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| In New York we've just finished the 6th annual Open House New York, run by the organization of the same name each first weekend in October. OHNY celebrates NYC's built environment, and mostly succeeds in getting some property owners to open doors that ordinarily wouldn't open to the likes of your webmaster. The event is getting increasingly popular -- enough so that reservations are now required at many events. OHNY distributes a lavish booklet every year listing every location, but since its deadline is early in the summer it gives many owners an opportunity to change their minds about opening, or change the schedule, leaving OHNY enthusiasts fuming (needless to say I'm one of them). Those cavils aside, this year's Open House NY brought me to... | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hopper (1882-1967) is one of my favorite artists; that said, he's an artist that non-aficionados can enjoy, for his matter-of-fact urban portraits. His is the famed Nighthawks, a late-night scene at an all-night diner. He studied as a young man at the New York Institute of Art and Design under Robert Henri, a leading light in the realist Ashcan School of American art.








"The Manhattan that Hopper pinned down like a narcotized specimen is not a village with friendly dogs and children, and certainly not the Village. It's a city that is paved over, glassed in, and swimming in heat -- the lonely dive in Nighthawks, the erotically charged workplace in Office at Night, and even the generic brickscape of chimney rows and skylights painted from the top of his building in Roofs of Washington Square.
"The critic Robert Hughes credits him with establishing not just the shadowy visual style but also the private investigator trope of film noir. 'It was Hopper,' Hughes writes, 'a man of extreme inhibitions who had no interest in communicating with the world at large except through his art, and then only obliquely, who saw that the old frontier had moved inward and now lay within the self, so that the man of action, extroverted and self-naming, was replaced by the solitary watcher.'" Julie Lasky, via Dan Hill's City of Sound
Fairfax & Sammons House







Every upstairs surface is either white or clear, and while that makes for great natural light at all levels, a choice seems to have been made somewhere that privacy is not really a priority here ... The jacuzzi is one example ... the upstairs shower is another (surrounded on 3 sides by glass and on the fourth by a sort of chain-mail shower curtain), and the kicker is the (doorless) upstairs bathroom, which does double-duty as the exit to the terrace. Comments from curbed.com

HOME | ADS | ALLEYS | CEMETERIES | COBBLESTONES | FORGOTTENSLICES | LAMPS | NEIGHBORHOODS | SIGNS | STREET NECROLOGY | STREET SCENES | SUBWAYS & TRAINS | TROLLEYS | YOU'D NEVER BELIEVE YOU'RE IN NYC | LINKS | FORGOTTENTOURS | SEARCH | FORGOTTENSTUFF | QUEENS CRAP | FRANK JUMP'S FADING ADS | OUT OF TOWN | BOWERY BOYS | ALL CITY NY | LOST CITY | VANISHING NY | FNY THE BOOK/ERRATA
Photographed October 4, 2008; page completed October 15, 2008.
erpietri@earthlink.net
©2008
left: View from Kushner penthouse