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Andy Warhol at the Whitney: Why it Matters

If you haven’t seen Andy Warhol at the Whitney Museum yet, make sure you get there before it ends on March 31. You have plenty of time, so no excuses. Andy Warhol–From A to B and Back Again includes over 350 works, and yes, the soup cans are present and accounted for. It is, according to the museum, the “first major reassessment of his work in thirty years.”

Andy Warhol at the Whitney
Andy Warhol at the Whitney

I think it’s safe to assume that most people in the world are familiar with Andy’s work. I mean, you’d really have to be living under a rock not to be. Soup cans and coke bottles and portraits of Liz, Marilyn, Liza–icons all, captured by an icon. These images are some of the most recognizable in pop culture. Of course, just because they are universally known, does not mean they are universally loved. I know many people who don’t LOVE Andy Warhol. And, I know some people who actively dislike Andy Warhol. “I mean, it’s just a bunch of Brillo boxes,” was a thing I heard at the exhibit (standing in front of the Brillo boxes). To each his own, especially when it comes to art. Full disclosure: I love the guy. He’s a disruptor. A troublemaker. I love troublemakers.

Andy Warhol at the Whitney
Portraits by Andy Warhol at the Whitney

I’m not going to give you a screed on Warhol’s contribution to art and culture. Like the saying goes, I’m no art critic but I know what I like. But whether you love him or hate him, this exhibit is worth seeing. Why? Well for one thing, it’s rare to see this volume of work in one place, spanning so much time. The scale of the exhibit is staggering. It includes everything from his earliest commercial work, Interview magazine, film and television projects, early silk screen experiments, private sketches, and ephemera, to collaborative work with Jean-Michel Basquiat, and a huge collection of commissioned portraits. It’s exhausting to view, just imagine what it must have been like inside his head.

Andy Warhol at the Whitney
Mao Tse Tung, Andy Warhol

If you think you know Warhol, seeing the work all together like this will give you a new appreciation. If you dislike Warhol, you may find yourself inspired by the sheer voluminous output. And if you are one of those people who thinks that all he did was reproduce soup can labels, you may find yourself reevaluating your opinion. Photographs of the silkscreened flowers or the gigantic Mao Tse Tung don’t show you how “painterly” these works are. Getting up close to the lovely and delicate shoe portraits is a rare treat. (I COVET the Diana Vreeland shoe drawing.) The line drawings, some never before seen by the public, are touching and intimate.

Andy Warhol at the Whitney
Diana Vreeland’s shoe, Andy Warhol

It’s true, no matter how you feel about him, that Andy Warhol had a huge impact on art, celebrity, society, music, print media–the list goes on and on. And for that reason alone, the exhibit is a must. But it is the personal moments that most resonate–a simple self-portrait, the portrait of his mother, Julia Warhola, the Time Capsule, the special projects and collaborations that give you a small window into the artist’s interior life. Those are the moments most valuable to me. Go. Meet the artist. He’s an interesting fellow.

But those soup cans, though.

Look for my weekly blogpost, THOUGHT PATTERNS, here, and follow me on Instagram @debmartinnyc 

 

 

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Entertainment Featured NYC Real Estate

The Real New York: Kipton Cronkite

Over the past twelve months, I’ve traveled over 100,000 miles to experience the best of both worlds – New York and Los Angeles. The question that gets asked time and time again – do you like NY or LA better? Take it one step further, and I get asked to choose one. My answer is why do I have to choose one when I can have both?  Here’s a look into why I chose to live a bi-coastal lifestyle and how I appreciate both cities even more…


Weather

If you are like me, you are inspired and energized by sunshine, warm weather, endless scenery, and the water. Los Angeles has perfect weather all year round and the backdrop doesn’t hurt either. Growing up, I was an avid skier and would look forward to cold winters where I could do as many runs in a day as possible. At this point in my personal and professional life, I feel more secure spending more free time around warmth and nature, oceans and beach, and the sunshine and mountains. It doesn’t negate the fact that I look forward to the change of seasons in New York (this is refreshing, and also inspiring) to acknowledge and accept changes in life are marked by the changes in seasons. One of my favorite things to do is to drive upstate New York in mid-October to see the leaves changing from brown, to red and orange. Walking around a lake with a light breeze, warmed by a light jacket and holding a hot cup of tea reminds me to appreciate the beauty around us.  So why not have a little taste of both the NY and LA lifestyles?

 

Food

Each time I land in LA, I hear of a new restaurant opening. Each with a different theme, unique menu, menu items inspired by the surroundings, and the ambiance that can’t be beaten. Depending on my mood, I can choose to sit among the Hollywood elite at the Sunset Tower Hotel or be surrounded by emerging artists at Broken Spanish in downtown LA. LA dining offers everything – from vegetarian to fine cuisine, farm-to-table ingredients combining with expansive wine and cocktail offerings. New York, on the other hand, offers solid classic options. With a few exceptions, my favorite restaurants are still some of the most sought-after locations in Manhattan: Nobu Fifty Seven, Soho House, Le Bilboquet and Gramercy Tavern. I value the elegance and consistency that these restaurants are known for (with menu items that stand the test of time). From Williamsburg to the Upper East Side, the New York food scene is in a league of its own. So why not enjoy the best of both worlds?

 

Balance

A priority of my bi-coastal life is achieving a healthy balance. Not just a work/life balance, but a balance that promotes the unity for my mind, body, and soul. Having the opportunity to experience the addictive energy of New York while accessing the softer-flowing vibes of LA, is truly an amazing way to live. Angelenos are incredibly focused on their structured workouts and maintaining a healthy lifestyle. It’s normal to many to wear gym clothes during meetings and then go straight to a yoga class after work. In LA, some even base their days around their workouts which I find quite refreshing.By contrast in New York, many struggle to find time to leave the office early enough to make it to the gym before a work or social engagement. In my opinion, LA wins over NY for a healthier mind/body balance.

 

Art 

The best aspect of bi-coastal living is the variety of art. Although New York and Los Angeles have distinct advantages around art and culture, I enjoy the contrast of how I feel in both cities. The changing environments all challenge and add value to the selection of art for my projects. Some of my museums are: The Whitney Museum of Art in New York, The Getty in Malibu, The Broad downtown LA and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NY.  Yes, art is personal to each of us but both cities offer stellar examples: from ancient art to contemporary art. Leading a bi-coastal lifestyle has also given me the ability to select my favorite pieces of both cities and create a new identity for myself; thus growing the scope of my art advisory services.More than ever before, I now am able to appreciate the contrast in both coasts while ushering in a brighter light, one which positively carries through everything I do.

So, when asked to choose one city or defend one, I decline. LA and NY both have so much to offer. My goal is to continue discovering the best parts of each coast in order to create the most rewarding bi-coastal lifestyle I can.

 

By bridging the worlds of art and luxury real estate, Kipton Cronkite pioneers art advisory and staging services for real estate and hospitality through bespoke collaborations with established and emerging contemporary artists. His services are highly sought after by developers seeking to elevate the value of their offerings and private individuals looking to build art collections in their homes.

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Uncategorized

A chat with Kahina Giving Beauty’s Katharine L’Heureux

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7BwPpa3LT_U

Katharine L’Heureux, Founder of Kahina Giving Beauty, has dedicated her career to building sustainable businesses around luxury.

After discovering argan oil on her first of many trips to Morocco, Katharine decided to create a niche beauty brand with Kahina Giving Beauty, not just offering organic products to women in Lower Manhattan and across the United States. In doing so, she provides much needed job opportunities for women in Morocco who help produce the sustainably-sourced and packaged products.

“As I came to know and appreciate the Berber women, she decided that a cornerstone of the Kahina brand would be giving back to them to elevate them and their communities,” she said.

The Downtown Chelsea resident frequently visits the Moroccan argan cooperatives from which the oil is sourced to ensure the fair and proper treatment of the Berber women who extract it. She also works with suppliers online pharmacy and local social activists to identify these women’s most urgent needs in order to give back to them in a way that directly improves their lives and communities.

For the Berber women who inhabit the argan forest in the Southwest of Morocco, the hard work of extracting argan oil offers them their only means of financial and social independence. In collaboration with cooperatives and local NGOs (non-government organizations), Kahina Giving Beauty works to enhance the quality of life for these women and their communities by supporting local educational, environmental, agricultural and clean water initiatives.

Kahina Giving Beauty donates 1% of its annual revenue to organizations that directly benefit the women in the South of Morocco and their families; Education For All in Morocco (EFA) an organization that provides safe boarding homes for girls so that they can continue their education beyond elementary school, and The High Atlas Foundation, which raises money for a number of regional initiatives including delivering clean drinking water to remote villages in the High Atlas Mountains, creating jobs and protecting the environment by planting community-run nurseries in rural Morocco.

“I was influenced early on by being raised on a vineyard in the Napa Valley to understand that products are only as good as the quality of ingredients that go into them,” she said. “The highest quality ingredients typically come from small family farms, where there is a measure of control over, and pride in, the end result.”

As for the products themselves, Kahina combines time-tested organic and natural ingredients with modern technology to provide effective formulations and packages them for the discerning customer, going beyond Fair Trade requirements and donating an additional percentage of our revenue to support the Berber women of Morocco who crack the nuts for the argan oil.

Standouts include pure Argan Oil, which is rich in vitamin E and essential fatty acids which works on contact to moisturize, reduce inflammation, minimize fine lines, improve skin tone and protect skin from environmental factors that cause signs of aging. There’s also the unique Moroccan Rose Beldi Soap, a skin cleansing and softening treatment that serves as a key element in the traditional purification experience known as the hammam in Morocco. The gel-like soap is made from saponified olive oil and lightly scented with Eucalyptus Oil. Used as a body mask to soften skin and followed by massage with the traditional “kessa”, a rough mitt, this luxurious treatment cleanses and exfoliates leaving your skin detoxified and silky smooth.

Finally, the 15-minute Moisture Mask helps create a refined and rejuvenated complexion. An homage to Katharine’s wine country roots and her “first skincare love”, argan oil, extracts from red wine grapes, argan oil and prickly pear seed oil provide essential fatty acids and potent antioxidants to neutralize free radicals that contribute to signs of aging. Avena Strigosa combined with a naturally occurring unique sugar compound work to increase skin’s water reserves to plump skin and improve barrier function, while mushroom extract soothes skin.

When she’s not in Morocco, the downtown resident loves frequenting Murray’s Cheese, KISAN on Green Street for Icelandic fashion concepts, grabbing dinner at Cherche Midi on the Bowery, and taking walks along The High Line to take in the landscape and clear her head. After that, she’ll most likely stroll into the Whitney Museum or Aedes Perfumery on Greenwich Avenue.

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Culture Events Living

GOGO THIS WEEK FOR DOWNTOWN: MONDAY, OCT. 3 – MONDAY, OCT. 10

30_The Battery_Quennell Rothschild & Partners_c The Battery Conservancy

Gogobot is an innovative planning tool that tailors recommendations for places to stay, eat and play to your specific tastes. It also allows you to share your great experiences with people who have the same interests as you; people in your “tribes.” Gogobot’s GoGo This Week feature empowers you to discover and take advantage of great events, openings and exhibits throughout the city each week. Visit the website or download the app for more GoGo This Week upcoming events.

Here are some exciting events and sites to check out in downtown New York this week, courtesy of Gogobot:

jill-bencsits---im-no-hero_29369416750_o_grandeCourtesy of Spoke-art.com – artist: Jill Bencsits

1. Bob’s Burgers Art Tribute
Spoke Art NYC (Lower East Side)
Wednesday-Sunday 11am-7pm (Through Sunday, Oct. 16)

Can’t get enough of Bob’s Burgers? We can’t either and that’s why we won’t be missing an entire art show dedicated to this quirky animated sitcom. On display are dozens of remixed, fine art versions of America’s favorite family. FREE

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2. New Yorker Festival
Check website for complete list of venues
Friday, Oct. 7-Sunday, Oct. 9

The New Yorker Festival is your favorite magazine come to life! The weekend long festival is a chance to hear and see what makes this magazine  intellectually stimulating. On the roster are conversations and panels from Louis C.K., Malcolm Gladwell, Jeremy Lin, Ann Goldstein, Keegan Michael Key, Jonathan Safran Foer and many other fascinating people talking about relevant topics in politics, science, music history, art, cinema, food and the environment. Tickets start at $45

nicoletta

3. Slice Out Hunger
St Anthony’s Church (West Village)
Wednesday, Oct. 5 from 6-9pm

Pizza, unlike many things in life, seldom disappoints. But, you won’t have to worry about quality at the annual Slice Out Hunger event since you’ll be tasting some of the best slices New York has to offer, and for a good cause.  The fundraiser will be offering $1 slices from over 50 New York pizzerias among them, Two Boots, Patsy’s, Sal’s Little Italy, Speedy Romeo, Roberta’s and Dough.

 

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Photo: Courtesy of artist

4. Art in Odd Places
14th street from Ave. C to Hudson River
Thursday, Oct. 6-Sunday, Oct. 9

14th Street slices through the widest part of Manhattan. Should you decide to cross Manhattan this weekend, you’ll find the outdoor art exhibition Art in Odd Places. Art will pop up in the most unlikely places; look for performance pieces, posters, installations, sculptures, listening stations and even interactive apps that explore this year’s theme of race. FREE

 

5_Turnstyle_Architecture Outfit_c Ty Cole

Photography by Ty Cole

5. Architecture+October=Archtober
Check website for complete list of locations
Through October (check website for dates and times)

October is New York City’s Architecture and Design Month which means every single day in October is dedicated to a single building’s design and history. Sometimes it’s a small boutique,  a farm, a pier or a big museum like the Whitney. Whichever day you choose, you’ll see NY’s many structures in a completely new light. FREE and paid events

 

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6. Latest Ice Cream Trend
Taiyaki NYC (Little Italy/Chinatown)
Mon-Fri 12pm-10pm; Sat-Sun 11am-10pm

New York’s most current obsession is a fish-shaped ice cream cone called taiyaki. We don’t know how long the trend will last, but we are definitely joining the line to get our fish-shaped waffle cone filled with matcha and black sesame soft serve.

 

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7. Parade of Boats
Pier 61 (Chelsea)
Wednesday, Oct. 5 at 6pm

Part of the Heros of the Harbor Celebration, the Parade of Boats is a an “urban flotilla” display showcasing  New York’s waterfront community. It’s a pretty spectacular show which includes a narrator detailing the boats’ stories. FREE

 

If you know of great events happening in your neck of the woods that might be a fit for a future GoGo This Week column, please send details about the event to events@gogobot.com

-Courtesy of Gogobot

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Culture Entertainment

Downtown Whitney Museum To Host Breakthrough Works of Artist Frank Stella

whitney-museum-september-2014-ed-lederman
Downtown’s Whitney Museum of American Art will hold an exhibition of the works of groundbreaking American painter, Frank Stella.

The groundbreaking and breathtaking works of celebrated American artist Frank Stella will be on display at the new Downtown Whitney Museum of American Art this fall.

The exhibit will offer the most comprehensive collection and presentation of the artist’s career – showcasing his prolific output from the mid-1950s to the present including approximately 120 works, including paintings, reliefs, maquettes, sculptures, and drawings.

The Massachusetts-born Stella, has been New York-based since 1958 – a period which has seen him become one of the most highly regarded artists of his generation.

Stella, Grey Scramble
Frank Stella’s Gray Scramble X which was purchased by New York’s eminent Hirschfeld family in 1973.

His breakthrough work in creating geometric and abstract paintings with no pictorial illusions has been hailed as innovative and inspired.

His technique emphasizes “the picture-as-object” rather than a representation of something else was unique and inspired a new generation of American painters.

Stella was recognized as a master in the art world before the age of 25.

In 1959, several of his paintings were included in “Three Young Americans” at the Allen Memorial Art Museum at Oberlin College, as well as in “Sixteen Americans” at the Museum of Modern Art in New York (60).

His work has always been recognized and showcased prominently in New York.

In 2007, The Metropolitan Museum of Art dedicated its roof to display Stella’s sculpture, inspired another New York luminary who is the proud owner of one of his masterpieces.

“Stella’s work has become a blueprint for an entirely new direction in painting,” says iconic New York developer Elie Hirschfeld, whose own impressive art collection has been hailed as one of the finest in the United States.

“My family purchased the famed Gray Scramble X back in 1973 and I’ve been an admirer ever since,” says Hirschfeld.

“The piece means a great deal to me as I had just moved into my new apartment directly across the street from the Museum and that rooftop exhibition felt like an extension of my new home.”

As a result, the pictured Stella piece now proudly adorns a room in that home – occupying a full dining room wall which serves as a special private museum tribute to an American master.

The Stella exhibit will be open to the public at the new Whitney beginning October 15 and run through February 7, 2016.

The exhibit will occupy the Whitney‘s entire fifth floor, an 18,000-square-foot gallery representing the Museum’s largest space for temporary exhibitions.

For more information, please go to: whitney.org/Exhibitions/FrankStella

 

Categories
Culture Entertainment

Jeff Koons, ‘Split Rocker’ Sculpture at Rockefeller Center

KOONS 2000.Split-Rocker (Rockefeller Center) D web

JEFF KOONS. Split-Rocker, 2000. Stainless steel, soil, geotextile fabric, internal irrigation system, and live flowering plants. 446 7/8 x 483 1/8 x 427 5/8 inches. Edition of 1 plus 1 AP. Credit: (c) Jeff Koons. Courtesy Gagosian Gallery. Photography by Tom Powel Imaging.

American artist, visionary, and pioneer Jeff Koons will have his retrospective show displayed at the Whitney Museum of Art this month, starting June 27th. Koons will be the first to occupy nearly the entire space of the Whitney’s Marcel Breuer building. This art-takeover will highlight the relocation of the historic museum to a larger space in the Meatpacking District at the end of 2014.

Prior to the opening of this exhibit, on June 25th, a reveal of one of his most exclusive sculptures will take place at 30 Rock Plaza, where the Christmas tree stands each year.

In addition to being honored as the Whitney’s final act, Koons will be installing his iconic 37-foot-tall, toy-like sculpture, “Split-Rocker,” at Rockefeller Center, two days before his exhibition’s debut on June 27th. The monumental figure, weighing a whopping 150 tons, is made up of two halves. One half was inspired by a toy pony, while the other was influenced by a dinosaur figure; both of which were created by Koons’ son. These two halves form a ginormous rocker blanketed with multi-colored, fresh flowers.

The Whitney Museum has been serving the culturally hungry in its uptown home for 48 grand years, so make sure you drop by to feed your eyes with Koons’ lifelong collection before the museum relocates. And definitely don’t forget to pay your respects to the “Split-Rocker” at the heart of midtown this summer.

– Mariah Brown