Friday, November 5, 2010

Grey November Day Paves Way

So: Note to self, Dr Marks is ONLY in on Mondays!!

Well once again finding myself launched into "above 59th Street" territory, I unfolded my umbrella and cut across Central Park a recent weekday afternoon. What is it about CP that makes one lose one's bearings so readily? The only place on earth i feel dizzier is Paris!!
But...

A good New Yorker MUST have and maintain a perpetual sense of direction. And as a long time time New Yorker, I have prized my sense of awareness in a city fraught with calumny and disaster. There is little in life as delightful as strolling across Central Park on a grey Autumn afternoon. The light cresting over the edge of the island and peeking through the cracks of the buildings and trees, the leaves clinging yellow-orange in despair. Or was that merely the orange of the ING banner in preparation for the coming weekends marathon? Baltos looks particularly noble this time of year; eyes, ears, and snout all pointing upward toward the greying Winter sky.

What a delight to have divined a relatively straight path across Central Park and to find myself strolling down W 65 to the intersection of Broadway and Amsterdam. One is immediately struck by the the quality of light as you move towards the large intersection;, crisp, luminous, glowing. What one has is the magnificent view of the restructured Alice Tully Hally building at Lincoln Center.

I start thinking back to my last trip up to the LC
and realize that when last viewed by me this entire corner was boxed in! Yikes!!

I've been anxious to see the transformation that Diller Scofidio + Renfro were promising to this Rockefeller folly. What they have accomplished is nothing short of a miracle! The corner with Alice Tully Hall has had a face peel; the horrible marble that "united" Lincoln Center is gone, replaced by a vaulted glass front entrance. The box office and theater are opened up to the public and by cutting away the corner of the building it improves pedestrian traffic tenfold. And in a clever twist, the architects have taken that corner, flipped it over and placed it across the street in the completely redesigned Lincoln Theater plaza between W 65th Street and the Henry Moore reflecting pool. A restaurant called Lincoln is the occupant of this new addition and it reflects lovingly in the pool. As for food and service, I hope we can report to you on that in a future entry!!

Looking from across Broadway and Columbus you don't notice anything radically wrong with the plaza. And yet a dramatic shift has taken place. By extending the canopies of the State Theater and Avery Fisher Hall east with long beveled glass, audience members now have covered protection from the theater to their pick-up/drop-off area on the service road. The use of these enormous glass slabs act as an effective counterweight to the heavy pock-marked marble of the three main buildings on campus. So does the clever imposition of led lights built into the shallow set of steps leading up to plaza. Programmed to deliver building performance and event information, they are staggered in interesting effects that turn this electronic billboard into a very subtle light piece!

Another reason I felt an obligation to visit the plaza was because of the story I had read in the NY Times that the Johnson Fountain in the center of the plaza was going to be replaced and chronicled the typical knee-jerk reaction New Yorkers tend to have to change. I never had a deep attachment to that fountain. Let's hope that the new Revson Fountain in the Josie Robertson Plaza will provide more endearing memories than being chased off of it. It's a clever work. In homage to its earlier incarnation the fountain is black and round; but instead of being a black heavy monolith it is now a floating marble circle. The plumbing has been moved sub-plaza level and supplemented with lights and computer-timing to create a truly dramatic fountain. I loved it. I stood for over ten minutes watching it until my stomach demanded food!!
Feeling in a bountiful mood, I decided to pop over to check my boy Daniel Boulud's Bar Boulud. Happily still in business, I sat at the bar/communal table and enjoyed a prix fixe dinner in honor of LC's fabulous make-over!
Boulud is a master of figuring out the right food and ambiance for the right location. Bar Boulud has always been aimed to be high-middle brow, culture-loving, bistro-chic. With its leaning towards country cooking and charcuterie, it allows the plate to be adorned with something as simple as whole grain mustard, cornichon and picked onions for my starter of tangine d'agneau, a Moroccan-inspired terrine with lamb and sweet potatoes.
I was pleased that my waiter had steered my entree selection towards the schnitzel. Breaded and fried to perfection it was accompanied by Reisling-braised Napa cabbage and seasonal veg. It was rustic magic on a plate. And in usual Boulud style, the dessert was a tantalizing work of pastry art!
But the genuine pleasant surprise here, oenophiles, was the sommelier's special. Seems the maestro here offers magnum pours of fine french wines. The night I attended I was lucky enough to be the first to sample a 2000 Beaune 1er cru Domaine Champy. This was a magnificent French Burgundy, chewy, leggy with a lovely play on your tongue and palette. So lovely in fact that at even $25 a glass your dedicated reporter felt he had to have two!! And from the array of labels I recognized from earlier such pours, this dedicated reporter intends to visit again!!


Saturday, October 16, 2010

Search for Life on the UES

Last Tuesday I found myself beached on the Upper East Side, so I decided to take some time and re-explore the rarefied world of Madison Avenue.

With time to spare I was able to bag a table at my favorite eatery in this strata, Cafe Boulud. The room has been revamped AGAIN! The quasi-bar area that had replaced the original 'traditional' bar has been moved out all together and put it across the hall all to itself. This gives the room more table space. It maintains its calm neutral palette but has added some lovely warm dark wood that makes you want to linger over your after-coffee Madelaine longer than you should. I'm happy to report the kitchen and staff are still in peak form here. The Prix-Fixe lunch is a national treasure. I started with a potato-leek veloute with potato guaffette; a lovely warm blend of late season flavor. My skate with autumn veggies was a poem on my plate; the skate crispy yet moist, flavorful bits of cauliflower and turnip roasted and garnished with capers, bacon bits and one of the most amazing sauces I have ever eaten!! The Cafe has always made sure every course excels and the pastry chef continues the legacy with a milk chocolate parfait w/ candied hazelnuts.


After my four-star at two-star price lunch, I popped into the Gagosian Gallery on Madison Avenue to take in the new Gregory Crewdson show! Yes Gregory Crewdson at Gagosian on Madison!! These lovely delicate archival ink-jet prints were taken at the dilapidated Cinecitta Studio in Rome and are are as vapid and empty as the movie sets photographed. And there are a lot of them!! In search of an antidote I stumbled across the avenue to L+M Arts where I was told through the intercom that they were current installing a Damien Hirst Exhibit!! EGADS!!

Succor was found at Mitchell-Innes & Nash who have some small Lichtenstein drawings and studies up in their uptown sanctuary. Bright and concise, Lichtenstein continues to astound me with his proficiency!!


After that I took a more mercantile tact, enjoying the delicious treasures in Michael Kors and Caroline Herrara's windows. Then what should I stumble upon at the corner of E73 and Madison?

What happened to Soup Burg? The last refuge of the under-paid in a sea of high-priced sandwiches and coffee? GONE!!

"Changing... it keeps changing..." - Stephen Sondheim


I planned to stop in at the House of Lipshitz (aka Ralph Lauren) but the Baron of Bourgeois banality had the entire intersection of E 72nd and Madison cordoned off so the exterior of his latest fiefdom could be photographed! Ralph, honey it was Tuesday afternoon; where did you expect all the traffic to go to? Hmmmmm?

I was able to get into MALO where there were some elegant men's sweater. The teal blue zip-front cardigan I tried on was heaven and only $!,895!! Moving along quickly, I decided to see if anyone I know from my days in the basement at Giorgio Armani were still alive. Apparently not but I saw some amazing men's wool check pants for only $895!!

Praise __________!! Salih Salon is still in business. Salih is the only man I trust with my hair. This man can handle long men's hair and make it look great! I was fearful in these economic times if I would find him or not at 20 E 67 St, but its a testament to his skill with hair and his acumen for his clientele that I was able to book an appointment with him for the following Tuesday! Hail _______!!!

Feeling my oats at this point, I decided to check off a long-ago to-do list item and stop in at the Howard Greenberg Gallery in the Fuller Building at 57th & Madison to tell them to stop sending their dreck-mail to my mother. Which I did. Up on the walls were some black & white photographs by some man. Need I say more. If you are in this neighborhood though, stop in one floor below at the Bonni Benrubi Gallery where there is a great show up of Abelardo Morrell's work. GROUNDWORK features the artist's signature imagery (ie camera obscura, tent photos, piles of books) in large format color. The works are phenomenal as are the black and white cliche-verre prints on exhibit. BRAVO!!

Saturday, August 21, 2010

A GLEANER'S DINNER

My big news to report on cheap eats is Vanessa's Cafe on 220 E 14th St. This no ambiance Chinese bubble tea joint serves up an in-house special Wednesday to Friday after 3PM. An order of pan fried pork dumplings (6-7 in an order) is only $1.40, tax included. The dumplings are fresh, juicy and tasty and I find myself gravitating to this corner of the city when I am in 'town' just to take advantage of this bargain. CHECK IT OUT!!

On a more local level I'd like to welcome the opening of Wine Life SI. On the bustling hip strip of Van Duzer (at Beach), this wine shop offers up a tasty and provocative collection. The inventory may be 'limited' due to the size of the space but the selection is thoughtful and well-balanced. All the wines are excellent for their price point. Most wines are priced under $20!
Vee and staff have pointed me in the direction of more than one new vineyard with which I've been delightfully impressed. A few new favorites include the La Martina Malbec, the Chateau Brun Labrie Bordeaux (oh so drinkable), and an organic Kimmeridgien Chardonnay from France which has replaced Chateau Montelina's Chard as my new favor; no oak, crisp, a nice mix of mineral and fruit. Don't overlook the Primaterra Pinot Grigio; in regular or economic size its delightfully refreshing for a PG, not too acidic with some lovely peachy after-notes. And under $10 for 750ml!!





Friday, August 20, 2010

FILM FRIDAY

It s a big weekend for Film Forum this weekend, the home of the new the novel and the classic. A FILM UNFINISHED has been receiving rave reviews and THE RADIANT CHILD is still held over, but for me this weekend offers the chance to see Hitchcock's DIAL m FOR MURDER in 3-D. The master visual composer, you cannot truly appreciate this film unless its seen in its original 3-D release. Hitch shrewdly and expertly understood what the depth of field that 3-D could allowed him to add to his storytelling abilities and once you see the flawless Grace Kelly 'knife' her attacker in the back you'll understand what I mean. The courtroom scenes will make much more sense to the 2-D viewer as well. WORTH EVERY PENNY!!

Once again TCM's SUMMER UNDER THE STARS has boffled up its programming schedule; Katherine Hepburn is featured today but nothing of real substance and fun is scheduled until after midnight tonight: BRINGING UP BABY, THE PHILADELPHIA STORY & SUMMERTIME in a row. The last, David Lean's gorgeous ode to Venice and lost love is truly lost to most viewers at 4AM.
Paul Newman is featured on Saturday and they have a nice string of films at a reasonable hour; CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF at 1:45 PM is a watered down version of Tennessee William's stage play but feature A+ performances by Liz Taylor, Burl Ives, Judith Anderson and the always oily Jack Carson. This is followed by HUD (in glorious Black & White by James Wong Howe), HARPER, and THE STING. Once again in the 4AM slot another gem SWEET BIRD OF YOUTH with Geraldine Page!
John Mills is featured Sunday with one of my all-time favorite films HOBSON'S CHOICE at 8AM. Another early David Lean under-appreciated classic features Charles Laughton in the title role of Henry Horatio Hobson. Mills is delightfully naive as his talented boot hand, William Mossop and Brenda DeBanzie as Hobson's eldest daughter Maggie, determined not to remain a spinster. It also features a young Prunella Scales (of Fawlty Towers fame) as the youngest of Hobon';s daughters, Vicky.
Not to put down John Mills but why isnt Elizabeth Taylor, featured on Monday with a great list of films, scheduled on a weekend when most people have time to enjoy them? Hmmmmmm?

Friday, August 13, 2010

FILM FRIDAY

Since I don't get out to see first run films as much as I once did and I want to keep this blog active and alive, so I've decided I'll share some screening info and thoughts on some interesting films of note this weekend:


Mr. Death: The Rise and Fall of Fred A. Leuchter, Jr. (1999) Errol Morris' fascinating study of American Hubris is available on demand from Cinemax. Morris' distance and restraint allow us to follow this "high speed car crash" of a life. You can see it happening and you can't quite take your eyes off of it. Morris is clever enough to blink for us occasionally with quick flashes of black screen. Leuchter displays a classic case of American "naiveté" gone horribly horribly wrong. A beautifully photographed moral lesson I can watch over and over.

9 (2009) This post-apocalyptic animated film written (with Pamela Pettler) and directed by Shane Acker is ruuning in the current airing schedule of Cinemax (also on-demand). Grizzly but not grotesque, the struggle of nine fabric-beings surviving in a world devoid of humans and menaced by techno-nature that becomes more and more horrific certainly provides us with all the usual spills and chills of a fantasy-adventure. I felt the film has some "issues" with its conclusion, but the beauty of this creepy dark parable keeps you watching.Beautifully render.

Summer Under the Stars on TCM will be featuring the films of Gene Tierney and Margaret O'Brien this weekend. I've never considered myself a huge fan of either lady but at 1PM on Tierney Saturday they are airing "The Shanghai Gesture" (1941) a Von Sternberg kitsch potboiler too silly for words. If you can make it up until 3:30AM (shouldn't that be Margaret's day already?) they will air "Advise and Consent" (1962) Otto Preminger's all-star DC intrigue feature Charles Laughton's final screen appearance as an oily Southern Senator. It is also renown for having one of the first cinematic scenes in a gay bar!
Regarding Ms. O'Brien Sunday, TCM has scheduled an nice stretch of films from 12:30PM until 8PM, including her first film "Journey for Margaret" (1942), followed by "The Canterville Ghost" (1944) with Charles Laughton (did I miss Laughton Day?) at 2PM, "Meet Me in St. Louis"(1944) with Judy Garland and a wonderfully taciturn Margaret at 3:45. "Little Women" and "The Secret Garden" (both from 1949) follow but after Judy well......

Once more to CineMax, to Women's CineMax Channel who will be showing Hitchcock's "Shadow of a Doubt" early Monday at 1:15AM. This portrait of evil festering in the bosom of his naive family, features a wonderfully unctuous Joseph Cotten as visiting Uncle Charlie, the Merry Widow Killer, a wonderful cast of character actors and a screenplay by Thorton Wilder. But it's Teresa Wright's performance as Young Charlie, her uncle's namesake, who delivers a wonderfully realized portrait of a girl becoming a woman, dragged into adulthood with the realization of her uncle's heinous crimes. Take a nap, have some coffee and enjoy.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

AN OPEN LETTER TO CARRIE BRADSHAW

dear ms parker,

I hope you have a moment from your busy schedule as actress, arbiter of taste, purveyor of style, mother, wife and putzfrau to read my plea.

STOP THE MADNESS!!

Ms. Parker I am sure as a proud New Yorker you are thoroughly aware of this city's exuberant cultural life. In particular, New York City has, for over half a century, been a center of contemporary art. Although I am not familiar with your personal collection and your particular tastes and preferences, I must tell you that your time, money and efforts would be better spent in the simple supportive act of purchasing artworks you like and providing a lively for a genuine “next great artist".

if the title of your show weren't repulsive enough, the idea of imposing a reality show competitiveness to a field that is so ruthlessly competitive and cut-throat has totally backfired.
Whereas chefs, fashion designers and hair stylists MUST continue to work and produce to survive, such a small percentage of visual artists make their livelihood through their work that the artist has the ability to not work.
Isn't it better to wait two weeks, two months, two years even in order to produce a work that is genuine in its inception and completion? I admit having a deadline has been able to help complete tasks and work I'm doing in a timely manner, but many the deadline has come and gone before because it was "just not right".

issues of performing under time restraints aside, the idea of throwing a group of artists into a studio together and giving them specific projects or challenges is merely a high-end version of grad school. all reality shows are simulacrums of high school. you have broken this cardinal rule, intently I'm sure. not everyone has gone to grad school, let alone experienced the petty insincerity of the candidates for an MFA.

and what will be come of this new "great artist"? well from eight seasons of Project Runway has anyone become the next Mark Jacobs? Where does the winner of Top Chef season 5 work now?
I wish the finalists all the best in their final show. they are all interesting talent artists. And after you have publicly embarrassed, shamed and hurt two of the three of them, I kneel hope and pray we will not be made to see you drag the fine arts into the ring for mud wrestling.

thank you

Reuben Sandwich
Minnie Van Driver
Jonathan Leiter

Thursday, April 15, 2010

A STROLL THROUGH CHELSEA

Since our invitation to a studio visit to the Upper East Side was rescinded we strolled the Hi-Line then took in some art. Here's what we saw:


JANET CARDIFF & GEORGE BURES MILLER @ LUHRING AUGUSTINE GALLERY -Fabulous fun. Cardiff and Miller continue to produce smart works that demand the visitor's attention. Aural and narrative exploration are the words-dejour here. Three 'antique' black telephones adorn the wall when you enter the gallery. Definitely sit in on the bleary dream Cardiff recounts on the rightmost of the three. Mid-Gallery contains The Carnie, a large loud carousel with two small children floating above it. Make your way through as quickly as you can and get your behind into the last gallery which contains a lovely old wooden library filing cabinet. The piece is called "The Cabinet of Curiousness". Open a drawer and a sound or a voice or piece of music emerges from the drawer. Drawers can be opened and closed in random order which made for great viewer interaction. This piece drew me in so deeply and contentedly that i never listened to the final telephone pieces. On my next visit, because I intend to come back!
I would love to concertize on this instrument!! GO NOW!!
Up until May 1, 2010 - DO MOT MISS! TOTO AND I BOTH SAY GO!!




URSULA VON RYDINGSVARD @ GALERIE LELONG - Large, raw wooden sculptures. A variety of inside-outside vessel objects are crafted with the artist's usual attention to rough-hewn detail. Impressive in a Teutonic-fetish way. Ouch!!






Up until May 1, 2010 - WORTH A LOOK!




DONALD BAECHLER @ CHEIM & READ - Baechler continues to institutionalize his naïf style. Large flowers, soccer balls and skulls float on enormous tarps of spattered paint and newsprint. Theses pieces are big! And absolutely nothing new.


Up until MARCH 27, 2010 - IF YOU MUST. DEFINITELY FOR PAINTHEADS!!




CATHERINE OPIE  @ GLADSTONE GALLERY- Beautiful butch lesbians. Opie's color work is rich and straightforward. Her small black and white are fiercely fetishistic and don't really dull their porno appeal. Opie is highly capable and highly over-rated.
Up until April 24, 2010 - HOT HOT HOT??


Also seen:



APRIL ROSS-HO:  "Somebody stop me" @ MITCHELL-INNES & NASH- A nice New York debut by this California based artist. Very girly, very gold. My hat is off to anyone who makes their own pegboard! And we love the enormous inverted gold clown pin and gold chain ornaments. WORTH A LOOK.


ANDRE BUTZER: "Nicht fürchten! Don´t be scared!" @ METRO PICTURES GALLERY - Large, thick lavish paintings. Messy and derivative. Standouts are Grablegung von Winnie Puh (Entombment of Winnie the Pooh) and Nicht fürchten! (3) (Don't be Scared! (3))!! WORTH A WALK-THRU.


WES LANG: "Smile, It's a Grey Day: @ ZIEHERSMITH GALLERY - More paintings, large and small. Memento Mori moments galore. The smaller works are more successful, especially the 'black' paintings, simpler and more evocative. FLIP A COIN.

WILHELM SASNAL @ ANTON KERN GALLERY - A talented Polish painter working in the German School of Everystyle. Dim, wishy-washy and uninspiring. IF YOU MUST.


BARBARA KRUGER @ MARY BOONE GALLERY - A large scale multichannel video of humorless humor "artfully" projected. SKIP IT.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

A Stroll Through Chelsea

While all the Hottentots were busy with the Armory Show and its offshoots, Toto and I took time to take in a few shows in Chelsea. Here's what we saw:
















KEN PRICE @ MATTHEW MARKS GALLERY - Fun, fun, fun. These witty ceramic works are finished with gorgeous painted surfaces that are channeling the spirit and voluptuousness of Austrian glass from the turn of the last century. We loved the deflated Macy's Thanksgiving Day float in luminous gold as we entered the front door and continued through the entire exhibit. A favorite: the tubular 360 tube in Loetz peacock blue!


Up until April 17, 2010 - VERY FUN! TOTO AND I BOTH SAY GO!!




JAN DIBBETS @ GLADSTONE GALLERY - Ellsworth Kelly meets Todd Hido. Deceptively simple photographs are juxtaposed at right-angles which combine the horizon lines contained in both photos. Varied photo sizes as well as placement on the larger paper field add enough variety to the mix while a perimeter line in graphite unite them. Fanciful and not unpleasant.


Up until January 16, 2010 - WORTH A LOOK!




BILL JENSEN @ CHEIM & READ - An 80's stalwart re-emerges as an apostle of abstract painting. Jensen has refined his palette and style to his benefit. His surfaces are less tortured then they once were and his color choices have brightened. Compact and well composed, many of these paintings are truly delightful. The show also features many black & white drawings that seem to reflect the artist's study of Chinese Philosophy, the escape hatch for most American Abstract Painters today.


Up until MARCH 27, 2010 - I APPRECIATED THE EFFORT MORE THAN TOTO! DEFINITELY FOR DIE-HARD PAINTHEADS!!



JOE BRADLEY & CHRIS MARCH @ MITCHELL-INNES & NASH - This two-man show juxtaposes the delicious painterly excesses of our city's foremost painters, Mr. March, with an acolyte of the Minimalist school, Mr. Bradley. The two play off each other well displaying a nice study in painterly composition and construction! Mr. March in particular shines with large exuberant paintings.


Up until March 27, 2010 - DON'T MISS!!

 
Also seen:


WOLFGANG TILLMANS @ ANDREA ROSEN GALLERY - A sprawling photographic installation of Mr. Tillmans’ snapshots. I think Mr. Tillmans may have found his 'happy medium' in the large-scale photos in the smaller second gallery. These large vertical works seem to work best for his images. Lesson learnt, Mr. Tillmans? Let's hope so. WORTH A QUICK PEEK.


GARY SIMMONS @ METRO PICTURES GALLERY - These white on black images of movie palaces and drive-ins are nicely rendered and executed. The enormous wall drawing in the back gallery is a tour-de-force!! MAKE A WALK-THRU.


CANDIDA HOFER @ SONNABEND - More of the usual from Empress of the Interior. Cold and a bit more washed-out than usual. The standout image is in the rear gallery of the a wonderfully rococo interior littered with empty Phillip Stark Ghost Chairs. HEAD STRAIGHT TO THE BACK AND LOOK RIGHT. THEN LEAVE.


TONY SMITH @ GAGOSIAN GALLERY - A blue-chip show of America's grandfather of abstract sculpture. Simple, direct and nicely curated. IF YOU MUST.


PETER HALLEY @ MARY BOONE GALLERY - More Cells and Conduits in 80's day-glo and glitter. Does anyone still buy these? Does anyone still buy this? Hello Mr. Halley? 1988 is calling; it wants its hair scrunchy back. SKIP IT.