Why the hell should I trek all the way out to Queens? Answers within.

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Queens Arts Connection 2008 + Call for Photographers-Deadline March 17

The Queens Museum of Art (QMA), the Queens Council on the Arts (QCA) and the New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) will present a free networking event at the QMA for artists and cultural groups of all disciplines. 19 New York City arts services organizations will share information about their programs, presentation spaces, and funding sources. The afternoon’s schedule includes a raffle, live music, and an informal networking reception.

In addition, artists will have the opportunity to participate in a peer-sharing slide/video/reading slam during the event (in five minute sessions).
Queens Arts Connection 2008

Saturday, March 22, 1 - 7 pm
Schedule of Events

In the Café & Large Triangle Gallery, 1st Floor

1 - 3 pm
Sign Up-registration & Informal Networking
Browse Arts Service Organization Tables

3:30 – 4:15 pm
Dance in Queens Application Seminar with:
Paz Tanjuaquio, Topaz Arts & Hitomi Iwasaki, Associate Curator QMA

4:30 - 6:30 pm
Complementary Refreshments & Informal Networking
Slide/Video/Reading Slam-share your artwork with other participants.

In the Theater, 2nd Floor

2 – 2:20 pm
Welcome by presenting organizations: Queens Museum of Art,
Queens Council on the Arts, & New York Foundation for the Arts

2:20 – 2:45 pm
Performance by Mahina Movement
Raffle of two $50 QMA gift shop certificates

2:45 – 3:15 pm
Linda Park presents NYFA Source tutorial

3:15 – 4:15 pm
Gary Dayton, Arts in Education Associate at NYSCA presents a
workshop on "How to Become a Teaching Artist"

Administration Offices & Library, 2nd Floor

4:30 – 6:30 pm
Portfolio Review for Visual & Video Artists:
Hitomi Iwasaki, QMA Associate Curator;
Erin Sickler, QMA Curatorial Assistant; Herb Tam, Exit Art Curator;
and Cecilia Jurado, Y Gallery Curator

4:30 – 6:30 pm
Portfolio Review for Dancers with Paz Tanjuaquio, Topaz Arts

For more information, click here.

Queens Onstage


From reader Darren Cardosa:

I enjoy your blog. Thanks for the posting about the Sunnyside crime
spree. I live in Sunnyside and appreciate the heads up.

I am producing a show and wonder if it is something you would consider posting on the site. Both of us in the show and producing it are Queens residents. Any place we can get mention of the show is a great help. Thank you very much for your time.

Sincerely,
darron cardosa


Here's the listing:

Minnie Pearl Does Broadway

Grand Ol’ Opry and Hee Haw legend Minnie Pearl is down from Heaven for three nights to sing all the Broadway songs she never got a chance to perform. From A Chorus Line to The Wiz, Minnie belts out show tunes like only she can. She’ll tell stories and jokes and there will even be a door prize! Assisting her onstage is the often talked about but never before seen Uncle Nabob. Cabaret artist Mark Alan Jones stars as Minnie Pearl with Darron Cardosa as Uncle Nabob.

Don’t Tell Mama
343 W 46th St. between Eighth and Ninth Aves.
212-757-0788
Saturday March 8, 6:00 PM
Sunday March 9, 7:30 PM
Monday March 10, 7:00 PM

Subway: A,C,E to 42nd St-Port Authority
$12 cover + two drink minimum

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

3 Queens Teens' Stories of Legal Emancipation, Foster Homes & Group Homes

WNYC’s Radio Rookies

presents

OUT ON MY OWN

Stories of Living Away From One’s Parents

Listen online


Three NYC Teens’ Experiences with Foster Care, Legal Emancipation,and Life in a Group Home

(February 19, 2008--New York, NY) – Most teens dream of independence from their parents’ rules, restrictions and terminal lack of cool. But living away from parents brings a host of other challenges for teens, including feelings of loneliness and trying to find a sense of security and of home where they can.

Radio Rookies, WNYC’s Peabody Award-winning youth journalism program, presents OUT ON MY OWN: Stories of Living Away from One’s Parents, three searing tales of New York City teens growing up in separate places from their moms and dads.

* Monday, February 25: JORDAN opted to become legally emancipated from his parents at 15, wishing to escape an emotionally challenging relationship in order give himself the opportunity to succeed.

* Wednesday, February 27: STAR was living in a foster home when she learned – through a televised news report – that her father had murdered her mother. Years later, the news media has moved on to other tragedies, but Star is still here. She’s about to age out of the system, and she hopes she can overcome her past and chart a new course.

* Friday, February 29: KRYSTLE is living in a group home, but would love to return to her mother…if the circumstances that separated them can be healed.

“I’ve learned so much, and I’m not afraid to state what’s real,” said Star about reporting her story. “Everybody goes through something…If you don’t sugarcoat it, people will be like: ‘Look at that girl, what she’s been through. And look—she’s ok.’”

All stories will air on WNYC during Morning Edition, which airs on 93.9FM, AM 820 and via live webstream at www.wnyc.org from 5-9:30am. They will also be available for on-demand listening and podcasting at www.radiorookies.org.

Going Green in Queens

DATE:
Saturday, March 8, 2008

TIME:
10:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.

LOCATION:
The New York Hall of Science
Flushing Meadows Corona Park
47-01 111th Street
Queens
(Free parking or shuttle available from the 111th Street 7 train station)

DETAILS:
Do you want to “go green?” Come to the first annual “Going Green in Queens,” a free environmental, educational and networking event. Parks & Recreation, Partnerships for Parks, the Queens Civic Congress and Queens Coalition for Parks and Green Spaces will host informational workshops on street trees, alternative energy sources and composting. Other topics to be discussed include construction materials, waterfront accessibility, and how to work with your local government.

To RSVP, please call 718-343-6779 or email GoingGreeninQueens@gmail.com. For more information, please visit www.nyc.gov/parks or call 311.

Monday, March 03, 2008

Sunnyside's own Jeremy Karaken on NPR

From Jeremy:

On Friday, March 14th, set your dials to NPR and Radiolab, as they discuss my play The Sweet Sweet Motherhood with Lee Silver, my collaborator. They'll be discussing the scientific, as well as the moral implications of human-animal hybridization.

As they say on the networks, check local listings.

Or, simply go to www.radiolab.org and look for Show #404

(So-Called) Life
Show #404
Friday, March 14, 2008

What are the consequences when humans start playing with life? The human imagination has always dreamed up fantastic creatures, but now biotechnology is making it easier and easier for us to actually create forms of life that have never existed before. In this hour, Radio Lab looks at the uneasy marriage between biology and engineering, and asks what counts as "natural?"

We enter the world of bioengineering with scientist Lee Silver from Princeton University. Silver tells us about a strange creature created by scientists back in the 80s, called a "geep," and shares his recent collaboration effort, a play by playwright Jeremy Kareken that explores the implications of combining humans and other animals.

Sunday, March 02, 2008

Keep an Eye Out: Sunnyside Neighborhood Watch

Lynn and I were informed by our landlords, and later saw the fliers posted around the neighborhood, that in the last month there have been 3 break-ins on 47th Street between Skillman and 39th Ave., and one stolen vehicle. It seems that the break-ins were usually accomplished by kicking in basement doors, or by going through sliding glass doors - all between 11am and 3pm. So please be on the lookout for any shady characters walking down the street with 3 laptops and a crowbar - that kind of thing. And take a minute to think about the security of your house/apartment. Secure those sliding glass doors with a door jam or locking bar, get an alarm system if you're really paranoid, and at the very least post BEWARE OF DOG signs on your back doors.

It should go without saying that you should have renter's insurance, and please make sure to backup all those files on your computer! I personally use SyncBack which is completely free and does it's thing every Saturday night at about 3:00am without me having to lift a finger. And every month or so I make a DVD backup of the latest month's files and store it at my office in case we did get broken into and lost everything (or in case all three of my hard drives failed, which is not outside the realm of possibility).

Three break-ins in a month is bad, but it certainly could be worse. In 1990 there were 2,062 burglaries in the 108th precinct. In 2007 there were just 564 - an 84% drop!

Keep your eyes and ears open and use common sense. Unlike the guy parked near our apartment who left a bunch of cash on his dashboard ...

Saturday, March 01, 2008

Queens Gets Indoor Public Pool




The official press release:

CITY OPENS FIRST INDOOR PUBLIC POOL IN FOUR DECADES

Aquatic Center Opens in Largest Recreation Facility Ever Built in a City Park

Deputy Mayor Robert C. Lieber, Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe, Economic Development Corporation President Seth W. Pinsky and Senior Vice President David Kane, Queens Borough President Helen Marshall, USA Pools Corporate President Troy Legg, local elected officials and community members gathered today to celebrate the opening of the new Flushing Meadows Corona Park Aquatic Center, the first indoor public pool to be built in four decades. Competitive high school swimmers, synchronized swimmers, divers, senior citizens and children were on hand to test the water and show the flexibility of the space, which allows competitive and recreational swimming to take place simultaneously.


The Olympic-size swimming pool is housed in the new Flushing Meadows Corona Park Natatorium and Ice Rink building, which was built in partnership with the Economic Development Corporation. The building, which also houses the NHL-regulation ice rink that will open later this year, is the largest recreation complex ever built in a City park and will serve as a year-round facility for competitive and recreational use. The $66.3 million project was funded and envisioned by Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, Queens Borough President Helen Marshall, former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, former Queens Borough President Claire Shulman and former Parks Commissioner Henry J. Stern.


“One of the hallmarks of our five-borough economic development strategy is to invest in things that make New York City more livable, and this fantastic new aquatic center – the first indoor public pool built in this City in more than 40 years – is a terrific example of that,” said Deputy Mayor Lieber. “The Economic Development Corporation and the Parks Department, together with Borough President Marshall, have created a fantastic addition to Flushing Meadows Corona Park and a place where local and citywide residents can come to learn, play and have fun.”

“From a valley of ashes to World’s Fairs grounds to a stunning contemporary building with soaring masts—the new Flushing Meadows Corona Park Pool and Ice Rink marks an important milestone in the history of the park and our city,” said Parks Commissioner Benepe. “Not only have we introduced modern design to public space for the first time in decades, but we have made a world-class swimming facility available to all New Yorkers. We thank our partners, the Economic Development Corporation, for their support in managing this project, as well as Mayor Bloomberg, Queens Borough President Helen Marshall, former Mayor Giuliani, former Borough President Claire Shulman and former Parks Commissioner Henry Stern for making it a reality.”

“This new pool and soon-to-open ice skating rink will fill this building with the sound of laughter and squeals of excitement for thousands of youngsters for generations to come,” said Queens Borough President Helen Marshall. “I am happy to have provided more than $10 million in funding for this facility. However, we could not have reached today’s opening without the support of Mayor Bloomberg who we hope will swim here one day.”

The Building

Inspired by the 1939 and 1964 World’s Fair pavilions, a cable-supported canopy roof is suspended over the 110,000 square foot building. Designed as part of the 2012 Olympic bid, the design allows for the walls running the length of the facility to potentially be removed for expansion to a larger venue with a temporary bleacher structure. Like the construction of the Works Progress Administration era, simple materials are used to create stunning architecture. In this case, pre-cast concrete panels are punctuated with color glass tiles to create the exterior and a three-story glass lobby provides a dramatic introduction to the building.

“This building is a feat of architecture and structural engineering, with its elegant and exceptionally efficient cable-stayed roof design; not dissimilar to the construction of the some of the great bridges of the world,” said Economic Development Corporation Senior Vice President David Kane. “Additionally, the way in which the building is sited, with such tremendous views of Flushing Meadows Corona Park and the grand yet inviting nature of its spaces, is a signal of the City’s commitment to design excellence and to the creation of public architecture worthy of our great City.”

In 1999, Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani and Queens Borough President Claire Shulman envisioned a new indoor pool in Flushing Meadows Corona Park. Conceived as an intermediate size pool, it was enlarged to meet Olympic standards and an indoor skating rink was added. Construction of the foundation finished in 2001 during the administration of Parks Commissioner Henry J. Stern but following 9/11, it was halted due to funding constraints. In 2003, the project was designated to be part of the City’s bid for the 2012 Olympics and Parks partnered with the Economic Development Corporation to implement the new project. A revised design was developed by Handel Architects, LLP in association with Hom & Goldman Architects.

On January 17, 2008 Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg delivered his seventh State of the City address from the floor of the ice rink.

The Pool

The Olympic-sized pool (25M x 50M), located on the second floor with dramatic views of the park, meets international standards, is ADA-accessible and features ten lanes, surge tanks and overflow gutters. Movable bulkheads can configure the pool into three 25-meter swimming areas, allowing for different programming to take place at once. One-third of the pool has a movable floor that can adjust the depth from just a few inches to 7-feet, 4-inches. The middle section is also 7-feet, 4-inches deep and the third section, the diving tank, is 12-feet, 4-inches deep to allow for diving from the pool’s three diving boards—two 1-meter and one 3-meter. A mezzanine bleacher section seats approximately 414 spectators and an adjacent outdoor terrace will feature additional seating. Public locker rooms, toilets and showers are situated on the second level below the seating.

The new Aquatic Center will be operated and staffed by USA Pools, which has an established reputation in the industry will offer services such as aquatic instruction and added lifesaving training for lifeguards, while saving the city and its taxpayers money.

“USA Pools is excited about the opportunity to work with the City of New York and the Parks Department as we provide effective pool management, highly trained lifeguards and aquatic programming to the New York Community,” said USA Pools Corporate President Troy Legg.

The Park

Flushing Meadows Corona Park, one of New York City’s prized flagship parks, comprises 1,255 acres of beautifully landscaped lawns, lakes, fountains, athletic fields, playgrounds, and a zoo. The park is also home to the Queens Museum of Art, Shea Stadium and the Billie Jean King USTA National Tennis Center. Once a dumping ground for ashes, the area was transformed in the 1930s by former Parks Commissioner Robert Moses into a site for the 1939 and 1964 World’s Fairs. Both of the World’s Fairs left behind a number of prominent structures in the park, such as the Queens Theater in the Park, the Unisphere, boathouse, marina, the Hall of Science, the New York State Pavilion and Towers, and Terrace on the Park. The Flushing Meadows Corona Park Natatorium and Ice Rink is located within the park at Avery Avenue and 131st Street in Flushing, Queens.

3/2--St. Patrick's Day Parade in Woodside and Sunnyside

Starting at 2pm!

Starts at 43rd St and Skillman Ave in Sunnyside
East on Skillman
North on 56th St
East on Woodside Ave
Ends at 61st St and Woodside Ave

Or head to the Rockaways today at 1pm for an even bigger parade.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Sexy T-Shirts--They Heart Queens

Please do check out Ciara Elend's Queens-inspired t-shirts.

We at Let's Meet Up In Queens thank her for her sponsorship!

45th Ave ISO Spanish Speaking Good Samaritan

...to tell K*ke's Mexican that they might have a branding issue.

It's around 49th St. I may not be a member of the tribe, but I practically plotzed when I saw the sign. Part of me thinks it should stay that way, if only because it's so rare to experience actual shock while out on a walk around the neighborhood.

Of course, even if they do change their name, they're competing with the MAGNIFICENT de Mole on 48th Ave and 45th St in Woodside. I have eaten there 5 times since learning about it only 3 weeks ago.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Sugar – Sweet Temptation--Event at Nourish

Thursday, February 28 at 7pm
Nourish NYC presents:
Sugar – Sweet Temptation

Please join us for an evening talk session with:

James Duignam HHC, AADP.
Holistic Health Counselor


Understand how sugar affects your health, such as how it:

* Interferes with weight-loss
* Speeds up the aging process (wrinkles!)
* Raises cholesterol levels
* Contributes to diabetes & heart disease


Join us to learn:

* A quick overview of your digestive system
* Which carbohydrates are good versus bad
* Natural and Artificial sweeteners


We look forward to seeing you for a fun evening at Nourish NYC as part of our ongoing health series.

RSVP inside store, or:
Phone: 718-433-4443
Email: info@nourishnyc.com

Sunday, February 03, 2008

Pictures of the Hawk

Taken by reader Brian Haimes--thanks!



Friday, January 25, 2008

Sunnyside Hawk

Reader Sarah writes:

I haven't seen any posts about this, and just wanted to know if anyone else has noticed the beautiful hawk hovering over Queens Boulevard most sunny days this winter? I see him (her?) from the 40th Street platform often in the late morning/early afternoon, either calmly circling on the thermals, or perched on an antenna on one of the taller buildings. He seems to favor 40th just north of the boulevard. I'm tentatively identifying him as a red-tailed hawk, but I'm not an experienced birder. Once I let 3 trains go by, hoping he'd come closer. Must remember--put binoculars in handbag!

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Back on the Map: Revisiting the New York State Pavilion, a Queens Museum of Art Exhibit



Opening Reception: Sunday, January 27, 2008, 3:00 – 6:00 pm

3:00 Valerie Smith, Director of Exhibitions at QMA, will give a brief "gallery talk"

4:00 Demonstration of conservation techniques (UPenn)

4:30-6:00 Refreshments and music (music will be records of bands that played at the Pavilion)

*The event is free and open to the public.



PHILIP JOHNSON’S TERRAZZO ROAD MAP GETS A FACELIFT IN 2008

The Queens Museum of Art collaborates with UPENN conservation team and Parks Department to refurbish a historic gem from the 1964/65 World’s Fair.

Queens, NY (January 18, 2008) - Also known as “The Tent of Tomorrow,” the New York State Pavilion was considered one of the best architectural monuments at the 1964/65 World’s Fair and certainly one of the most iconic of structures to survive. The Queens Museum of Art is pleased to help revitalize this historic monument with its new exhibition, Back on the Map: Revisiting the New York State Pavilion at the 1964/65 World’s Fair on view from January 27-May 4, 2008 in conjunction with Anthony Auerbach, Empire State Pavilion. Back on the Map seeks to inform and engage the public about architect Philip Johnson’s New York State Pavilion and its main exhibit: a large-scale, terrazzo floor replica of the Texaco Road Map of New York State. A fusion of Pop Art imagery and traditional craft techniques, the map pavement was a crucial component of “The Tent of Tomorrow.” In addition to the works of Pop Artists Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol and others displayed on the exterior of the adjoining Theaterama, the Road Map helped solidify the Pavilion’s status as a landmark of 60s avant-garde culture.
Built as a temporary structure for the Fair, the Texaco Road Map along with the Pavilion has suffered from over 30 years of weather exposure and vandalism. This year, however, the Map returns to the spotlight for a long-overdue comeback. A culmination of conservation activities by the City of New York Department of Parks & Recreation in collaboration with The Architectural Conservation Laboratory at the School of Design at the University of Pennsylvania, the exhibition at the Queens Museum of Art will feature restored sections of the Texaco Road Map and elaborate the project findings through text panels and an interactive Web site. The exhibit will also allow visitors the opportunity to witness the restoration process up close as conservators restore portions of the Road Map in the Museum’s galleries.
Please join us for the opening of Back on the Map: Revisiting the New York State Pavilion at the 1964/65 World’s Fair and the companion exhibition, Anthony Auerbach: Empire State Pavilion on Sunday, January 27 from 3-6 pm.

FAMILY WORKSHOP
Please join us for the next installation of the MetLife Foundation Presents First Sundays for Families at QMA on Sunday, February 3 from 1-4pm. The Museum will host a dynamic family workshop inspired by the Back on the Map exhibition. Families of all ages can join an interactive tour of the Museum’s galleries followed by a demonstration with on-site conservation experts. Participants will then map their own neighborhoods in mosaic as part of an artist-led workshop. A dance workshop, led by dancer Susan Thomasson of City Center, will encourage families to participate in an interactive movement program based on the spaces and rhythms of New York City.


ORGANIZATION AND SUPPORT
Back on the Map is supported by The National Endowment for the Arts, The Samuel H. Kress Foundation, New York City Department of Parks and Recreation, and the School of Design, University of Pennsylvania.

Anthony Auerbach is supported in part by the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs and New York State Council on the Arts.

The MetLife Foundation Presents First Sundays for Families at QMA

DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHY
Available upon request. Please contact Krista Saunders 718.592.9700 x221 or ksaunders@queensmuseum.org.

# # #


The Queens Museum of Art was established in 1972 to provide a vital cultural center in Flushing Meadows Corona Park for the borough’s unique, international population. Today it is home to the Panorama of the City of New York, a 9,335 square foot scale model of the five boroughs, and features temporary exhibitions of modern and contemporary art that reflect the cultural diversity of Queens, as well as a collection of Tiffany glass from the Neustadt Museum of Tiffany Art. The Museum provides valuable educational outreach through a number of programs geared toward schoolchildren, teens, families, seniors and individuals with physical and mental disabilities.

The Museum’s hours are: Wednesday – Friday: 10:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m., Saturday and Sunday: 12:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Admission to the Museum is by suggested donation: $5 for adults, $2.50 for seniors, students and children, and free for member and children under 5. For general visitor information, please visit the Museum’s website www.queensmuseum.org or call 718.592.9700.

Monday, January 21, 2008

The Return of the G Spot

Saturday afternoon I was heading over to Stop & Shop and popped my head inside the mysterious windowless warehouse known around here as The G Spot. The big letter G in concrete relief stands for Punta G, translated in English means G spot.

I noticed new exterior lighting had been installed and a beehive of activity inside. When I inquired about all the action, in broken English, a worker promised "dancing and drinking coming soon" he said they'll open for business by the middle of this year. I'm so depressed at the thought of this place and the crowds it will bring.

Back in of May 2006, there was a mini-uproar when word spread that there was a strip club coming to the corner of 48th street and Barnett Avenue. It was on the TV news.

Just across the street, The Paradise Billiard Club is a popular spot for underage drinking. The pool hall rents out a private room for parties that are incredibly noisy and go on all night. I fear the TV cameras will be back one day to report news of a violent crime. This intersection is literally a disaster waiting to happen.

There are so many promising things happening in Sunnyside, so many young families everywhere. There's a children's park diagonally across from the G Spot. Even if the owners have backed away from the original plan to open a strip club, the G spot should not open as a disco. How can these low rent, sleazy nightclubs be allowed to spring up in a residential neighborhood? What can we do?

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Seeking Ad Sales Rep

Sell ads in Let's Meet Up In Queens, earn commission. Email Claire at clairedeveron -at- gmail -dot- com if interested.

Seeking Contributors

Let's Meet Up In Queens is seeking new contributors to cover local businesses, events, and restaurants in:

Astoria
Long Island City
Woodside
Elmhurst
Forest Hills

If interested, please contact Claire at clairedeveron -at- gmail -dot- com.

We don't pay per post; however, all ad revenues are split among contributors based upon post volume.

Socrates Sculpture Park Emerging Artist Fellowship--Apply Now!

SOCRATES SCULPTURE PARK
2008 APPLICATION GUIDELINES:

-SPRING EXHIBITION
-EMERGING ARTIST FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM
-OPEN SPACE


APPLICATION GUIDELINES ARE NOW AVAILABLE ON OUR WEBSITE: WWW.SOCRATESSCULPTUREPARK.ORG

DEADLINE: MONDAY, JANUARY 28, 2008

ABOUT SOCRATES SCULPTURE PARK
Socrates Sculpture Park was an abandoned landfill and illegal dumpsite until 1986 when a coalition of artists and community members, under the leadership of sculptor Mark di Suvero, transformed it into an open studio and exhibition space for artistsand a neighborhood park for local residents. Once a rubble-strewn lot, it now flourishes as an ever-evolving natural landscape.

Located in an industrial neighborhood in Long Island City, Socrates is a waterfront park that overlooks the Manhattan skyline; the site is an affecting and inspiring place for artists to work and a spectacular setting for the presentation of public art. To date, Socrates has hosted close to 700 artists and currently attracts more than 72,000 visitors annually.

Socrates Sculpture Park is the only site in the New York Metropolitan area specifically dedicated to providing artists with opportunities to create and exhibit large-scale sculpture and multi-media installations in an outdoor environment that invites interaction between artists, artworks and the public. Socrates is world renowned as a laboratory where experimentation and innovation expand, reinvent and redefine the tradition of art in public spaces.

APPLICATION PROCEDURE

Artists seeking an opportunity to produce and exhibit their work at Socrates Sculpture Park are strongly encouraged to visit the Park before submitting their application. Applicants must take into account the site's rugged, urban outdoor environment and be aware that sculptures installed in the Park must meet safety requirements and be able to withstand the effects of weather and public use. Visiting the site will give applicants a clearer idea of the factors that effect installations at the Park and an overview of the facilities that the Park has to offer, including the tools and equipment available in the studio and the materials and resources available in Long Island City.

Artists can apply for one or more of the following exhibition categories:
·Spring Exhibition
·Emerging Artist Fellowship Program
·Open Space

If you are applying for more than one exhibition category, you only need to send one application package.

Grants and fellowships are not available to artists who are enrolled in a school, college or university program.

Spring Exhibition

From May through August 2008 Socrates Sculpture Park will present an exhibition based on interpretations and responses to the motivations, goals, realities, politics, and practices of recycling. This will be an expansive exhibition encompassing many perspectives about the concepts and methodologies of adaptive re-use, and will include projects that address the creative transformation of the by-products of production and consumption. Whether celebrating the global trend toward "green" or critically examining the motives and results of a world-wide focus on sustainability, the works in this exhibition will share a common theme of re-purposing wasted or cast off resources - both material and intangible.

For this exhibition, Socrates will provide artists with funding, administrative and technical assistance, a one to three month residency in the outdoor studio, and access to facilities, materials and equipment to create a new work - or will assist with shipping and rigging to place an already existing work - to be presented in the Park. The amount of financial support available to artists is contingent upon the requirements of their project and the funding that Socrates receives to support this exhibition.

Eligibility:

Participation in the spring exhibition is open to all artists, nationally and internationally, but Socrates will not provide any housing or transportation. Artists living outside New York will have to make their own living and travel arrangements.

Emerging Artist Fellowship Program

Fellowship artists are selected through an open application process. Proposals are reviewed by an advisory committee composed of past EAF recipients, prominent curators, artists, writers, and gallerists who work in collaboration with the Park's Executive Director to select the fellowship recipients. Socrates staff members then meet with the artists individually to discuss their proposal in greater detail and assist them with the development, engineering and fabrication of the project.

Emerging Artist Fellowship recipients are granted financial support in the amount of $5,000, a two to six month residency in the outdoor studio, and access to facilities, materials, equipment and technical assistance to create a work for the annual Emerging Artist Fellowship Exhibition (opening September 7, 2008). Fellows are also given the administrative assistance to do additional fundraising for their project, procure in-kind support and pursue future commissions, residencies and placement for their work.

Eligibility:


Fellowships are awarded to artists who are not yet well established, must be New York State residents and are in need of financial assistance.

Open Space

Socrates also produces single artist projects and collaborations that are presented as separate exhibitions throughout the year. Through the Open Space program, Socrates provides artists with funding, administrative and technical assistance, a one to six month residency in the outdoor studio, and access to facilities, materials and equipment to create a new work - or will assist with shipping and rigging to place an already existing work - for exhibition in the Park. Funding for this program varies from year to year and the amount of financial support available to artists is contingent upon the requirements of their project and the grants that Socrates receives to support the Open Space exhibitions.

Eligibility:

This program is open to all artists, nationally and internationally, but Socrates can not provide any housing or transportation. Artists living outside New York will have to make their own living and travel arrangements.

Information about Socrates Sculpture Park and application guidelines are now available on the web:
www.socratessculpturepark.org

SOCRATES SCULPTURE PARK
32-01 VERNON BOULEVARD (AT BROADWAY)
LONG ISLAND CITY, NY 11106
TEL: 718-956-1819 FAX: 718-626-1533
WWW.SOCRATESSCULPTUREPARK.ORG
EMAIL: INFO@SOCRATESSCULPTUREPARK.ORG

Friday, January 04, 2008

Arrow, Environmental Group, Launches New Website

From an email I received:

We have just designed a new website and I'm proud to share it with you as a start to a greener year! I hope you will visit the site soon to sign up to our e-mail list . Also, please take a minute to forward news of ARROWONLINE.ORG to other people you know who are concerned about our environment and want to take simple steps to make a real impact, both locally and for the whole planet.

We are creating the site to be an ongoing "bulletin board" of information about recycling venues, opportunities and ideas of how to reduce your waste, and up- to -date information about ways you can participate in improving the parks and open spaces in your community. We will also feature event and program information for ARROW, NYC Parks and Sanitation, and other information for Western Queens.

Thursday, January 03, 2008

The Butcher Block: Not Just for Meatheads

I have lived in the vicinity of my current apartment for nearly a decade, but like any neighborhood in New York City, I find myself constantly discovering new utopias almost weekly, with some literally around the corner. Back in 2003 there was a large fire in the neighborhood that burned down several storefronts and left the skies thick with black smoke. One of the places that burned was the famed "Butcher Block" Irish grocery store and Delicatessen that I had heard about for years, but never ventured into. Jokes abounded that the Butcher Block would be selling well done steaks on special for weeks to come, but being the righteous vegetarian I occasionally am, I thought "one less place selling dead animals, whew." Who knew I would be so wrong.

The Butcher Block reopened soon after at a larger location a block or so away and until two weeks ago I still had not ventured inside. Any place with a large wooden cartoon cut out of a man with a pig in a headlock outside does not necessarily signal "vegetarians welcome." However in an attempt to find some new obscure cheeses in our neighborhood, I suggested to Paul we check the place out to see what they had.

When we walked through the door, I needed to look behind me to double check that I hadn't just stepped off a Tarmac from an Aer Lingus flight. As far as I could tell, we had left Sunnyside and entered Ireland. The entrance of the store is filled with Irish/European candy and chips. I immediately scanned the shelf of Cadbury looking for something I devour in bulk every time I go to Europe, the elusive Bourneville bar.

Only distributed in Europe, this is the ultimate bar of dark chocolate one could ask for, and let me just say I've sampled a few. Cadbury has a "Royal Dark" bar they sell in America, but if you look at the back you will see it is made by Hershey and tastes like a watered down, sugared up, larger version of the real thing. In the past I have relied on European friends and a distributor Paul found online to occasionally get these treats. As Paul can testify, the minute we get off the plane in Europe I head to a drug store to buy some of these bars that literally leave me speechless.

I scan to the left, nothing. To the right, nothing. Then I look straight ahead and see an entire box of them just sitting there, European wrapper and all. Dramatic music cued up and credits rolled as The Bourneville Supremecy started up featuring me as the leading lady. I turned to Paul, and like Dorothy learning that all she had to do was click her heels to get what she want at the end of the Wizard of Oz, I said "I've had the power all along!" They were RIGHT HERE!!!

Paul wasn't listening to me though, as he too had discovered a plethora of his European dream foods, chewy candy without gelatin in them (gelatin's a vegetarian, no no) and enough different flavored chips to sink the island of Manhattan. While my weakness is chocolate, Paul is a big chip fan, and if you ever want experience a wide variety of chips lets just say the English and Irish have cornered the market.

There were bags of crisps in every style and taste imaginable. I look in Paul's arms and said, "Ummm are you buying Barbequed Chicken flavored potato chips?" He said, "Yeah, look at the bag it says suitable for vegetarians!" I looked and saw that these chicken chips were made with the use of "Flavourings" so how one attains chicken flavour without actually involving a chicken, is kinda beyond me, but he was enamored. They had steak chips, vinegar, salt, literally things you would never actually consider putting in a potato chip are available at this store. After trying the chicken chips, Paul does report that one shouldn't, perhaps, try to make potatoes taste like poultry as they were less than stellar.

We continued to roam finding all the products we adored while in Ireland. I think one of the most interesting things to do in another country is simply roam around the supermarket and look at all the cool packaging and options available elsewhere. The ability to do this in my very own neighborhood was something I was kicking myself for not discovering earlier.

Now I don't want to give the impression that the Butcher Block is some sort of vegetarian paradise. There is indeed more meat there than one can fathom, but my mind was so ecstatic about the Bourneville finding that I completely ignored that. We left the store and it's Irish accents behind and like I always do when getting my first Bourneville in Europe I rip open the package and pull out a little square like a heroine addict getting a fix. Paul asked, his mouth full of chewy gelatin-free candy, "Is it good?" and I raised my arm to tell him to stop speaking, this chocolate is so good it leaves me SPEECHLESS.

I still can't believe it has taken me this long to discover the magic of The Butcher Block, but since it did burn down once before I am savoring the Bourneville bars as if they are a secret stash smuggled directly from Ireland. I may be able to now get my supply without a passport, but I'm not taking any chances!