Archive for June, 2008
Posted in Uncategorized on June 26, 2008 by cody713
GO SKATE DAY
Posted in Uncategorized on June 19, 2008 by cody713SATURDAY JUNE 21
MEET AT THE BROOKLYN BANKS AT 1PM
CHOP SUMMER TIME
Posted in Uncategorized on June 17, 2008 by cody713Finally back in the kitchen!
In association with Art Production Fund
Chop Summers presents the 18th Restaurant every 18th of the month at 299 west Houston between Hudson and Greenwich
Please rsvp
$27 2 out of 3 courses with cocktail by Rita
Please bring your own drinks and join us this exclusive wednesday from 7 to 10
Love anne
RSVP- annebeuh@hotmail.com
Off Bowery
Posted in Off bowery on June 12, 2008 by cody713Tornado
Posted in Uncategorized on June 9, 2008 by cody713Yesterday my town got hit with a small tornado that did a hell of alot of damage. Me personally lost my electricity and water at 6 pm yesterday and it just turned back on at 7 pm today. There are broken down trees everywhere and its been pretty hectic. Besides that I’ve past my weekend at the beach everyday it’s been amazing, the heat is pretty ridiculous through. Anyway everything is back on and where all just chilling.
L.E.S FLICK
Posted in Uncategorized on June 4, 2008 by cody713Fri., June 13, 2008
Captured (Ben Solomon, Dan Levin and Jenner Furst | New York | 1:30:00)
World Premiere!
The amazing story of Clayton Patterson, prolific photo documentarian of the turbulent Lower East Side for 30 years.
Venue: on the roof of the Open Road Rooftop
Address: 350 Grand Street @ Essex (Lower East Side, Manhattan)
Directions: F/J/M/Z to Essex / Delancey
Rain: In the event of rain the show will be held indoors at the same location
8:00PM: Doors open
8:30PM: Sound Fix presents live music by A.R.E. Weapons (www.myspace.com/areweapons)
9:00PM: Films
11:30PM – 1:00AM: After Party: Open Bar at Fontana’s (105 Eldridge St @ Grand) Courtesy of Radeberger beer
Tickets: $9 at the door or online at www.rooftopfilms.com
Presentedin partnership with: IFC.com, New York magazine, IndiPix, ShootingPeople, Open Road New York & New Design High School
20years before there was YouTube, and Macaca, Critical Mass arrestvideos, and the RNC, Clayton Patterson was capturing video that exposedthe struggle between community activists and the often abusive NYPD. Hededicated his life to documenting the final era of raw creativity andlawlessness in New York City’s Lower East Side, a neighborhood famedfor art, music and revolutionary minds. Traversing the outside edge,he’s recorded this dark and colorful society–from drag and hardcore,heroin, homelessness, to political chaos and, ultimately,gentrification.
Inthe LES of the late 70’s and early 80’s, it seemed that it wasimpossible to take a boring photograph. Realizing this, Patterson vowedto himself not to miss a moment, and he was a ubiquitous presence onthe streets, in bars, and at parties, shooting literally hundreds ofthousands of photographs and countless videos that captured the essenceof the era in what might have been the most thrilling neighborhood onearth. For native New Yorkers, looking at his documents is like staringthrough a window to our own past, and the drugs, piercings, mohawks,kangols and graffiti on display are, in this context, not kitschy andnostalgic. Rather, they express the rich diversity of many littlecommunities living together in a troubled little niche of the city,long ago changed beyond recognition.




