* BX Advance Notices / Discounts
* Bronx Buzz Site Search
Bronx Arts & Culture BX NYC
September 2024 / Bronx Arts & Culture NYC / Bronx Neighborhoods / Bronx Buzz NYC.
This section is dedicated to the Bronx Arts & Culture section on Bronx Buzz NYC.
Page Guide
How to Make the Most of This Section
1. The reports at the top of this section will contain suggestions of current Arts & Cultural things to do in the Bronx.
2. As things change seasonally, but also artistically and culturally, the reports that follow the current things to do, will either reflect reporting on current events or related events in the past.
3. The rest of this section will contain arts & culture reports done previously, which over time we'll organize into Arts, Dance, Music and Theater categories.
4. At the bottom of the page there will be links to these reports and many others, organized into the neighborhoods in which the event occurred.
5. The Bronx Buzz website provides visitors with current news and a history of what has happened in Bronx neighborhoods, generally based on events, issues, locales and sometimes personages. Use the BOOKMARK button at the top of your browser window, to facilitate your weekly visit to find out what's happening in the Bronx.
Thanks for visiting and come back for our weekly & semi-weekly updates.
CLICK here to view our Bronx Arts & Culture NYC section.
Bronx Music Dance Theater - Bronx NYC
bronx live music events bronx dance performances bronx theater shows bronx things to do bronx nyc 1450 Bronx - Free Summer Outdoor Theater 2022 Free Things...
Bronx Fashion & Bronx Film - Bronx NYC
bronx fashion shows bronx indie independent film cinema bronx fashion film bronx buzz nyc 1453 Bronx - Free Summer Movies in the Bronx 2022 Free Things To D...
Bronx Arts & Culture - The Arts in the Bronx
Bronx Arts & Culture BX NYC September 2024 / Bronx Arts & Culture NYC / Bronx Neighborhoods / Bronx Buzz NYC. This section is dedicated to the Bronx Arts &...
Free Summer Theater in the Bronx - Free Things to do Bronx
Bronx Free Summer Outdoor Theater NYC 2024
Free Things To Do in the Bronx - Free Summer Theater Park in NYC
July 15, 2024 / Bronx Neighborhoods / Dance & Theater / Theatre Bronx / Bronx Things To Do / Bronx Buzz NYC.
Summer is in full swing. A number of community groups, some in collaboration with the NYC Parks Department and oftentimes with some measure of government funding, have put together a summer full of free summer theater in the parks. The free theatre events listed below are designed for young and old alike and they're FREE.
Editor's Note - ONLY ASTERISKED events have been updated to 2024. Pay attention to the performance dates / years. We will be updating / adding this summer theater report through the summer into September, so check back periodically for updates which you can note by the date changing above.
Other Free Things To Do in the Bronx 2024
UPDATE COMING 1ST HALF JULY 2024
Free Summer Movies in the Bronx. Click here to view our report on free movies in the park - summer movies in the Bronx, Mott Haven, Claremont Village, Hunts Point, Morrisania, Highbridge, Norwood, Bedford Park, Pelham Bay, Van Cortlandt, Riverdale, Concourse, Highbridge, Kingsbridge and Morris Heights.
Music / Concerts in the Park in the Bronx. Click here to view our report on free summer concerts in the Bronx - Mott Haven, Claremont Village, Hunts Point, Morrisania, Highbridge, Norwood, Bedford Park, Pelham Bay, Van Cortlandt, Riverdale, Concourse, Highbridge, Kingsbridge and Morris Heights.
Current Bronx Things To Do. Click the header above to view a listing of current Bronx things to do.
- CLICK here for free things to do / free summer theater in the Bronx NYC 2024.
Free Summer Concerts in the Bronx - Free Things to do Bronx NYC
Bronx Free Summer Concerts 2024 Bx NYC
Free Things To Do In the Bronx - Free Summer Concerts in NYC
July 6, 2024 / Bronx Neighborhoods / Music & Free Concerts in the Bronx / Bronx Things To Do / Bronx Buzz NYC.
Summer has begun. A number of community groups in collaboration with the NYC Parks Department and frequently with some measure of various levels of government funding, have put together a summer full of films and free summer concerts in the parks. The free concerts listed below are designed for young and old alike and they're FREE.
- Click here to continue onto free summer concerts in the Bronx - free outdoor concerts in the parks in the Bronx NYC.
Free Summer Movies in the Bronx - Free Things to do Bronx
Bronx - Free Summer Movies in the Bronx 2023
Free Things To Do in the Bronx - Free Summer Movies in the Park in Bx NYC
June 20, 2023 / Bronx Neighborhoods / Dance & Theater / Theatre Bronx / Bronx Things To Do / Bronx Buzz NYC.
UPDATE COMING NEXT WEEK.
Summer is in full swing. A number of community groups in collaboration with the NYC Parks Department and frequently some measure of government funding, have put together a summer full of free summer theater in the parks. The free theatre events listed below are designed for young and old alike and they're FREE.
Editor's Note - Note that only ASTERISKED LOCATIONS have been updated. Pay attention to the movies dates / years. We will be updating / adding a few more movies between now and the end of September. So check back periodically for updates which you can note by the date changing above.
-
Free Summer Theater in the Bronx
- Click here to view our report on free summer theater in the Bronx - near Mott Haven, Melrose, Claremont Village, Hunts Point, Morrisania, Highbridge, Norwood, Bedford Park, Pelham Bay, Van Cortlandt, Riverdale, Concourse, Highbridge, Kingsbridge and Morris Heights.
-
Music / Concerts in the Park in the Bronx
- Click here to view our report on free summer concerts in the Bronx - near Mott Haven, Claremont Village, Hunts Point, Morrisania, Highbridge, Norwood, Bedford Park, Pelham Bay, Van Cortlandt, Riverdale, Concourse, Highbridge, Kingsbridge and Morris Heights.
-
Free Things To Do in the Bronx
- Current Bronx Things To Do. Click here to view a listing of current Bronx things to do.
- CLICK here to read the rest of our report on free summer outdoor movies in the Bronx.
Identity Crisis Theater Opens at the Brick in Greenpoint
The Event Included a Rough Draft Festival Preview Coming to LaGuardia 3/11
March 2, 2020 / Brooklyn Neighborhoods / Brooklyn Theater / Brooklyn Blvd NYC.
In early February I attended the opening of a new theater ensemble - Identity Crisis Theater - at the Brick Theater in the Greenpoint neighborhood of Brooklyn.
The theater group is comprised of three Turkish American artists who will "... feature English translations of works from Turkey, the Balkans, the Middle East and surrounding Mediterranean cultures." Their goal is to develop "... a platform for exploration, conversation, revelation and the celebration of our common humanity."
It was a cold, wet, miserable night outside, as I made my way to the Brick, which is located only a couple of blocks from the G line Metropolitan subway stop. As I stepped inside, the atmosphere changed to warm and dry as I took my place amongst a crowd filled with anticipation. The audience had packed the theater in advance to view performances by some of NYC’s emerging dance, musical and theatrical artists.
I met the Brick Theater management team comprised of Ryan Downey and Theresa Buchheister. This past year they took over the operation of the Brick Theater, after years of working there. They seemed to have the theater production well in hand, as there are events and performances at this warm, rustic Greenpoint Brooklyn theater every week, and quite often every day.
Identity Crisis Theater Presents 'Triggerman' at the Brick Theater in Greenpoint BK
On the stage at the back of the theater, a performance had just begun. The piece was entitled Triggerman and it was about the step-by-step planning of an assassination, alongside the moral struggle of a young man, trying to wrest himself free from the anger and hate, being imposed on him by a few members of his own ethnic tribe.
- CLICK here to read the rest of our report on the Identity Crisis Theater opening night at the Brick Theater in Brooklyn.
Mediums of Exchange at Lehman Art Gallery
Two Site Art Exhibit Explores the Role of Money in Society
April 9, 2019 / Bedford Park Neighborhood / Bronx Art Scene / Bronx Buzz NYC.
There's an art exhibit entitled Mediums of Exchange that opened at the Shirley Fiterman Art Center at the Borough of Manhattan Community College in Tribeca / Downtown Manhattan on January 31st, 2019 and ended March 30th. But it was a two site / two part art exhibit, with the second site opening in the Bedford Park neighborhood of the Bronx at the Lehman College Art Gallery on February 9th and which runs through May 4th, 2019.
It's a group show, that showcases 35 artists, most if not all of whom I believe are NYC based [unconfirmed]. And the exhibit explores the role of money from a social, psychological and economic point of view. On Wednesdays there are artist talks beginning at 5 pm. I am currently in the process of trying to find out if the artist talks are held every Wednesday or only periodically [ad hoc] and then how late the gallery stays open on those evenings, because the Lehman Art Gallery is normally open from 10 am - 4 pm Tuesday through Saturday.
I hope to post more about this exhibit at a later date. The image above was taken from the Lehman Art Gallery in the Bronx.
Daughters of the Stone
The Tale of 5 Generations of Afro-Caribbean Women
April 2, 2019 / Bronx Neighborhoods - Concourse / Bronx Culture & Literature / Bronx Buzz NYC.
A couple of weeks ago I had an opportunity to attend a book talk by Dahlma Llanos-Figueroa at the Andrew Freedman Home in the Central Bonx neighborhood on the Concourse.
The Andrew Freedman Home is worth the trip in itself and it was a rare treat to hear a distinguished author in such a distinguished setting. But I was not alone in savoring the moments.
The room was full, mostly of women, many of whom likely were of some Puerto Rican or African descent, and they had come to learn more about their shared past as described by one woman who had fictionalized some of the history of five generations of her family.
I'll have more later today on the Daughters of the Stone by Dahlma Llanos-Figueroa at the Andrew Freedman Home on Friday, March 15th.
NY Botanical - The Bronx Garden of Eden
An Array of Enticements for World Travelers & Locals in NYC
January 15, 2019 / Bedford Park Neighborhood / Bronx Neighborhoods / Bronx Things To Do / Bronx Buzz NYC.
A week ago I headed up to the New York Botanical Garden to view the Holiday Train Show and experience their famous Bar Car Nights. It was a Saturday and the program began around 7 pm. I walked from the subway and arrrived about 8 pm, so I had plenty of time to look around, since it went on until 10.30 pm.
I entered at the western gate along Southern Blvd and walked along the winding path, heading to the pavilion where there were food vendors, a fire and an ice sculptor. Along the path of the Garden Way there were dancers from American Circus Theatre performing slow moving pieces that highlighted the body as form in motion. I paused at the Christmas tree, which was postcard perfect and the sight of numerous photo taking sessions, before heading up to the Pavilion.
The Pavilion is tucked just inside the NY Botanical Gardens southern gate. Local food vendors were tucked in along the walls and a railing in a U shape, with a fire burning in the middle of it. The food vendors are generally participants of the Bronx Night Market, and thus may change from week to week. The Bronx Night Market which is a seasonal pop up market in the Fordham neighborhood.
This week the food vendors were Kernelicious from the Fordham neighborhood serving gourmet popcorn, City Tamale from the Hunts Point neighborhood serving Mexican food, Barbeque on a Stick from Long Island City in Queens serving Homestyle Filipino barbeque on a stick, and The Fried Kitchen who are caterers from Port Morris serving fried chicken. They were also serving wine and beer, where a line had formed.
I watched an ice sculptor from Okamoto Studio NYC ply his trade, as it appeared he had nearly completed a sphinx-like cat. Behind him there was the NY Botanical Garden Pine Cafe and beyond that a long separate room, where a couple of local musicians were entertaining a fairly large crowd with some American tunes from the 20th century.
Finally, I was ready to visit the famed Holiday Train Show, which was situated inside the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory. The Conservatory is "a stunning example of Victorian-style glass house artistry" and worth a visit by itself. The building was inspired by the Royal Botanic Garden in London and took three years to erect, completed in 1902. The Enid A. Haupt Conservatory is used to house the Holiday Train Show during the holidays and the Orchid Show in the Spring.
Visitors from around the world come to visit the NY Botanical Gardens, to see the Conservatory, as well as forest that the Botanical Garden has tried to keep intact since prior to the Revolutionary War in the late 1700's. It's a highly challenging preservation task, given the NY Botanical Garden is situated in one of the largest cities in the world, where winds bring unwelcome vegetational visitors, and pollution doesn't make things any easier.
Inside the Haupt Conservatory I found the Holiday Train Show. The New York Botanical Garden Holiday Train Show is also worth a visit on its own, but the Bar Car Night program allows you to satisfy your curiosity on both of these attractions, at the same time. The Holiday Train Show began 27 years ago in 1991.
A film showing how the New York Botanical Holiday Train Show had been constructed was shown at the entrance. This was followed by tables and elevated train tracks where the trains seemed to soar past us. But the real treat lie in wait, as we entered the Conservatory where the lush green vegetation was used as the environment for the trains and associated structures. Overhead, literally dozens of feet above us, were the paned glass windows of possibly a century ago.
People were milling about, enjoying the ambiance, the train show detail, and each others' company. While it was early January, the holiday spirit remained intact. I spent a fair amount of time taking it all in before I headed back to the bar, where another group of folks were milling about enjoying the social ambiance. On my way out I passed by some NYBG carolers who had created a chorus of visitors singing some well known holiday tunes. The last Bar Car Nights of the Season was January 12th, but it will return in mid November of this year. And the Holiday Train Show runs one more week, ending Monday, January 21, 2019.
Tickets cost $38 for non-members and $28 for NYBG members. P.S. They also have a restaurant called the Hudson Garden Grill in the Ross Conifer Arboretum, which is between the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory and the western Southern Blvd Gate. It's open daily from 11.30 am - 6 pm, but they vary the light and full menu based on weekdays / weekends.
Scroll down to view a video of the Bar Car Nights at the NY Botanical Gardens, including the Holiday Train Show.
Bar Car Nights at the New York Botanical Garden
January 5, 2019 / Bedford Park Fordham Central Bronx Neighborhoods / Holiday Things To Do Bronx / Bronx Buzz NYC.
This is a short video capturing the various entertainment offerings included in the NY Botanical Garden Bar Car Nights program over the holidays. There was music, an outside fire surrounded by presumably Bronx restaurateurs' offerings, an ice sculptor performing his art, dancers and singers caroling and performing, and the holiday train show in the Enid Haupt Conservatory, which is worth the trip all in itself. Next Saturday is the last night of this program until next Fall.
Pregones Theater La Casita Block Party
Pregones Theater Hosted the La Casita Block Party of Poets, Musicians & Artists & a bit of Pregones Theater History
August 6, 2018 / Concourse Neighborhood / Bronx Theater / Bronx Neighborhoods / Bronx Buzz NYC.
On Sunday I made my way over to the Pregones Theater in the Concourse neighborhood of the Bronx. Pregones is located at 575 Walton Street, only a couple of blocks from Hostos College and the Post Office in the Bronx. Today was their annual block party, the origins of which, date back to the early 2000's. Pregones Theater moved to this location on Walton Street in the Concourse neighborhood in 2005.
It's worth mentioning that Pregones Theater has been serving the Bronx community of actors, actresses, producers, directors, playwrights and their audiences for nearly four decades. Pregones was started in 1979 and recently [2015 - 2017?] merged with another theater company, Puerto Rican Traveling Theater, to become the cultural institution that it is today.
The Puerto Rican Traveling Theater began in 1967 and helped give birth to the careers of Raul Julia and Miriam Colon, and recently merged with Pregones. Today Pregones Theater / The Puerto Rican Traveling Theater has venues in both Bronx and Manhattan.
As I arrived I noticed their colorful psychedelic house, the Casita, erected as the backdrop for the stage where performers would take flight to delight the audience. It was around 4 pm and a poet, I know it, was speaking, sweet talking, sugary, short arias of verbalized visuals whose acoustical imagery was as stimulating and winding as a quick jazzy beat. Too fast, to fully comprehend, the details of which lie within.
I remember a subway ride, some history, a street scene, but you really had to be there to get the full gist. You missed. But they'll be back next year and they have numerous performances throughout the year.
Along the sidewalks vendors were selling unique - possibly Bronx made, clothing, cosmetics, jewelry, pottery, purses, knapsacks, paper products and other little finds, many of which you might be hard pressed to find elsewhere.
I stepped inside the theater to check it out. It's a well kept, spacious theater, with seating for somewhere between 50 to 100. And a hall of fame showing accolades for performances and performers of years past.
The folks were friendly and it was definitely an artsy, eclectic and friendly crowd. There were also folks there from Lincoln Center Out of Doors, who in part sponsored the block party performances. And Pregones Theater / The Puerto Rican Traveling Theater also performed down at Lincoln Center on Saturday, August 4th at 12 noon in Hearst Plaza, as part of their relationship with Lincoln Center Out of Doors.
By the way, 'pregones' in Spanish, means 'cries' in English. But nobody was crying today.
Hasta luego.
Pregones Theater in the South Bronx
The Bronx is Hitting its Stride as one of NYC's Great Cultural Centers
October 22, 2018 / Concourse Neighborhood Bronx / Music Dance & Theater Bronx / Bronx Buzz NYC.
Last summer the Pregones Theater or Teatro Pregones hosted a block party in tandem in the Concourse neighborhood with Lincoln Center Out of Doors. The recognition by Lincoln Center for the quality of Pregones Theater programming, shows just how far Teatro Pregones has come in earning the respect of one of the nation's most elite cultural centers. But this is nothing new for the Bronx these days.
Since gaining recognition for Rap and Hip Hop, the Bronx became known for its music, art and culture. Rap is said to have begun starting in 1973 when the first known hip hop party was thrown by DJ Kook Herc at 1520 Sedgewick Avenue in the nearby Morris Heights neighborhood in the Bronx.
The Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five were organized in the mid 1970's by John Saddler who took the name of Grand Master Flash. One of the Furious Five members, Keef Cowboy, is credited with coming up with the name hip hop. In 1979 The Sugar Hill Gang's Rappers' Delight reportedly brought Rap and Hip Hop into the mainstream. And in the following three decades, Rap and Hip Hop went mainstream, with rappers and hip hop artists emerging from all around the nation and all around the world.
In 2015 Belcalis Marlenis Almánzar, known as Cardi B, emerged as a national artist, after a few of her videos went viral. In 2017 Kardi B put out a single, Bodack Yellow, that quickly rose to #1. I went to listen to it on Youtube and it uses an Arabian theatrical motif, where Kardi B talks about dancing. Kardi B was formerly a strip club dancer and she rapped about how she doesn't need to dance for 'you' anymore. Once a poor nobody with some looks and talent, Kardi B became a rich and famous somebody almost overnight. Her video has received 668 million views.
Within the same month, Boogie wit da Hoodie , whose birthname is , put out an album, The Bigger Artist, that also went to #1. That video received 21 million views. Thus, these two artists - along with a number of others, moved the Bronx back into the limelight of Rapper / Hip Hop culture.
The reason I mention all of this, is because as you watch the video below, you'll notice the rich cultural poetry, and emerging sense of theater, emanating from two of the guest performers I saw that day. Pregones Theater / Teatro Pregones continues to host other talented artists throughout the year in both Spanish and English ... and if the block party is any indication ... far beyond these two languages alone.
Doc Film Center in the Bronx Neighborhood of Melrose
doc film center bronx doc film center melrose neighborhood bronx documentary film center near the hub in melrose history architecture bronx
Doc Film Center in the Bronx
Film Based Cultural Center Attracts Eclectic Group for presentation of Carlos Villalon's Coca: The Lost War on Drugs
September 24, 2018 / Melrose Neighborhood Bronx / Arts & Film in the Bronx / Bronx Buzz NYC.
In July I visited the Doc Film Center in the Bronx to attend a new film by Carlos Villalon about the failed war on drugs. I arrived as it was getting dark, disembarking from the #5 train at the HUB at 3rd Avenue, 149th Street and Willis in the neighborhood of Melrose. I walked north a couple of blocks and took a left, coming upon the Doc Film Center which is housed in a three story building that looks to be in the neighborhood of a century old.
The HUB at 3rd Avenue, 149th Street and Willis / Melrose Avenue intersection was once referred to as the Times Square of the Bronx. It is still a fairly robust shopping district during the daytime, but after hours when the stores close, it has a sort of abandoned feel. I went in knowing that the crime rate in the Bronx, like the rest of the city, is down significantly versus prior years.
In the past five years, according to the Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz, the murder rate for the entire Bronx has been below 100. This is in a borough that is home to 1.471 million, so the murder rate is below 1 murder for every 14,710 people in the Bronx. It's worth adding that a third of Bronx murders are from gang related violence, which sometimes includes collateral damage.
Architecture Near the Hub in Melrose: 1900 - 1930
The NYPD has been having some good success in taking down gangs in Bronx as well as NYC. In March of 2016, they reportedly completed the biggest bust in the Bronx, capturing 89 gang members. There are numerous places in Manhattan and Brooklyn that are far more dangerous, but Bronx historically has been given the worst reputational rap, and that impression, while changing, still lingers. I attribute it to LOCAL TV NEWS COVERAGE, which seems to PRIMARILY report crime stories when covering the Bronx.
As I walked to the Doc Film Center I observed the architecture around which I found myself surrounded. The Hub heyday was back in the early 1900's running into the 1930's when the Great Depression hit. Thus many of the buildings in the area are from that time period, which to me, is what I've come to think of as New York classical architecture and building. They made them quite well back then, as America was flexing its economic strength.
Inside the Doc Film Center I walked along the wooden floors to a large room with incredibly high ceilings, like what you would expect to find in a high school gym. There were chairs lined up looking toward the front of the building where the speaker had already begun his presentation.
What followed was a journey into the drug wars. As Carlos Villalon took us on a journey through the South American jungles, into Coca: The Lost War on Drugs ...
- CLICK here later today to view the rest of our report about the Doc Film Center in the Bronx neighborhood of Melrose and the photographic documentary Coca: The War on Drugs by Carlos Villalon.
Bronx Museum & Art Galleries Bronx NYC
Bronx Museum Anarchitect Closing & Pig Roast
Anarchitect Closing Celebrated w/ Pig Roast on 2nd Floor Patio
March 27, 2018 / Concourse Neighborhood Bronx South / Bronx Art & Museums / Bronx Restaurants / Bronx Buzz NYC.
On Sunday the Bronx Museum held the closing reception for its exhibit entitled Anarchitect. The closing was held on the second floor of the musem and they sold tickets for folks to come and enjoy a pork sandwich prepared by a chef and enjoy a beer made by the Bronx Brewery.
It was a sunny and cool March afternoon as I made my way north on the #4 subway line. I had to get off at 38th Street and take the #1 bus because work was being done on the #4 line.
When I arrived the Bronx Museum cafe was fairly busy and folks were milling around. After checking in I headed up to the second floor to see what was happening.
Bronx Museum Hosts Pig Roast & Bronx Brewery Beer
There's a patio that opens up from the back of the second floor, and oftentimes the museum hosts various artistic and cultural events there. Today, there was a skewered pig roasting over a bed of coals. Chef Angel Jimenez of Lechonera La Pirana, which is a two food truck restaurant that may be found at at 152nd Street and Wales Avenue in the Mott Haven neighborhood of the Bronx, had prepared the feast. Jimenez who came from Puerto Rico in 1984 has been cooking and feeding his restaurant guests for over a decade. Lechonera La Pirana translates literally into something like Piglet the Pirahna, but I'm guessing means something like devouring pork.
I sampled one of the roasted pork sandwiches and decided to eat it plain, even though everyone else was adding catsup. The pork inside the bread was juicy, flavorful and skillfully cooked, so I didn't need the catsup - but that said next time I'm going to try it. There was a bit of skin included with the pork cuts which I took out. I also sampled a Bronx Brewery beer, which had a citrus name added to it. And again, I was delightfully surprised by the clean, crisp flavor of a medium bodied brew. I hope to sample more of each in the future.
There were a number of people there, from what appeared to be many walks of life, of various ages and in an eclectic mix of small groups of friends and family. I decided I should pay my respects to the artwork, having taken a little break, so I made my way down into the exhibit rooms.
The Bronx Museum Tries to Capture & Reflect one of NYC's Most Fascinating Boroughs
The first stop was the exhibit room located between the second and first floors. In the room were a number of thick paint on canvass pieces created by Angel Otero and the exhibit was entitled Elegies.
According to the curator, Christian Vivero-Faune, the work references the late Robert Motherwell who between 1948 and 1967 created over 200 paintings which he entitled Elegy to the Spanish Republic, which laments the Spanish Civil War.
Christian tells us that Otero's Elegies aren't elegies in the traditional sense, but are a medium with which to contemplate one's own losses. I found the bright, colorful abstracts works soothing and cheerful.
Click here to continue reading our report about the Bronx Museum in the Concourse neighborhood, including a closer look at the exhibit entitled Anarchitect by Gordon Matta-Clarke. We have also included photos of the work and of the pig roast social on the second floor patio.
Bronx Museum Anarchitect Closing & Pig Roast
Anarchitect Closing Celebrated w/ Pig Roast on 2nd Floor Patio
March 27, 2018 / Concourse Neighborhood Bronx South / Bronx Art & Museums / Bronx Restaurants / Bronx Buzz NYC. Continued.
The Bronx Museum Anarchitect Exhibit
I then entered the main exhibit area of the Bronx Museum to view the work of Gordon Matta-Clark in his Anarchitect series. Gordon Matta-Clarke [1943 - 1978] graduated from the Cornell School of Architecture in 1968. In 1972 he came to the South Bronx and began creating geometric artworks on abandoned and dilapidated buildings mostly in the Morrisania neighborhood of the South Bronx, along Boston Road.
The curator tells us that the process was a mix of performance art, photography and sculpture and at once creative and destructive. The curator further informs us that following the turbulence in the Bronx in the mid 1960's - including the disenfranchisement of entire neighborhoods due to Robert Moses' installation of the Cross Bronx Expressway - the work suggested that order had been replaced by chaos and architecture by dilapidated buildings - hence Anarchitect.
The exhibit was arranged into four periods including Bronx Floors / Graffiti 1972 - 1973, Walls / Wallspaper 1972, Conical Intersect 1975 and Days End 1975.
Anarchitect Artistically Captures some of the Changes in the South Bronx Neighborhoods in the 1970's
The Bronx Floors / Graffiti 1972 - 1973 work captured some of the NYC dilapidation of the early 1970's on film. Matta-Clarke then added handcrafted graffiti, which was an emerging artform, to the photographs. He was rejected from showing these at the Washington Square Art Fair and so opened up his own art fair in the Bronx where he sold the pieces.
The Walls / Wallspaper 1972 was a mix of urban archeology and print making. Matta-Clarke photographed the deteriorated walls, floors and other structures of the South Bronx, and then put the images on newspaper - hence Wallspaper.
The Days End 1975 piece was created in an abandoned pier along the Hudson River following the collapse of a section of the West Side Highway in 1974. Matta-Clarke's vision was to transform the fallen segment of highway into a "sun and water temple" as at the time, New Yorkers had little access to their shorelines, and Matta-Clarke envisioned using the collapse of the highway as an opportunity to transform it. According to the curators, Matta-Clarke's opening day of the artwork was closed by the NY Police Department as Matta-Clarke had not obtained city permission.
The Conical Intersect 1975 segment was the only non-New York section of Matta-Clarke's Anarchitect exhibit. Matta-Clarke fled NYC following the closing of his Days End opening, fearing arrest for his controversial work and violation of local law. He chose Paris for his exile, where he found the French bulldozing Les Halles-Plateau Beaubourg area. The curators tell us that the area was a major Parisien marketplace since the middle ages and became the commercial core of Paris about two centuries ago. The curators describe the work as,
"... a paracinematic look: the cone shaped functioning as a kind of lens looking down the new Beaubourg (the future) through the derelict cut buildings (the past) and opening up onto the everyday street scene (the present)."
Thanks: Bronx Museum, Bronx Brewery & Lecheron La Pirana
The Anarchitect exhibit was organized by Antonio Sergio Bessa and Jessamyn Fiore. And it was most interesting. The exhibit ran from November 2017 through March 2018, but provides an example of the kind of work being done at the Bronx Museum.
Many thanks to all of the people and organizations mentioned in this report for their help in making it possible.
The Bronx Museum Anarchitect - Concourse Neighborhood - Bronx News
The Bronx Museum Anarchitect History & Neighborhood Bronx News & Related Info
Click this link for promotions, discounts and coupons in the Bronx.
Click these links for promotions by advertisers in the Bronx.
Click this link to go to the Bronx Neighborhoods section.
Site Search Tips. 1) For best results, when typing in more than one word, use quotation marks - eg "Midtown Neighborhood". 2) Also try either singular or plural words when searching for a specific item such as "gym" or "gyms".
$element(bwcore,insert_search,N)$
Click the log in link below to create an ID and post an opinion.
Or send this story to a friend by filling in the appropriate box below.
Click this link to the Bronx Buzz front page.
Bronx NYC Related Links
Click for Bronx Restaurants - Bronx NYC.
Click for Bronx Banks Loans & Mortgages - Bronx NYC.
Click for Bronx Shopping - Bronx NYC.
Click for Bronx Things To Do Bronx NYC.
Click for Bronx Neighborhoods - Bronx NYC.
Click for Bronx Real Estate & Business - Bronx NYC.
Click for Bronx Schools & Bronx Public Education NYC.
Click for Bronx Street Fairs NYC.
Click for Bronx Politics & Government NYC.
Click for Bronx Farmers Markets NYC.
Click for Bronx Arts & Culture
$element(adman,groupads,Sectional2 Ad)$
Bronx Art Space - Mott Haven Neighborhood Things To Do
bronx art space mott haven bronx art space nyc music art cultural centers mott haven south bronx nyc
Bronx Art Space in Mott Haven
Bronx Cultural Space Provides Venue for Artistic Expression
November 13, 2017 / Mott Haven Neighborhood / Bronx Neighborhoods / Arts & Culture in the Bronx / Bronx Buzz NYC.
A few weeks ago I visited the Bronx Art Space as part of my effort to in some measure capture [and release] the heart and soul of the Bronx in pixels. Beverly Emers was my primary contact and her guidance was invaluable not just into the Bronx Art Space, but also in introducing me in some small way to the surrounding community.
As a bit of background, the Bronx Art Space first opened in 2008 in the South Bronx to provide a communal artistic venue to local artists, musicians, film makers and performers. The Bronx Art Space was co-founded by Linda Cunningham and Mitsu Hadeishi.
I arrived on a Saturday evening to witness one of the Bronx Art Space Gatherings. In 2017 at the Bronx Art Space began hosting the Gatherings, which have been organized by James A. Brathwaite, who I met shortly after I arrived. James told me he's been organizing at least one Gathering per month. The Gatherings consist of performances by local talent which is offered free to the public.
James told me it's an opportunity for local dancers, musicians, comedians and performers to get in front of an audience to express themselves and show what they can do. At the time of the October 21st Gathering, James had organized and hosted nine of them year to date.
- CLICK here to read the rest of our report on the Bronx Art Space in the Mott Haven neighborhood.
ID Studio Theater - Mott Haven Neighborhood - Latin Theater in the Bronx NYC
ID Studio Theater mott haven bronx nyc live theater mott haven neighborhood south bronx nyc latin theaters in bronx nyc
ID Studio Theater in the Bronx
Theater Gives Voice & Builds Community in Mott Haven
Posted December 5, 2017 / October 21, 2017 / Mott Haven Neighborhood / Bronx Neighborhoods / Bronx Theater & Dance /Bronx Buzz NYC.
I had an opportunity to visit the ID Studio Theater this Fall in Mott Haven. I briefly met the Artistic Director, German Jaramillo, who gave me a short tour of the theater, telling me that ID Studio Theater had moved into its new home to its new home at 311 East 140th Street in Mott Haven in the Fall of 2016.
German said he'd been working on renovating the ID Studio Theater new home ever since he'd arrived, to make it capable of providing rehearsal studio and performance space to work on new projects, community space and two studio apartments for visiting and affiliated performers. I had the opportunity to view the community space and the rehearsal space which are shown in the photos at right below. In the photo at right is the outside of ID Studio Theater in Mott Haven.
- CLICK here for the rest of our report on ID Studio Theater in Mott Haven / Latin Theater in the Bronx NYC.
City Island Art Fair - City Island Bronx NYC
city island art fair bronx city island neighborhood bronx nyc
City Island Art Fair
Where City, Sea & Country Meet in the Bronx
September 18, 2017 / Bronx Neighborhoods - City Island / Bronx Things To Do / Bronx Buzz NYC.
Just over a week ago, I made my way to City Island to take in their bi-annual art fair. The art fairs are organized by the City Island Chamber of Commerce and generally held the first weekend in June and the second weekend in September.
The art fair generally runs about three blocks along City Island Avenue [the main north / south street] between Fordham Street and Schofield Street. There's a small public space, Hawkins Park, which lies across from the Chamber of Commerce, and is generally the epicenter of all the fun. When I arrived there was a live band performing and some light food and beverage was being served.
- CLICK here to read the rest of our report about the City Island Art Fair & City Island neighborhood in the Bronx.
Table of Silence Transcends 911
Lincoln Center Dance Commemoration Transcends Hate through Love
September 11, 2017 / Upper West Side Neighborhood / Modern Dance Manhattan / Manhattan Buzz NYC.
This morning at 8.15 am over one hundred dancers began a spiritual commemoration of the events of 911 with a modern dance performance in the main plaza at Lincoln Center on the Upper West Side. This was the seventh year of the performance, and its meaning seems to grow - rather than diminish - with time. It's about the classic and timeless struggle, between giving into hate, or striving to love.
The dancers were all dressed in white, and they created a resplendent symmetry mimicking nature's own. The performance was accompanied by a bit of minimalist music - originating from a beating drum, the air passing through a conch shell, and the human vocal cords.
The dancers transformed the plaza at Lincoln Center into a table, with the bountiful water fountain in the middle. Plates appeared, signifying the sharing of a feast ... a spiritual feast ... a prayer for all humanity.
We feel a heavenly sharing of being together, in a single place, at a single time. It's a solemn place, a sagely peace, a peace with each other, a peace within, and a peace with all the world ... even as the world continues to swirl around us, as does the NYC traffic ... but we remain centered ... as one.
At exactly 8.46 am the performance stops. All is still in Lincoln Center Plaza as we observe a minute of silence together. It's a silence within, as we are surrounded by the ambient noise of the city during rush hour. Sixteen years ago at 8.46 am the second of two planes struck the World Trade Center wreaking havoc. Taking lives. Creating chaos.
Cleansed of hate and vengeance - we depart to go on with our days. We have defeated the terrorists, by not giving into their desire for an endless cycle of violence and hate.
Mott Haven Historic District & SummerStage in the Bronx
Mott Haven: Historic District & SummerStage in St Mary's Park Large Audience Gathers to Enjoy Communal Music Feast August 14, 2017 / Bronx Neighborhoods - Mott Haven...
Bronx Museum - Where Bronx Art & Culture Meet
May 2017 / Bronx Neighborhoods / Bronx Arts & Culture / Bronx Buzz NYC.
I visited the Bronx Museum a few weekends ago. The museum is located along the Grand Concourse a bit northwest of Yankee Stadium in the Concourse neighborhood of the Bronx.
They had a number of exhibits on display, ranging from an exhibit about Fidel Castro to a modern art exhibit on the second floor that used color and light to alter one's perception.
There's a cafe located on the first floor for folks to rest, grab a bite to eat and share their experience of visiting the museum.
The photo at right shows the Bronx Museum in the Concourse neighborhood in the Bronx. They feature local artists and cultural themes relevant to the community. The Bronx Museum is located at Grand Concourse and 165th Street in the Bronx.
Panorama Music Fest on Randalls Island
Three Day Musical Festival Strikes a Grammy Chord
July 25, 2016 / Bronx Neighborhoods - Randalls Island / Bronx Music & Culture / Bronx Buzz NYC.
I attended the Panorama Music Festival on Randall's Island this past weekend. The music festival featured dozens of top and second tier bands and musicians with the event starting Friday and ending Sunday night. Some of the music festival headliners included award winning groups like Kendrick, Alabama Shakes and the return of LCD after a ten year hiatus. Panorama also featured a number of other highly regarded, well known groups - many of which are likely to continue gaining recognition.
In the photo at right, vocalist Sza, is performing in the Pavilion at the Panorama Music Festival on Randalls Island on Sunday.
The weather over weekend was a very seasonal hot, with temperatures hitting nearly 100 on Saturday [high 98], before descending into the low 90's on Sunday. But the island breeze coming across the East River on Randall's Island and not-too-high humidity, made strolling around the event campus not only doable, but enjoyable. There was also a public water station where you could refill your water bottle [free] and there was ample shade within the tree filled park.
The crowd dressed for Panorama to beat the heat, more than anything else. This translated into a near beach-like scene for people-watching, with many youthful men and women enjoying the glow of their Adonis-like years. In 1992 there was a gender equality lawsuit, which contested women's right to go topless without being arrested - a right men enjoyed in this country since its founding. More than a decade later, in 2015, panhandlers in Times Square began asserting that right by painting their bare breasts with American flags and other designs, while soliciting tips from resident and tourist passers-by, for the pleasure of viewing them. These 'performance artists' were nicknamed the 'Desnudas'.
NYS and NYC Government officials found a way to reign in this practice - as it was creating quite a stir - by confining the solicitations to specified areas within the Times Square Plaza. Fast forward to 2016 and things continue to evolve, with women now wearing swimsuit / lingerie-like tops as fashion statements, some of which were on display at the Panorama Music Festival.
In the photo at right, a woman sports a fashionable swimsuit / lingerie-like top, at the Panorama Music Festival on Randall's Island.
We'll have a bit more later this summer, including video and a discussion of some of the art on exhibit at the Panorama Music Festival on Randall's Island in NYC.
Bronx: NYC Art & Theater - Exploring American Islamic Muslim Identity
nyc arts theater nyc queens beyond sacred laguardia college performing arts u.s. media treatment of islam muslims art nyc In Search Of A Civiliz...
Frieze Art Fair NYC - Randall's Island
Fun Fair Attracts Artists, Friendly Financiers & Fashionistas
May 12, 2014 / Bronx Neighborhoods - Randalls Island / Bronx Arts & Culture / Bronx Buzz NYC.
The Third Annual Frieze Art Fair turned out to be ... in a word ... FUN.
It was held on Randall's Island, which once one makes the effort, turns out to be an easy and enjoyable get-away from the din of the big city. Traffic thins out and slows down, and one can again see the horizon. With the NYC skyline in the background and the East River water slowly flowing on by, the locale almost seems idyllic.
Inside the white tented structure, complete with flowing ribbons and a lofty airy vaulted ceiling, there were literally tons of people milling about. But the fair managers had done a good job of figuring out how to comfortably accommodate the 8,000 people who passed through daily [except Saturday due to rain].
The fair easily encompassed enough space to hold one or more football fields. The structure was designed as a rectangle with four quadrants. And where the quadrants met, there was a cafe / rest area / and outdoor patio space.
We'll post more at a later date including a photo slide show of the 2014 Frieze Art Fair in NYC.
Lessons for Bronx Gentrification - Whitewash at Queens Gallery
5 pointz lic gentrification lic long island city art scene bronx gentrification bronx art Bronx Gentrification: Epitaph To An Era: W...
Bronx: NYC Art, Artists, Galleries & Museums - Immigrantual PS1
immigrantual ps1 ps 1 immigrantula Feared Immigrantula Seizes PS1 Hundreds Held Spellbound & Released Unharmed Saturday May 1, 2011...
Bronx Theater - They Call Me Q
They Call Me Q At St. Luke's In The Theatre District NYC
Original Script Performed By The Playwright At Off Broadway Theatre
May 26, 2014 / Bronx Neighborhoods / Bronx Theater / Manhattan Buzz NYC.
I had an opportunity to preview an original theatrical work entitled They Call Me Q. The play opens at St. Luke's Theatre in Midtown on June 4th. The play is about an immigrant Indian woman's personal journey in search of finding comfort in her own identity which encompasses both Indian and American cultures.
She was born in India and spent her youth there [until age 13], before coming to America with her parents at a tender adolescent age. She arrived on these shores as a complete stranger in a strange land. Her parents settled into the Bronx and she began attending American public school.
The show provides a unique opportunity to peer inside the life of a first generation 21st century immigrant American. Q delves the depths of her emotional struggle to find peace with herself as the embodiment of the cultural crossroads of ancient traditions, living in a modern, urban, American borough called the Bronx.
Click here to read our review of They Call Me Q at St. Lukes Theatre NYC.
They Call Me Q At St. Luke's In The Theatre District NYC
Original Script Performed By The Playwright At Off Broadway Theatre
May 26, 2014 / Bronx Neighborhoods / Bronx Theater / Manhattan Buzz NYC.
Continued. They Call Me Q is a one-woman show, where the playwright and performer are one and the same: Qurrat Ann Kadwani.
I arrived shortly after the performance began. Q was talking about her home life in America at the age of 13. Her mother played an important guiding role in her life, and Q's depiction of her loving mother is reciprocated in her performance.
Q assumed the personas of her family and friends as she regaled her life's journey. At times her performances were humorous, using Indian cultural icons, like biryani cooking, to describe her emotional states. And at other times poignant, as she describes the emotional roller coaster of a young Indian woman, alone in American public schools.
We join her in high school as she begins to find her way into developing skills which give her confidence and satisfaction and through these activities, friends. She begins to pull away from her family as she grows up, but she continues to feel the tug of her parents' affection and interest in helping their only daughter find her way [she has a couple of brothers].
Eventually she leaves the Bronx for college, where she finds camaraderie with fellow Bronx bred classmates, with whom she finds a shared past. While away, she maintains communication with her mother and she begins to take a renewed interest in her native culture, first through food and then more expansively.
After college she must decide what to do with her life. Marry? Or do something else? She finds herself not able to accept an arranged marriage but - at her parents urging - returns to visit India where she spends time in her native culture with relatives and old friends.
The performance ends when she returns from that trip to America. It's an interesting journey, and I have left out many of the side roads she heads down for a short while on her journey through life. To be sure there are ups and downs along the way, as well as periodic comic relief.
Her tale strikes a universal chord that likely many New Yorkers can relate to - that being that once you leave your hometown for a long period of time, it's difficult to return to that cultural milieu in spite of its great familiarity. There's a small trace of a modern parallel to Thomas Wolfe's book, You Can't Go Home Again.
The stage is set simply with a few significant items that Q pulls into our view as she assumes the different roles she depicts. She uses lighting and music to create environments that embrace the story she's telling. And she characterizes her father, mother, family and friends by adopting different accents and voices, all of which made the hour and a half disappear without notice.
Many thanks to St Lukes Theatre for hosting this performance, to Paul Bourgeois the sound and lighting man, and of course to the talented playwright and performer, Qurrat Ann Kadwani for sharing this personal tale and performance with us.
They Call Me Q, begins June 4th, 2014 at the St Luke's Theatre on 308 46th Street at 8th Avenue in the Theatre District of Manhattan NYC.
Click here to view a photo slide show of the performance of They Call Me Q at St Luke's Theater in Manhattan.
Bronx NYC Related Links
Click for Bronx Restaurants - Bronx NYC.
Click for Bronx Banks Loans & Mortgages - Bronx NYC.
Click for Bronx Shopping - Bronx NYC.
Click for Bronx Things To Do Bronx NYC.
Click for Bronx Neighborhoods - Bronx NYC.
Click for Bronx Real Estate & Business - Bronx NYC.
Click for Bronx Schools & Bronx Public Education NYC.
Click for Bronx Street Fairs NYC.
Click for Bronx Politics & Government NYC.
Click for Bronx Farmers Markets NYC.
Click for Bronx Arts & Culture
Site Search Tips. 1) For best results, when typing in more than one word, use quotation marks - eg "Astoria Park". 2) Also try either singular or plural words when searching for a specific item such as "gym" or "gyms".
$element(bwcore,insert_search,N)$
Click the log in link below to create an ID and post an opinion.
Or send this story to a friend by filling in the appropriate box below.
Bronx Arts & Culture - The Arts in the Bronx
Bronx Arts & Culture BX NYC September 2024 / Bronx Arts & Culture NYC / Bronx Neighborhoods / Bronx Buzz NYC. This section is dedicated to the Bronx Arts &...
Bronx Arts & Culture Related Links
Click this link for promotions, discounts and coupons in the Bronx.
Site Search Tips $element(bwcore,insert_search,N)$
- Click Bronx Arts & Culture
- Click Bronx Parks & Sports
- Click Bronx Neighborhoods & News.
Or send this story to a friend by filling in the appropriate box below.