoping to move back in as soon as possible. I’m going to miss the old charms of that place, but the new plan does have its ups.

A Brief, albeit ironic, History of One-Seventeen Mackay
… so we bought the place as we supposedly outgrew Avon Lane, all my memories of Ottawa from my earliest years are defined by Avon Lane. Immediately after the transaction, we were posted to Cairo and never got to move in. John rather liked the place and has had some high hopes for the ancient structure (in which they’ve just uncovered, and replaced, some asbestos, not to mention some lovely nineteenth century electricals made with porcelain/etc as well as maps and news papers dated from the late 1800s). We finally move in, on our way out of the World Bank / the District, in the end of summer ‘05 and I think we were all very happy with the place … I know I was, I had my fair share of great times and countless winter barbecues. Largely due to technical issues with the structural integrity of parts of the house, but also some ambitious plans for a little bit of new, my humble abode has been a construction site for half a year now. Anyways it’s been quite a bit of effort and certainly also a learning experience for the family and I, the father and myself have done most of the planning and have actually worked with the good folk rebuilding the place for us, it’s been very rewarding (at least a little bit of the reason I got interested in Habitat for next year rather than some other NGOs), and mum’s helped a lot with the (re)packing/unpacking.

Some day, in the not too distant future, we’ll be barbecuing on the roof/deck … it’ll be great.

I’ll leave you with a link to this rather thought-provoking essay on How Art Can Be Good by Paul Graham.
And, before I forget to mention it, my copy of JPGmag arrived a couple days ago, I’m quite happy with it; I’m also catching up on the last few issues of Adbusters from over the summer, amongst other things on my reading list.

and just one more link : by FP, via kottke, The Top Ten Stories You Missed or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the News Corp.

Cheers everyone

it’s that time of the year …

JPGmag

JPGmag is a very cool (print) magazine concept, it’s grown out of what was a flickr group and is now running their own site. (free) members get to submit one photo for each theme and can vote (yeh/neh) on submissions. The really nicely printed version of the magazine comes out 6 times in a year, Issue 7 is out now. Anyone can download the magazine as a PDF (or view it in their browser as flash) free of charge. Realistically, I think JPGmag is actually very reasonably priced at $15 (US) / $21 (Canada) for a year of six awesome issues, this is not the list price ($25) but they’ve been generously distributing ten-bucks-off discounts all over the intertubes (this is one of them).
JPGmag is pretty much Threadless for photographers (not to say that we can’t also wear Threadless). speaking of Threadless, they’ve announced plans to start producing their own raw tees rather than printing on AA and fruit-of-the-loom (for us guys), rumour has it they really nice too … (another) three cheers for Threadless !

JPG is a magazine. It’s published 6 times a year by 8020 Publishing. Check out the back issues. The photos in the magazine come from you!

JPG is a website. Here any photographer can join and upload photos to their member page. You can also submit your photos to issues and themes for consideration in the magazine.

JPG is a community. JPG exists because of, and exclusively for, photographers like you. Without you, we’re nothing.

regardless of whether or not you buy a subscription, I think JPGmag is a really great thing and it’s a lot of fun to participate in for anyone into photography. besides, either way, you can always borrow my copy.

so, get off your arse and pick out one of your best shots for the next issue’s first theme, which I’m really looking forward to : the Streets (not the artist), you’ve got 51 days left … and don’t forget to properly waste some time going through submissions for this issue (themes: tourist, intimate, embrace-the-blur), you’ve got until friday to give your take on the submissions and spread the word. you might as well start with mine

cheers
by the way, you can check out the rest of my work on flickr