Archive for the ‘Greenwich Village’ category

The Forbes Magazine Building

March 3, 2008

I was recently heading down Fifth Avenue toward Washington Square when a interesting looking building caught my eye.

20080223-forbes-magazine-01.jpg

It wasn’t anything more than the columns that I noticed and then, looking closer, I discovered it was the Forbes Magazine Building, located at 13th Street and Fifth Avenue.

I’m no longer a subscriber, but it isn’t the magazine that I was thinking about when I saw it.  It was the toys!

Yes, the toys.  Malcolm Forbes was a collector of all sorts of stuff and his most reknowned collection…okay, his second most reknowned (the Fabrage eggs would be #1)…is his toy soldier collection.

As I entered the building, a couple of things happened.  First, there was a bit of wall art that caught my eye.  It was a sort of toy-rolling-balls-with-clanging-sounds sort of thing by “George Rhoads”.  It took a quick picture.

20080223-forbes-magazine-02-george-rhoads-wall-piece.jpg

There was usually one ball in motion zipping around in this contraption and about every minute or two, seven or so balls would kick into action with lots of useless movement and noise.  I loved it.

Another thing that caught my eye was a request not to take pictures.  Oops.  So, the interior of the place is only going to be textually described.

The Forbes Gallery (it’s on the first floor) is open to the public where the rest of the building is still in use for publishing the magazine.  When you first go in, you have several possible routes.  Mine was straightforward:  where are the soldiers?  Thataway, I was told.  So, I went thataway.

They weren’t the first to be shown.  The first stuff was toy boats.  Magnificent, wonderous, perfect toy boats.  Hundreds of them.  They were exclusively not modern.  I didn’t notice anything that looked less than 50 years old.  Most looked much older than that.  I got the feeling that these were Malcolm’s and, being raised a child of wealth, he got every one he ever wanted (and he wanted a lot of them).  They were shown with very few placards, but mostly as if to say:  “I got a zillion of these things, here they are in bulk.  My collection is the greatest in the world!”

And, by George, it probably is.  They were mostly steamship-type boats and they looked like they had a complete life and a wonderful time on small ponds throughout NYC over the years.  None of them, at least offhand, looked like a true collector might want them:  absolutely pristine and without blemish.  Instead, they looked like they had been played with a lot by a boy (or a bunch of boys) with every intention of enjoying them to the max.

A couple of more rooms held the toy soldiers.  “Soldiers” is being too narrow.  Lots of soldiers and lots of cowboys and Indians and lots of Aztecs and lots of Greeks…and lots of others.  They were made of tin, and lead, and sawdust, and everything.  It was a complete collection of lots and lots.  You didn’t have one or two soldiers.  Nope.  You had hundreds arranged in an action scene.  And each type of army or group had its own scene.  I confess that I’m glad I never saw it when I was a kid because my green plastic army men would have never satisfied me again.

But I bet Malcolm never had the great wars with his guys that we had with ours.  Our great joy was to use rubber band shots to simulate the warfare and I doubt Malcolm would have let his suffer under that sort of assault.

But I loved his collection.  Wow.

Another room held the first Monopoly set ever.  If you’ve heard of the oldest one, it’s round and mostly handprinted.  He even has the earlier versions of it, back in the days it was called “The Landlord’s Game”.  Very, very impressive.

There were other rooms filled with artworks and a necklace exhibit.  The artwork was mostly cartoons by Ronald Searle and the necklace exhibit was not what I would have expected.  Instead, it was mostly plastic and glass necklaces, all done by hand by Monica Searle (I don’t know about any relation to Ronald Searle, but I would suspect there is).

A rather unusual collection that’s also there is old trophies for unknown people.  Well, that’s not right.  It’s trophies that ended up in flea markets and the like.  Their original winners’ names may be on them or not, but the trophies have provided their fleeting accolades on people and since been discarded by them or their heirs.  It’s a little strange.  But that’s fine by me.

-H

St. Mark’s Place

March 1, 2008

In other parts of the City, 8th Street is simply…8th Street.  But when you get to the Lower East Side it becomes St. Mark’s Place, named after the Episcopal Church located on 2nd Avenue (but actually up at 10th Street or so).  I’ve wandered St. Mark’s Place a few times, but nothing of any consequence…until I went to Alphabet City.  When I did that, I discovered that the street is about as funky and retro a place as you’ll find in NYC.  Actually, when I realized that the street is really only three blocks long, I kind of shook my head in shame knowing that I had only previously been on St. Mark’s between 2nd Avenue and 3rd Avenue.

Offhand, the street doesn’t look particularly special in any way.

20080113-st-marks-place-01.jpg

But the crowd is very youthful and the stores are very…interesting.  Below is the St. Mark’s Theater sign.  I don’t think they spent a fortune on it.

20080113-st-marks-place-02-theater.jpg

Others show a more artistic and funky flair.

20080113-st-marks-place-graffiti-store.jpg

I wonder if there’s any particular reason that two of the most visually interesting places are both located below street level?  One of the great mysteries…

I did like this little vegetarian restaurant (at least visually as I didn’t try it).  It seems to be a bit small to be called “Whole Earth Vegetarian Kitchen.”  And it’s second name?  “Whole Earth Bakery and Kitchen”.  Having two relatively long names for the little place, plus the great slogan of “Simple food for complex times” is a hoot.

20080113-st-marks-place-vegetarian-kitchen.jpg

-H

Washington Square Park in Winter

February 25, 2008

Just a follow-on to my recent post on Union Square in winter.

Washington Park, one of the great little parks, located in the heart of Greenwich Village, remains mostly closed for renovations.  That didn’t stop the snow, though.

20080224-washington-square-park-01.jpg

There are still parts that are open, though.  It made for a pleasant visual as I passed by.

20080224-washington-square-park-02.jpg

But most of the snow in NYC is now gone.  There are still pockets of it, but I wouldn’t count on even those pockets to hold out the rest of the week.

-H

Riis Houses on Ave D in Alphabet City

February 4, 2008

At the end of Alphabet City is the Jacob Riis Housing projects.  I was there on a very cold day and the smart people, unlike Famous Ankles, were inside and comfortable.

But, I have to admit that I’m not fond of this area.  Not because of anything other than the Soviet-style feel to the place and it’s general lack of any aesthetic that I can appreciate.

20080113-riis-houses-on-ave-d-01.jpg

I guess that they may look good on paper and they are probably laid out in some nice little grid that I can’t appreciate…but I just don’t think much of the area.

20080113-riis-houses-on-ave-d-03.jpg

In the middle of the above picture, you can see a bit of artwork that someone put there.  And to the left, there’s a children’s playground.

Here’s a closeup of the sculpture.

20080113-riis-houses-on-ave-d-04-sculpture.jpg

And the playground.

20080113-riis-houses-on-ave-d-05-playground.jpg

I mean, there’s nothing really to object to, but I don’t like it.  Maybe it’s because it looks like a low-income project, and maybe it is one, and such things seem to have a hopelessness about them.  But, I think it is just that it is so very sterile and there’s no signs of life here.  No sign of commercial activity, no sign of much.  I’d just walked through a number of blocks of mostly empty streets, but got none of the negative feeling I got from here.  I hope and expect it’s more my imagination than anything else, but all I can think of is that some architects really didn’t put much of themselves into this place.

-H

Lower East Side Ecology Center Garden in Alphabet City

February 1, 2008

On 7th Street between Ave B and Ave C is a garden unlike any other I’ve seen in NYC.  The LES Ecology Center Garden is all about recycling.

20080113-lower-east-side-ecology-center-garden-01.jpg

Yeah, it really is a garden and they do grow stuff there (it’s winter now so there’s a bit of a hold on “growing stuff”), but it’s all about composting for them.

20080113-lower-east-side-ecology-center-garden-02.jpg

Like all NYC community gardens, it’s pretty small, but so are a lot of things in NYC, like stores and parking spots.  It ain’t worth complaining about.  Instead, we just make more and more of them.

20080113-lower-east-side-ecology-center-garden-03.jpg

I guess these community gardens are the one thing I can’t forget about in Alphabet City.  There are so many of them and they are all so small.  One person told me it was an outgrowth of how bad stuff was before Guiliani:  places would go down, perhaps they might be burned down or made completely uninhabitable.  Later, some people with vision would have the City condemn them and then take it over with the City’s blessing and funding.  They then would just put in some of these tiny plots of green that make life a little more livable.

-H