Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Coming to The Yard

Revelers at The Yard last fall

Thanks to Bumpershine for this post on the BKLYN Yard (for the past few summers, known just as The Yard), announcing their May events, starting with Memorial Day weekend.

The grassy knoll near the Gowanus has featured some of Brooklyn's best events, from Harvest Festivals to an After The Jump Fest.

Opening day festivities kick off with not music, but a picnic, with goodies from some of the best NYC food trucks, including Pizza Moto (of the Brooklyn Flea), Red Hook Huarache Vendors, and the Green Pirate Community Juice Truck.

So mark your calendars for May 23, and if you're still in town that weekend, here's one idea for some fun in the sun.

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New at Pete's Candy Store

Between its spelling bee and reading series, as well as its month-long residencies, there's always something going on at Pete's Candy Store in Williamsburg.



Now, add to that, Classical Candy, a bi-monthly series featuring performances by New York’s finest young classically trained musicians eager to present pieces that represent the truly eclectic, varied, and exciting sound world that encompasses "classical" chamber music.



Each evening will be an hour-long exploration of acoustic works by various composers from days pre-Bach to works by living composers for a variety of instruments. Experience chamber music as it was originally intended to be enjoyed: in a wonderful intimate space, with a variety of instruments performing in duets.



The series kicks off tomorrow night at 7:30 with Maureen Keenan on flute, Daniel Liao on bassoon, Katya Mihailova on accordion, and Anna Callner on cello playing Mozart, Villa-Lobos, Mihailova, Bach, and others. Bring a buddy.

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Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Simply Guactacular


Cinco de Mayo presents another reason to party on a "school night," and The Bell House is combining appropriate drink specials ($2 Tecate and Modelo and $3 Coronas) with a food competition (increasingly, as we noted yesterday, a Brooklyn specialty).

Guactacular Invitational 2009 invites local restaurants to find out who has the best guacamole, and you're the judge.

Competitors include Pinche Taqueria, Mercadito, La Barra Cevicheria and Crema Restaurante, so get that chip hand ready.

That list is surprisingly Brooklyn-less, which begs us to ask - who do you think has the best guac in the borough?


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Shop smart on the cutting edge at Bklyn Designs

The lines of a flower container from Warp Designs mimic the graceful curves of the tulips it holds.

By Helen Klein

Innovative materials, cutting-edge engineering, a concern for the environment and an ineffable sense of style are just some of the elements that combine to infuse the upcoming “Bklyn Designs” show with the kind of self-conscious flair that characterizes the new crop of Brooklyn designers.

The three-day event -- headquartered in DUMBO, and organized by the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce -- will kick off on Friday, May 8, and conclude on Sunday, May 10. In between, design professionals, consumers, retailers and trend-setters will have the opportunity to view furniture, wall coverings, home accessories and other such creations in a variety of venues that, arguably, are as interesting as the objects they will house.

The work of 45 borough-based designers will be featured in a trio of locations, the St. Ann’s Warehouse, 38 Water Street, where the exhibitors will display their works; the Bosch, Thermador, Gaggeneau showroom, 1 Main Street, which will feature environmentally-friendly design; and Jane’s Carousel, 56 Water Street, where there will be a children’s furniture show.

In addition, the weekend will feature:
*A self-guided house tour of contemporary homes, organized in conjunction with Dwell Magazine, on Saturday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.;

*A tour of DUMBO galleries with Zannah Mass, cultural affairs director of Two Trees Management, on Friday, from 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. (Meet at the Rice Bar inside St. Ann’s Warehouse. For more information on participating galleries & exhibit schedules, and to RSVP: email Zannah@twotrees-dumbo.com.)

* Kid’s Story Time at Iglooplay, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. on Sunday, Mother’s Day;

* Mother’s Day Brunch and Educational Eco-friendly Series, on Sunday, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., at 93 Nevins Street, billed on Bklyn Designs’ website as “Brooklyn’s newest green townhomes;”

* Avant-Arrangements: Designing with Flowers presentation and brunch, Sunday, 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., with Amy Gardella of Seaport Flowers (RSVP for brunch to brooklynheights@dwr.com) at Design Within Reach, 76 Montague Street; and,

* A Green Design Tour, Sunday, 3 p.m., led by Jill Fehrenbacher from Inhabitat, at St. Ann’s Warehouse.

The participating designers include 16 who have never before shown at the event, now in its seventh year. Carl Hum, president of the Brooklyn Chamber, said this year’s show is likely to be “the best ever.”

“Every year, it gets bigger and better,” Hum added. “We are truly showcasing young, upcoming and hot designers who are producing, creating and innovating in Brooklyn.”

“Some of the pieces are really spectacular,” he stressed, “not only because they are beautiful but because they employ the latest in technology.”

Brooklyn, he acknowledged, functions as a sort of “natural incubator” for of-the-moment design, because the borough is perceived as a design hot spot around the world due to the existence of such institutions as Pratt, “which are educating the designers of tomorrow,” and also because the borough boasts the necessary space for such endeavors.

“Brooklyn was a manufacturing town,” Hum stressed. “Its architectural fabric reveals the richness of its manufacturing history. We may not be making beer and rope the way we used to, but the spaces where these designers are carry on the tradition of manufacturing in Brooklyn.”
Even if you have attended Bklyn Designs in the past, this year’s show is a must-see, Hum contended. “There’s a new cast of designers,” he told this paper. And, he emphasized, “You are supporting local industry -- your neighbors and friends -- that make the borough so wonderful.”

Tickets for “Bklyn Designs” cost $12 purchased in advance, on line, and $15 at the door. Tickets to the house tour, including admission to “Bklyn Designs” and a Friday night launch party organized by Dwell Magazine at Galapagos Art Space, 16 Main Street, cost $40 in advance, and $50 at the door.

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This week in 24/Seven

Each week we'll preview what you can expect in our 24/Seven print edition, out Thursday for you southern Brooklynites and Friday for the downtown neighborhoods.

Highlights include:

Magic: A profile on Brooklyn's George Schindler, an esteemed magician participating in the 100th Annual Salute to Magic at the Manhattan Center May 16 in New York City.

Music: Old and young folkies unite in Red Hook May 15-17 for the 1st Annual Brooklyn Folk Festival at the Jalopy Theater, the premier place in the borough for the scene.

Books: Noted Irish writer Colm Tóibín reads from his sixth novel, "Brooklyn," set in 1950s Brooklyn (hello, Dodgers!), on May 13 at Book Court. The author writes about his latest work this week in the Washington Post as well.

Arts: The return of the Bushwhack Series, a festival of performance art in Brooklyn's burgeoning arts community, Bushwick, running May 14-16 and 21-23.

Theater: "On the Waterfront," the play that inspired the classic movie starring Marlon Brando, comes to the waterfront, when the Brave New World Repertory Theatre puts on a staged reading at the Waterfront Museum Barge in Red Hook on May 17.

For these stories and more, pick up a copy in your nabe or check back here later this week!

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Monday, May 4, 2009

The Great Outdoors

The view from Alma. Photo: almarestaurant.com


New York Magazine's feature on new outdoor drinking spots got us thinking about some fresh air locations in Brooklyn.

On their list: Williamsburg's d.b.a. Brooklyn, whose backyard patio is now open, and Der Schwarze Koelner in Fort Greene, a beer garden coming this summer.

Some of our own favorites include Alma along Columbia Street, with a great view of Lower Manhattan from the roof-top restaurant, the laid-back atmosphere (and, of course, the Sicilian pizza), from L&B in Gravesend, the subway hideaway that is the Gowanus Yacht Club, and Fort Greene's recently re-opened and eco-friendly eatery Habana Outpost.

What spots are you looking forward to hitting up this summer?

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Tonight: Film screenings

A scene from "Hug," a short film by Khary Jones


In this kind of weather, the most appealing thing to do is kick back with a movie and some drinks.

You can do just that tonight at Galapagos Art Space, when Scene: Brooklyn, a program of the Brooklyn Arts Council, kicks off with "Framing Fiction," featuring the work of local, up-and-coming filmmakers.

There's the short narrative film Hug, directed by Khary Jones, which recently made a debut at Sundance, followed by Charles Divak's "The Wildflower," Kristen Swanbeck's "Single Girl," Natalia Leite's "Dash," Jonathan Emmerling's "The Funeral," and Christopher Radcliff's "Bonnie Rocks."

The screenings start at 7 p.m.

Following that, at 9 p.m., there's "L'Eau Life," directed by the well-known painter and experimental filmmaker Jeff Scher. The film screens as part of the "Artists in Residence" program, which will also feature tonight the world premiere of "Design by the Book," a film in which Grace Bonney of the blog Design*Sponge.

The film follows five Brooklyn-based artists—a glassblower, letterpress printer, ceramicist, pattern designer, and self-described “maker of things”— as they uncover hidden treasures in The New York Public Library.

Bonney, as well as the director, James Murdock, design blogger Amy Azzarito, and featured artists Julia Rothman and Mike Perry will be on hand for a Q&A following the screening.

You can find the complete schedule of BAC's film events here, for another rainy day.

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