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Posts tagged ‘artist’

BikeBANQUET November 7 with Recycle-A-Bicycle and special guest Randy Cohen

Thank you to everyone who came out to the BikeBANQUET to benefit Recycle-A-Bicycle November 7!

Guests enjoying the banquet part of the BikeBANQUET. In the foreground, (L-R) Hilda Cohen, Randy Cohen, Janet Liff and Josh Bisker

Randy Cohen

Karen Overton (L), Executive Director of Recycle-A-Bicycle, in conversation with  Melissa Garcia

Arriving at the BikeBANQUET

Sarah Haga in conversation

Sarah Haga in conversation

Nomad Cycle owner Damon Strub

Nomad Cycle owner and host Damon Strub

Randy Cohen and janet Liff in conversation , Hilda Cohen and Josh Bisker in foreground

During dinner, Randy Cohen Janet Liff, Hilda Cohen and Josh Bisker in conversation

Randy Cohen listening during dinner

Randy Cohen listening

BikeBANQUET Nov 7 2015

Dan Solow, of Southern Queens Greenway, and Marc Van der Aart, of Rolling Orange, in conversation during dinner

Angela Stach, Transportation Alternatives Queens Committee in conversation during dinner

Angela Stach, Transportation Alternatives Queens Committee, in conversation with other guests during dinner

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Randy Cohen spoke about biking in the city

Lesley McTague and Daniel Solow visioning their Bicycle Utopia

Instead of cognac, a visioning activity and BikeART Party followed dinner and Randy Cohen’s talk. Lesley McTague and Dan Solow collaborate to make their Bicycle Utopia

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Lesley McTague going for a spin in Bicycle Utopia

Stella Bronwasser of Rolling Orange creating her Bicycle Utopia

Stella Bronwasser of Rolling Orange making her Bicycle Utopia

Esmé Brauer (L) and Hilda Cohen taking their Bicycle Utopia visioning rather seriously

Esmé Brauer and Hilda Cohen's bike portrait

Esmé and Hilda in their Bicycle Utopia

Nathan and Lion Brauer getting their bike portrait taken

Nathan and Lion Brauer getting ready for their BikeART portraitLion + NathanFL

Nathan and Lion in Bicycle Utopia

Luzmina Sindi Hernandez gets her bike portrait with completely unnecessary encouragement from appreciative onlookers

Luzmina Sindi Hernandez gets completely unnecessary encouragement from other guests as she gets her BikeART portrait taken

Luzmina Sindi Hernandez's bike portrait

A passerby asks “Why does life have to be so terrible?” when no bikes are ALLOWED in Luzmina’s Bicycle Utopia

Will Knoesel from Recycle-A-Bicycle making a very special Bicycle Utopia...

Recycle-A-Bicycle’s Will Knoesel works on making a very special Bicycle Utopia…

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Will’s Bicycle Utopia

Raffle prizes donated by Nutcase Helmets, Vanmoof, Thule, Levi's, Bloomsbury Publishing and ABUS

Raffle prizes donated by Nutcase Helmets, Vanmoof, Thule, Levi’s, Bloomsbury, Johanna Kindvall and ABUS

Avril Greenberg raffle winner of Culinary Cyclist at BikeBANQUET to benefit Recycle-A-Bicycle, with special guest Randy Cohen at Nomad Cycle, November 7, 2015

Avril Greenberg, raffle winner of a copy of the Culinary Cyclist, by Anna Brones and illustrated by Johanna Kindvall

Nathan Brauer, raffle winner of an ABUS lock and Hilda Cohen, winner of Infographic Guide to Cycling at BikeBANQUET with Lion and Esmé Brauer

Nathan Brauer, Hilda Cohen, Lion and Esmé Brauer, winners of an ABUS Bordo lock and a copy of the Infographic Guide to Cycling

Angela Stach's bike portrait

Angela Stach in Bicycle Utopia

Reed Rubey and a Vanmoof bike are all that survive in his Bicycle Utopia

Reed Rubey goes for a spin on a Vanmoof bike in Bicycle Utopia

BikeBANQUET would not be possible without the generous support of Bicycle Utopia’s sponsors.ami nyc sp mailchimp sponsors logos-01

 

 

AM I INVISIBLE? NYC | SP : the Exhibition

Scenes from the exhibition and public art installation Am I Invisible? NYC | SP, in New York City and São Paulo, on view from September 15 – November 8, 2015.

Panel discussion at Centro Cultural São Paulo, September 15. Speaking is Nabil Bonduki, Chief of Cultural Affairs, SP

A projection of images submitted to the Am I Invisible? NYC | SP Open Call at the opening party at Delancey Plaza, September 15, 2015.

Panel discussion at Centro Cultural São Paulo, September 15. From left to right: (L-R) Nabil Bonduki (Chief of Cultural Affairs in São Paulo), Ignacio Aronovich (LostArt), Ronaldo Tonobohn (Department of Transportation), Anderson Augusto (6eMeia), Leonardo Delafuente (6eMeia) and Baixo Ribeiro (Instituto Choque Cultural). Speaking, Anderson Augusto of 6meia.

A visitor to the installation at Delancey Plaza, NYC, September 15, 2015. Works visible (L – R) Gustavo Gomes, Jessica Findley, David Horvitz, Bijari.

Wide view of Invisìvel? SP | NYC at Centro Cultural São Paulo. Works visible by (L – R) William Lamson, Jessica Findley

Visitors to Am I Invisible? NYC | SP October 10, 2015 look at works by Jessica Findley, Gustavo Gomes. Partially visible at extreme left, 6meia.

A visitor to Am I Invisible? NYC | SP takes a picture at Lomography Gallery, NYC, October 10. L-R: works by William Lamson, Hai Zhang.

Public art installation of Invisìvel? SP | NYC with work by William Lamson

Visitors to Am I Invisible? NYC | SP at Lomography Gallery, NYC, October 10, 2015

Public art installation of Invisìvel? SP | NYC with work by Jessica Findley

 

 

CONGRATULATIONS! PARABENS!

Congratulations! To the winners of the 2015 Am I Invisible? NYC | SP Open Call

Please join Bicycle Utopia and Ciclo Utopia in honoring the six recipients of the jury’s decision.

Parabéns aos vencedores do concurso Invisível? SP | NYC 2015!

Por favor, junte-se à Bicycle Utopia e à Ciclo Utopia na saudação aos seis escolhidos pelo júri.

097- Argun Ulgen

099-Duncan Moore

112-Carlo Guzman

284 Aloisio Ferreira

11113 Ronaldo Azambuja

11180 Ana Paula Leoncio Augusto
In São Paulo:
Ana Paula Leoncio Augusto
Aloisio Ferreira
Ronaldo Azambuja

In New York:
Carlo Guzman
Duncan Moore
Argun Ulgen

Many, many thanks to all who entered the Open Call. Your vision and creativity is an inspiration to everyone who envisions a “bicycle utopia” in New York and São Paulo.

We extend our heartfelt thanks to the jury panels in New York and São Paulo:

Daniele Dal Col, Director, Galeria Superfície, São Paulo

Renata Falzoni, Architect, Journalist and Bicycling Advocate, São Paulo

Zanna Gilbert, Department of Drawings at the Museum of Modern Art, New York

Elcio Ohnuma, Department Chair of Photography, Escola Panamericana de Arte, São Paulo

Karen Overton, Executive Director, Recycle-A-Bicycle, New York

Louise Weinberg, Curator, Queens Museum of Art, New York

And a big thank you to all our sponsors, without whom the Am I Invisible? NYC | SP Open Call would not be possible.

Parabéns aos vencedores do concurso Invisível? SP | NYC 2015! Por favor, junte-se à Bicycle Utopia e à Ciclo Utopia na saudação aos seis escolhidos pelo júri. Em São Paulo: Ana Paula Leoncio Augusto.jpg Aloisio Ferreira.jpg Ronaldo Azambuja.jpg Em Nova York: Carlo Guzman Duncan Moore Argun Ulgen Agradecemos muito a todos que participaram do concurso. Sua visão e criatividade são uma inspiração para todos que desejam uma “utopia ciclística” em Nova York e São Paulo. Estendemos também nossos sinceros agradecimentos aos jurados de Nova York e São Paulo: Daniele Dal Col, Diretora da Galeria Superfície, São Paulo Renata Falzoni, Arquiteta, Jornalista e Defensora do Ciclismo, São Paulo Zanna Gilbert, Departamento de Desenhos do Museu de Arte Moderna, Nova York Elcio Ohnuma, Chefe do Departamento de Fotografia, Escola Panamericana de Arte, São Paulo Karen Overton, Diretora Executiva, Recycle-A-Bicycle, Nova York Louise Weinberg, Curadora, Museu de Arte do Queens, Nova York E muito obrigado a todos os nossos patrocinadores, sem os quais o concurso Invisível? SP | NYC não seria possível.

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Ana Benaroya at ArtCrank

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We loved Ana Benaroya’s poster at ArtCrank this year. “I wanted to create a raw, powerful image of a woman riding a bike nude. She and the bike are one and they are rebellious, powerful and free.”

Ana’s work merits a Buzzfeed listicle, 8 Life Hacks Every Woman Should Know, excerpt from her forthcoming book 120 Ways to Annoy Your Mother (And Influence People).

Stay moist and go slow.

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Am I Invisible? A Portrait of New York City Bicyclists Opens April 8

Untitled (Ghost Biker) Marina Berio
Untitled (Ghost Biker) Marina Berio
Am I Invisible? A Portrait of New York City Bicyclists

Opening April 8, 2014 6 – 9 p.m.

In the Great Room at The Old Stone House
Old Stone House & Washington Park
336 Third Street, bet. 4th/5th Avenues
Brooklyn, NY 11215

Directions

Am I Invisible? A Portrait of New York City Bicyclists is a transmedia project produced by Bicycle Utopia in collaboration with Recycle-a-Bicycle and The Old Stone House.

Am I Invisible? is a portrait of New York City viewed from a bicycling perspective. Artists Marina Berio, Christopher Cardinale, Jeanne Hilary, Johanna Kindvall, Sam Polcer, Justin Strauss Mike Taylor and Harry Zernike will be exhibited along with images from the Am I Invisible? Open Call, and images created during an Am I Invisible? Bike Art Party, a community event organized with Queens Museum. Am I Invisible? A Portrait of New York City Bicyclists will be on display at the Old Stone House and an interactive public art installation in locations around NYC from April 8 to June 3.

Am I Invisible? is inspired by the experience of biking in the city. Biking creates intimacy with the built environment, encourages social interactions and enhances awareness of New York City as an ever-evolving, collective cultural experience.

About the Artists

Marina Berio

Marina Berio is an artist and photographer. She has been granted a New York Foundation for the Arts fellowship, the Aaron Siskind Foundation Award and a Pollock/Krasner Grant, and been invited to various residencies including the MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, Millay, and Schloss Plüschow in Germany. She has exhibited photography and drawings internationally, including Michael Steinberg Fine Arts, Yancey Richardson Gallery, Von Lintel Gallery, Smack Mellon, and Artists Space in New York; Les Rencontres d’Arles, Galerie Camera Obscura, and the Centre Photographique de Pontault-Combault in France; her work has been published in Foam and Fantom. Berio is Chair of the General Studies Program at the International Center of Photography in New York City. She lives with photographer Jean-Christian Bourcart and their son Elio in Brooklyn, New York. More about Marina’s work at marinaberio.net

Christopher Cardinale

Christopher Cardinale is a cartoonist and muralist. While living in Guatemala and Mexico, his work was inspired by encampments of striking workers and anarchist punk collectives. He has been publishing comics since 2001 when his first graphic narrative appeared in World War 3 Illustrated Magazine. Since 1996, Christopher has led large-scale, collaborative mural projects in New Mexico, New York City, Italy, Greece and Mexico.His work addresses themes ranging from labor organizing history, cyclist and pedestrian rights, urban environmentalism and post-Katrina New Orleans. Christopher illustrated the graphic novel, Mr Mendoza’s Painbrush, by Luis Alberto Urrea, chosen by Kirkus Reviews as one of 2010’s best books for teens.

Johanna Kindvall

Johanna Kindvall is a designer, illustrator and architect based in Sweden and New York City. She editss a food blog, kokblog; her illustrations appeared in The Culinary Cyclist, by Anna Brones. Her illustrations have been published on blogs such as Art of Eating, Foodie Bugle and the books The Fabulous Baker Brothers. She is currently at work on a cookbook in collaboration with Anna Brones, which will be published by 10 speed press. Her work has been exhibited widely, notably in 14th St Overlay by Walczak & Heiss in Denver, Colorado, at the Triennial of Lövestad, Sweden, at the National Art Museum of China and others.

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Jeanne Hilary

Jeanne Hilary is a photographer and new media artist.  She is founder of Bicycle Utopia, a public art project about New York City seen from a bicycling perspective.

Her work has been exhibited widely, notably le Centre Pompidou, le Palais de Tokyo, Le Musée Carnavalet, la Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris; Lilit Kala Akademi, New Delhi, The Museum of Fine Arts, Calcutta,, the Museum for Contemporary Photography, Chicago. She has received numerous grants and residencies, among these: The American Center, Paris; the Fondation Regional Pour l’Art Contemporain, Ile de France; the Ministére des Affaires Etrangéres, France; the Palm Beach County Cultural Council; the Ministére de la Culture, France. Her work has been published in  The New York Times, The Guardian, La Repubblica, El Pais, Le Monde, Libération, le Nouvel Observateur, l’Express, Geo, Newsweek, Fortune and many others. Her work is broadly concerned with how the built environment impacts human endeavor, and how memory and desire inform contemporary society. She has worked extensively on gangs and youth issues in Chicago and Los Angeles,  women’s issues, infrastructure and housing, poverty and immigration in France’s housing estates, and a range of human rights and social issues in Egypt, Afghanistan, India, Turkey, China and Rwanda, throughout Europe and the United States. More about Jeanne Hilary at jeannehilary.com

Sam Polcer

Sam Polcer recently recently completed his first book, New York Bike Style, which will be published by Prestel in Spring 2014. (He also has a blog, Preferred Mode, that features some of the photos from that project.) His writing and photography has appeared in The New York TimesThe Wall Street JournalTravel + LeisureHemispheresBrooklyn MagazineThe L Magazine,  among others. He is Communications Manager of Bike New York. Previously, he was a nightclub visual designer, traveling circus spotlight operator, documentary filmmaker, DJ, video editor, blueberry picker, election campaigner and event producer. When he’s not riding his bike or traveling on assignment, he spends as much time as he can in Brooklyn, NY. More about Sam Polcer at Preferredmode.com

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Justin Strauss

Justin Strauss, 16, from Forest Hills, Queens is a junior at Stuyvesant High School. Justin is photo editor for both The Spectator, Stuyvesant’s student run biweekly newspaper, and The Indicator, Stuyvesant’s yearbook. His interest in cycling began in 2012, after participating in bike tours in and around New York City. The following year, Justin joined the Century Road Club Association. He competes in road, track, and cyclocross races for the club’s Junior Development team. Justin saw the opportunity to combine his two defining interests in Bicycle Utopia’s Am I Invisible? contest and he plans to continue to experiment with using photography as a medium to capture the beauty of cycling.

Mike Taylor

Mike Taylor is a printmaker, painter, writer, self-publisher and arts educator. He works in screenprinting, painting, collage, sculpture and performance. His work is narrative and autobiographical, documenting his surroundings and reflecting on culture, politics, and the human condition. While self-publishing anthologies of his own artwork, comics and writing he is also an elementary school art teacher. 

Harry Zernike

Harry Zernike makes photographs and films for a broad range of commercial and editorial clients. His photographs are in a number of books as well as private, corporate, and museum collections. He has been spotted in road and cyclocross races, and toodling around New York on a single speed. A predisposition to photographing cyclists (conflating work and play) led him to publish the printed 9W- a journal of Cycling Photography and it’s online companion 9wmag.comwww.harryzernike.com

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Am I Invisible? A Portrait of New York City Bicyclists is made possible with generous support from our sponsors.

AdoramaPix600

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A Bikestrian

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This just in from artist Frédéric Lère:

“You could not miss me.

“Walking a Citibike from the art supply store to my studio. Should I use the sidewalk or the bike lane? I opted for the bike lane, smoother surface.

“All the way up 8th Avenue from 23rd to 38th Street. Respecting all the traffic lights and unruly pedestrians…

“I was special, a bikestrian.

“One of the unruly persons that I met was driving a Yellow cab. He cut me off, forcing me to use my brakes, as he turned left on 35th Street, running a red light.

“The driver was a cop in a uniform!?!”

You can see Frédéric’s The Freevolous King Lère Show at the Mayson Gallery, 254 Broome Street, New York, from January 22 to February 05.

Proceeds from the show benefit the Big Apple Circus Clown Care Unit.

 

A Visit to Bicycle Roots Bike Shop in Crown Heights

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What’s different about New York City from Central Illinois? Artist Kathy Creutzburg pays a visit to Joe, Nechama, Herschel and Steven at Bicycle Roots Bike Shop in Crown Heights, Brooklyn.

 

 

 

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¡Vivan los Muertos! Day of the Dead Celebrations at la Casa Azul

paul lambertonArtist Paul Lambermont’s lifelong fascination with Mexica theology began when he was seven or eight years old and saw an image of the Mexica dipping their feet into pails of sap to makes boots for themselves. “How cool is that?”

This spectacular painting (“the figure is the size of a small child”) is part of the Vivan los Muertos exhibition currently on view at La Casa Azul. The piece is made of found paper, that has been sewn, stapled and painted.

The painting represents the God Xipe Totec, and is part of a series inspired by the Codex Borgia, the Codex Zouche Nuttal, and Tibetan Art which he calls The Codex Chitipati. “I am interested in the art and myths of many cultures and time periods. Despite separation of geography and time, images are constantly repeated.

“Xipe Totec is the God of Springtime and Vegetation. He is represented as having been flayed: the skin is removed so new life can come through. During the ritual devoted to him the priests wore the flayed skin of sacrificial victims. It’s sort of nice we don’t do stuff like that now–it would make us more paranoid than we are already.”

The Vivan los Muertos exhibition includes work by Claudia Corletto, Pablo Caviedes, Michael Guillen, Ramon Gutierrez, Antonio Pertuz, Vanessa Peters and Airy Quiroz, and a community altar in memory of the writer Oscar Hijuelos, who passed away in October of this year.

¡Vivan los Muertos at La Casa Azul on view from now to November 23.

La Casa Azul Bookstore 143 E. 103rd St 

Highlights From Last Week’s East Harlem Art and Culture BikeART Tour

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Great weather, great art, great food, site-specific spoken-word performances by JC Augustin, and wonderful music by Blue Maky at the East Harlem Harvest Festival were just some of the highlights of the BikeART tour on Saturday, October 27.

We’re looking forward to more of the same and just more on Saturday, November 2 for the Day of the Dead tour!

Sign up here!

October 27th East Harlem BikeART Tours: Play(LABS)!

baddermural

Muralist, graffiti and tattoo artist Badder Israel puts the finishing touches on “Yellow Brick Road” his tribute to the cultures of the Indians of the Americas–Maya, Inca, Aztec and Taino. The mural is part of Play(LABS), a public art installation in four East Harlem community gardens, organized by the West Harlem Art Fund and New York Restoration Project.

Join us on Sunday, October 27th on our bike tour! Starting from the East Harlem Café we’ll make stops at Play(LABS) and other art and culture locations, the East Harlem Harvest Festival. We’ll taste some great food, listen to some great music–it’s going to be a great day to be in Harlem!

Tours start at 10 am and 2 pm.

For more information, and to book a tour, go here.