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Bumblings Of Miss Button

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Bumblings Of Miss Button

Tag Archives: NYC

Swinging in the City

12 Saturday Jun 2010

Posted by sarabutton in Uncategorized

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NYC

This Thursday night, I went lindy hopping. I had been trying to find a good place to go, because when I had done some preliminary searches, there were so many options that it was hard to figure out exactly where would be a good venue. Some friends of a friend told me that everyone goes to the Frim Fram Jam on Thursdays. So, I planned out an evening: dinner with a friend, then meet up with another friend to get some dancing in.

I met up with a friend from early on in college and we ate at La Carbonara on 14th & 7th. It was a wonderful dinner with wonderful company and I had a wonderful time. Wonderful, wonderful, wonderful. (For those curious: we split a buffalo mozzarella appetizer, and I had the papardelle with bolognese sauce.) Afterward, I changed into a flippy polka dot skirt and grabbed my new Aris Allens and went to meet Paige. We found the place and followed the music. This is the part where I revel in the openness and joy that is dance.

One of the aspects of swing dance that was so attractive to me years ago when I started was how its fundamentals are more about expression, about connection between partner and sound, not about whether someone is the best dancer ever or if they’re going to win any competitions. Anyway, the jam was a blast. It was packed, and after one song everyone was drenched, but it didn’t matter. There was a very diverse crowd there, which was fun. Beginners and experts, college students and retirees, and all different colors. I had a few exceptionally great dances with some exceptional leads, but overall I just enjoyed the knowledge that I can go to any city in the world, find a place to swing dance, and it will feel like coming home.

Stranded

12 Saturday Jun 2010

Posted by sarabutton in Uncategorized

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NYC

Thursday I had the day entirely to myself, as my family headed out to the opening of my uncle’s building in Boston. I headed out around 12:30 and made my way to one of the sweetest bookstores ever. Strand Bookstore claims to have 18 miles of books. You can purchase books by the yard, the foot, leather-bound books, rare books, first editions, you name it, they’ve got it.

I love bookstores. I could have spent all day there, except for the fact that, unlike Barnes & Noble or Portland’s Powell’s Books, Strand has fewer places to sit and devour books other than the floor. Even though I was there on a Thursday afternoon, the place was packed. Three floors of books, books, books, some brand new and some traded in. I wandered through and put 6 or 7 books in my shopping bag when I realized that was an unrealistic number to schlep back home. So, I opted for Pride & Prejudice, which I have never read and would like to, if only so I can read the zombie version. $6 new. I also bought A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier by Ishmael Beah. After almost 2 hours of browsing and wishing I had limitless money and space to buy and transport everything I saw, I headed out, passed through Union Square Park and then sat in Madison Square Park briefly to read. Then it started to rain.

While we’re on the subject of reading, I have to say: I have started neither of the books I bought, due to the addiction I have acquired to the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series. My original plan had been to go to the Strand, grab one of the Percy Jackson books (I believe I was on book 2, The Sea of Monsters), sit and read until I finished it. However, due to lack of totally nonobtrusive reading space, I decided against it. I want to do a little free publicity for that series, though. It is awesome. Seriously. I wish I had written it. Although they’re geared for middle schoolers, mostly, the books are well written and super fun if you have any interest whatsoever in Greek/Roman mythology. A few of my students this semester knew about some obscure mythological monsters thanks to this series, so I really owe a thank you to the series’ author, Rick Riordan, for writing such a brilliant series. I just wish I had had the idea first. 🙂

Fun at F.A.O.

09 Wednesday Jun 2010

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NYC

Yesterday was another stunning day. I went to Central Park, enjoyed a book, picnicked, marveled at the designs at the Cooper-Hewitt (a post for another day), got gelato with my cousin and walked 70 blocks back home. Our walk back to the apartment had a couple detours, the longest of which was an almost hour-long jaunt into the world-famous toy store, F.A.O. Schwarz. The place has been redone in the past few years, and in 2009 it was bought out by Toys ‘R’ Us. It is the country’s oldest toy store. It’s more modern, more sleek, but still chock-full of amazing toys: walls of stuffed animals, $1,000 plush wildlife (me as a scary bear), candy (this soldier is built from jelly beans) and more dominate the first floor. There’s even a muppet workshop where you can DESIGN YOUR OWN MUPPET. It can look like this. Ok, so it’s $130, but how awesome is that!?

Upstairs, there was an entire Barbie section, where it had vintage Barbies, but also even a little runway with Barbies on it. A wall of Playmobil almost gave me a coronary, I was so excited. Lego (Chewbacca made of Lego!) and books and Harry Potter products, oh my! Plus, the big piano, made famous from the movie, Big, is upstairs. You have to wait in line and you have a few minutes to play on it–we saw a gaggle of toddlers running around on it, and then a trio of young guys played the theme song to “Rugrats.” Everyone seems to find their inner child for the time they spend in FAO Schwarz.

You can see we had a fun time. Sorry the photos are poor, I took them from my phone.

Dia:Beacon

07 Monday Jun 2010

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NYC

Opened in May 2003, the space is dedicated to displaying contemporary artwork from the 1960s-present day, much of which would not be able to fit into a conventional museum due to its size or nature. Artists have entire galleries devoted to their work, giving the collections a sense of cohesion that is often lacking when one sees a single painting or piece by an artist that perhaps was not meant to stand alone.

I am the first one to admit that I am not the biggest contemporary art buff. As a sophomore in college, I took a contemporary art survey course as a requirement for my minor. Although I did not always enjoy the experience of all the pieces from our modern world, I enjoyed learning about them, the artist’s intentions, and the discussion most of the work provoked. I found this still to be true upon my visit to Dia:Beacon. Luckily, I was accompanied by my wonderfully interesting and intelligent family members, all of whom were happy to engage in such discourse (and fielding questions of mine, like, “So…what’s the point of that?”)

There is no way that I could successfully take you through the experience I had at Dia:Beacon in a single blog post. Instead, I will write about what I found most interesting. You’ll have to go visit for yourself and see what you think of everything else.

Richard Serra

You may be familiar with Richard Serra’s minimalist sculptures as part of the process art movement. As a young man working his way through school, Serra worked in steel mills, and his art directly shows this influence. One of the first rooms in the Dia exhibits a huge Serra piece, whose title I didn’t write down. I immediately thought of the prow of a ship, and was pleased to discover that he even uses the same materials as ship builders when sculpting his work. On a lower level of the museum is a series of Serra pieces: enormous metal creations the color of rust, one a spiral labyrinth, one an almost closed circle with another almost closed circle within. They had to be 15 feet tall. We walked inside them, playing with the sound of a stomping foot in the middle of one and comparing to see if it sounded different in the next. Walking through the spiral, sometimes I felt a claustrophobia from the sloping edges, others an openness. This play with the senses—in this case, an absence or mutation of personal space—seemed to me to be a quintessential factor in Serra’s work. Not only did he engage my eyes, he engaged my ears and even my physical awareness. It was one of the few times I’ve felt like I’ve experienced art, and I rather liked it.

Fred Sandback

My uncle said Sandback was one of his favorites at the museum. At first glance, I barely realized it was an art piece: a piece of string creating a large rectangle from floor to ceiling. First instincts flared with cynicism, but as soon as I started looking at the rest of the sculptures, all made of nylon yarn or a similar medium, I started enjoying their simplicity and whimsy. They reminded me, too, of a social experiment. In seeing what is essentially a box created from the planes of the yarn, floating in mid-air or randomly in the center of a room, I felt as if I shouldn’t walk over the yarn or swipe my hand through the air above it, as if it were some sort of laser-triggered alarm system from the movies. By creating space that is sort of filled, and sort of not, I felt that Sandback was playing with my physical experience, as well as my adherence to invisible spatial rules. It was odd, but pretty neat.

Sol LeWitt

This guy gave me a lot of trouble. I guess that makes sense, since he’s a Conceptual artist, which arguably requires a bit more thinking than average. Sol LeWitt basically writes out directions about how to create a piece, and then assistants create it (the pieces we saw were wall drawings, although he is the author of many 3-d pieces, as well). Because every person is different, each of his works is manifested uniquely, too. Most of what we saw of his at Dia was geometrical in some way, but not all. The biggest issue I had in understanding this was how it’s still considered a Sol LeWitt piece if he is not the one physically making it. It’s his, I guess, in that it is his concept. The product might be different from piece to piece, from execution to execution of instructions, but that makes it interesting and certainly one-of-a-kind.

Last, but not least…

On Kawara

This gallery may have been my favorite. I can’t pinpoint why, but somehow the precision, the concern with time, and the multinational/multitemporal parts of it spoke to me. On Kawara’s Today Series is a project he started in the 1960’s wherein he would paint a canvas with the date on which he was painting, in the language and format of the country where he was. If he did not finish the canvas by midnight that night, he would destroy it. Sometimes he makes 2. Often he makes 0. The canvases had to be one of 8 predetermined sizes, all with a horizontal orientation. Kawara mixes his paint daily, so it is fresh. Sometimes the backgrounds are black. Sometimes they are a dark navy. The font is almost always the same, originally a version of Gill sans but eventually making its way to Futura. Each date has an accompanying handmade cardboard box that houses a clipping from the painting’s town and date, but these are not always displayed (in fact, they were not when we were there).

I think part of what I liked about this series is that, even though the day Kawara painted may not have been meaningful to him, that date could be meaningful to a viewer. We wake up each day never knowing what will happen, and perhaps on some of the days he painted, that date became an important part of world history. But either way, it became an important part of someone’s history. It is something about that potential connectedness that I like. Plus, I’m a sucker for calendars.

*

Before I leave you to contemplate the value of string sculptures and artistic time capsules, I want to say one very cool thing about the museum’s space: it used to be a Nabisco box printing building. That might sound strange, but after a renovation guided by artist Robert Irwin, the facility is bursting with open space, natural light (only natural light for all the artwork! Except in the basement) and an overall sense of tranquility. No obtrusive explanations all over the walls. Just the artist’s name and a folder with laminated explanations of the artwork. It felt easier to appreciate the art when I didn’t feel stressed about reading every title and every placard, as I often do in museums.

Beauty in the Countryside

07 Monday Jun 2010

Posted by sarabutton in Bumbling Bites

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food, NYC


On Friday evening around 8ish we headed up to Dutchess County, where my aunt and uncle own a little house. It was built in the very early 19th century (1802, I think) and sits quietly in a beautiful, green chunk of land, replete with a stream, hammock, outdoor shower, honeysuckle, lupines, peonies and a mostly wrapped-around porch. Our late arrival precluded us from eating dinner at a reasonable hour, so we threw together a nice, impromptu carbonara:

Country Carbonara

8 egg yolks
1 c. Romano cheese (instead of parmesan)
1-2 c milk (instead of cream, we didn’t have any)
1 clove garlic
salt
pepper
1 package bacon
16 oz pasta.

Combine the eggs, cheese, milk, garlic, salt and pepper in a bowl. Separately, cook the bacon until it is crisp. Boil the pasta, and when it has finished being strained, pour the bowl contents and bacon on top. Toss, toss, toss! The heat from the pasta will cook the eggs. This version had a great taste, was really rich and filling, and one could argue, was possibly lower in fat since we skipped the cream. Yum!

What I enjoyed so much about this weekend getaway—other than the wonderful company—was the weather. Saturday was muggy and warm, but not oppressive. I read Love’s Labours Lost in the hammock until we left for other outings. In the background, I could hear the nearby stream singing happily away.

That evening, we watched a lightning storm. It poured intermittently during the night, and Sunday morning greeted us with a gray, breezy sky. However, it was just cool enough to sit on the porch and read the newspaper and be comfortable with a blanket. Beautiful!

The radio warned us of hail and tornadoes as we approached the city on the drive home. For five minutes of our drive, we were concerned: the rain was so torrential it was difficult to see. A few miles later, though, it was as if there had been no storm. Despite all the warnings, it was blue skies when we got back into the city and today is absolutely perfect.

Day One

04 Friday Jun 2010

Posted by sarabutton in Uncategorized

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NYC

Last night we convened for a late dinner and ordered in from New York Burger Co. The Shake Shack’s line was too long, but I’m sure we’ll go there soon. Sweet aspect to their website: The Shack Cam, that shows you a live feed of the line at their Madison Square Park location so you can plan accordingly (or prepare yourself for a Disneyland line for carnivores). The burger was quite tasty; the bun wasn’t my favorite ever, but overall it was an extremely satisfying meal.

This morning I woke up around 7 and a couple hours later, Thea and I were out and about. We ran to CVS, got a late breakfast at the cafe downstairs and made our way to a nearby nail salon. The prices were good for a mani-pedi, and I was in pretty bad need for a new color, with all the sandal wearing I’d been doing. I figured that New York City is not the place to look too down and out, so I chose a funky, bold blue that matched my sundress and went for it. Overall, the place was great—it was a cheap nail salon, but without the reekage of chemicals that one often finds in places like that. The woman helping me was very sweet; I asked her where she was from, and it turned out she was Mexican, so for the rest of the hour I tried my best to revitalize my Spanish. I have been mourning the loss of my Spanish since 2007 when Italy ruined me. These days, instead of the rather good Spanish spoke in the days of yore, I have to translate from English to Italian and then to shoddy Spanish. Es muy mal. But she was very patient, and we managed to chat about everything from Arizona’s recent immigration psychosis to whether I had ever dated a Mexican boy. I hope I can go back there once more before I leave, perhaps for a goodbye mani-pedi.

On to our cultural exploits (and imagine, it’s barely 2pm!): Thea and I walked just a couple blocks over to FIT—the Fashion Institute of Technology —a renowned fashion school, alma mater to alumni like Calvin Klein. We went to their museum. Its latest exhibit is called Eco-Fashion: Going Green (free! Runs until November! Check it out!)

Basically the exhibit displays current looks by designers who utilize eco-friendly resources, and then presents the chronological history of fashion’s eco-friendly designs, as well as its faux pas, in relationship to modern standards. They particularly focus on 6 elements of sustainability: recycling materials, material origins, textile dyeing and production, craftsmanship quality and labor practices. For example, we discover which designers were innovative in their treatment of workers: paid vacation and coffee breaks were absolutely NOT the norm until someone made it that way! Fur makes a lot of appearances, as well as some interesting uses of reptile skin (read: alligator purse. With the alligator head still attached.) But older clothes from the 19th century did have a lot of sustainable elements to them. It wasn’t until the 20th century that clothes were mass produced in the way they are now, and so in the 18th and 19th century we see the emphasis of building clothes to last. Now, a lot of designers are more concerned not only with fair labor practices but with using specific materials whose production isn’t harmful to the environment. Kudos!

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