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CANstruction 2025 November 2, 2025

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Canstruction is back at Brookfield Place! The clever and fun annual design competition challenges teams of architects, engineers, and contractors to build sculptures made entirely out of unopened cans of food. The large-scale sculptures are displayed in an exhibition space free and open to the public and later donated to City Harvest to help feed those in needCanstruction® New York has donated over 2 million pounds of food to local food banks since 1993, and over 1.2 million pounds to City Harvest since 2006. Since 1992, Canstruction® has raised nearly 82 million pounds of food for hunger relief organizations around the world with its signature, trademarked CanArt. It is a very short exhibition and closes November 10th. Perhaps you CAN put it on your list for this year.

Dear New York October 8, 2025

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 Another October Surprise! I walked to Grand Central Station yesterday to see this unique exhibition of photos of New Yorkers, by New Yorkers, including 600 students. It is a delight for the eyes. The 750,000 people that travel through Grand Central each day have a wonderful opportunity to stop, look and read about some of their neighbors. Humans of New York (HONY- ) is a photoblog and book of street portraits and interviews collected on the streets of NYC by photographer Brandon Stanton. For the next two weeks Grand Central Station will undergo the biggest transformation in its 112-year history, as it becomes a living, breathing celebration of the people of New York. All advertising has been removed from the building and replaced with portraits and stories from Humans of New York. There is also continuous music from the students at Julliard. When I was passing through I heard a wonderful pianist. Stop and smell the roses, as they say. You can follow him on Instagram at humansofny. This exhibition will only be on view until October 19, 2025.

Bully! September 28, 2025

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 I live two blocks from Teddy Roosevelt’s birthplace which is part of the National Park Service and a National historic site. I must have passed by this house 1,000 times and told myself ‘you should go visit.’ Well, after 28 years of saying that we finally did visit this very special place. Wikipedia tells the complicated story best. This is a replica of his boyhood home. Teddy Roosevelt was the first U.S. president born in New York City. Raised in a townhouse at 28 E. 20th St., Theodore Roosevelt would grow up to be our 26th President and become immortalized on Mount Rushmore. We learn on the one hour, fact-filled tour that he started life as a sickly yet bright boy who exercised to improve his health and began a lifelong passion for the “strenuous life.” There is a separate room with loads of photos, artifacts and even the original ‘Teddy’ bear. We thoroughly enjoyed this tour but I must say that the house needs a real sprucing, dusting and a general upgrade. Pretty sure that in this political time there will not be any funding for this much needed work. Go visit. It is free.

June Leaf: Shooting from the Heart September 21, 2025

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Every once in awhile while arting we come across a major talent that nether of us had ever heard about. How does this happen? Well, for too many years art history books, museum  retrospectives, articles, etc have focused on either European white males or white males in general. We have been enriched in recent times by museums and galleries opening their eyes, minds, hearts and doors to all. June Leaf if one of those major talent who was blessed with a 75 year career and a long rich life (1929–2024). NYU’s Grey Gallery is now exhibiting a remarkable body of work that revels in the human experience in all its banality and sublimity. Armed with indefatigable energy, an inventive mind, and a wry, closely observing eye, Leaf nimbly navigated the planes of the real and the imagined, holding a mirror up to essential truths while reminding us of our shared humanity. Born in Chicago and trained at the New Bauhaus, Leaf experienced two formative stints in Paris before relocating to New York. The artist’s career took off here in 1968 with her carnivalesque, breakout exhibition Street Dreams at Allan Frumkin Gallery. In the 1970s, living part time in a remote fishing village in Nova Scotia, Canada, Leaf began creating the densely layered drawings and paintings and the expressive tin and wire figurative sculptures for which she is best known. I encourage you to experience her work which is on exhibit thru December 13, 2025.

More Birding While Arting September 14, 2025

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 As I said in a Sunday post about two months ago ” My friend Donald and I have been ‘arting’ about once a week in the museums and galleries of NYC for the past 18 months. I thought I had made up the word ‘arting’ but recently searched its roots. It turns out the term ‘arting’ is not a standard English word, but it is sometimes used to refer to the act of creating art, or the process of using art to understand oneself and the world. Anyhow, it’s a good word and serves our purposes. From the beginning, whenever I saw a bird in a work of art, I would text that photo to one of my bird nerd friends. There is never any context in the text – I just send it to her. Sometimes she responds and other times she laughingly asks if I can buy it for her”. So today’s montage once again features a number of these past texts. This was a fun montage to put together. Hope you enjoy today’s beautiful birds.

Dogs of the New Yorker September 7, 2025

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We are lucky New Yorkers as we now have another Museum dedicating an exhibition to the celebration of the New Yorker magazine’s 100th anniversary. The AKC Museum of the Dog is now exhibiting a private collection of 44 covers of The New Yorker related to dogs. The collection spans nearly the entire run of the magazine with covers featuring the work of New Yorker notables such as Peter Arno, James Thurber, Charles Addams, and Mark Ulriksen.The exhibition includes commentary on the specific covers with additional background material supplied by the staff and archives of The New Yorker. In addition to the role of dogs in the City, other themes include dog shows, grooming, country life and sports.  There is also be a section of covers produced around the Westminster Kennel Club’s annual dog show. This is a fun exhibit (as is the whole museum) and will be running thru December 7th. Woof!

You CAN Get There From Here August 31, 2025

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 The Poster House is a NYC treasure. They always have fun, informative and unique exhibits. They are closing soon to install new exhibits but the one I share today is on thru November 2. I admit I am a mass transit New Yorker. I haven’t drive a car in over 10 years and do not miss it at all. Our subway system gets all of us where we need to go quickly and cheaply. My earliest memory is paying 15 cents for a ride. The NYC subway token was first introduced in 1953. Over the next 50 years, 6 variations were designed and minted, becoming well-known symbols of the underground transit system. Just after midnight on April 13, 2003, these iconic tokens were phased out and the MTA transitioned to the Metrocard for its fare collection. Now the Metrocard has been replaced by the Omni card which is a tap and go system. This exhibit is focused on The Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT) which opened New York City’s original underground subway line in October 1904. While the city was one of the most diverse in the country, before the introduction of the subway, most New Yorkers were not in regular contact with people outside their own neighborhoods. Initially extending from the Bronx to Lower Manhattan (with service to Brooklyn beginning in 1908) and forming part of the wider transit system , the convenient and affordable IRT encouraged riders to travel beyond their communities for both work and leisure. This small exhibit features the in-car posters In order to entice people to regularly use the subway. The Subway Sun, highlighted each borough’s unique attractions. Put the Poster House on your regular schedule and visit it often. They also have an amazing gift shop.

Teacher’s Pet August 3, 2025

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When I was in my Senior year at RISD I was fortunate to have Professor George Morrison as my Painting advisor, teacher, mentor and most of all friend. RISD was/is a small art school and students had many opportunities to grow professionally and personally when we got to know our teachers. I had never met an American Indian before (not unusual if one is born in Brooklyn) so much was new to me about his culture and background. He invited me many times to his house to dine, chat and develop a friendship with not only George, but his wife Hazel and young son Briand. I do wish my memories were more clear some 60 years later but sadly they are mostly faded. What remains is the memory of being so very grateful that I got to know him and we stayed in touch after college but like many things in life time tends to separate people. Whenever I am in DC we go to the American Indian museum to look for his work but was always told they were ‘traveling.’ So imagine my glee to learn that the Metropolitan Museum  recently opened an exhibit of his work featuring 35 of his pieces that were created when he lived in NYC as a young man. This wonderful show will be on exhibit thru May of 2026 and can be found in the American Wing. I know I will return to see it again. The U.S. Postal Service honored George Morrison (1919-2000), one of the nation’s greatest modernist artists and founding figure of Native American modernism, with a set of five stamps showcasing his work in April of 2022. And yes, I have a few sheets of the stamps. The title photo features a photo of him and the sheet of stamps.

A Poem for Deep Thinkers July 27, 2025

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 Truth be told, I am not a fan of the Guggenheim Museum. I find the building design a distraction to viewing the art. That said, I do occasionally visit if there is a show I am interested in seeing like the Jenny Holzer exhibit last year. Add to that short list the present exhibit called ‘Rashid Johnson: A Poem for Deep Thinkers’ which is there thru January 2026. On view are almost 90 works—from black-soap paintings and spray-painted text works to large-scale sculptures, film, and video. They fill the museum’s rotunda, including Sanguine, a monumental site-specific work on the building’s top ramp with an embedded piano for musical performances. Additionally, a dynamic program of events, developed in collaboration with community partners across New York City, activate a sculptural stage on the rotunda floor. If you plan your visit you can easily experience one of these special performances. For nearly 30 years, artist Rashid Johnson has cultivated a diverse body of work that draws upon an array of disciplines such as history, philosophy, literature, and music. This major solo exhibition highlights Johnson’s role as a scholar of art history, a mediator of Black popular culture, and as a creative force in contemporary art. We thoroughly enjoyed this amazingly multi-talented artist.

Birding While Arting July 13, 2025

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 My friend Donald and I have been ‘arting’ about once a week in the museums and galleries of NYC for the past 18 months. I thought I had made up the word ‘arting’ but recently searched its roots. It turns out the term ‘arting’ is not a standard English word, but it is sometimes used to refer to the act of creating art, or the process of using art to understand oneself and the world. Anyhow, it’s a good word and serves our purposes. From the beginning, whenever I saw a bird in a work of art, I would text that photo to one of my bird nerd friends. There is never any context in the text – I just send it to her. Sometimes she responds and other times she laughingly asks if I can buy it for her. So today’s montage features just a small number of these past texts. This was a fun montage to put together. Hope you enjoy these beautiful birds.