The Gates – Part Two March 2, 2025
Posted by judylobo in Zoo.Tags: art, Art exhibit, Bloomberg Connects, Central Park, Christo, Jeanne Claude, NYC, photography, The Gates Project, The Shed, Virtual reality
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We decided to visit the two venues that are celebrating the 20th anniversary of Jeanne-Claude and Christo’s The Gates in Central Park. The Shed (in Hudson Yards) features photos, videos and scale models of The Gates. Some of the videos of old town hall meetings are hysterical. People both pro and con were very funny. This exhibit is on through March 23. The other venue is in Central Park itself. By downloading the free Bloomberg Connects app you are able to experience The Gates yourself. We started at Fifth Avenue and 72nd street. The path runs through the park, Bethesda Fountain, around the lake and up to Cherry Hill. It was lots of fun and if you did not experience The Gates 20 years ago, I encourage you to experience them now. The top half of today’s photo montage features photos from The Shed and the bottom half are photos of our walk as we virtually experienced The Gates.
Making Waves February 23, 2025
Posted by judylobo in Zoo.Tags: art, Art exhibit, Lanscapes, Making Waves, photography, Seascapes
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I take a lot of photos. I take photos as I wander the streets, museums and galleries of NYC. What do I do with all of my photos? I create blue photo folders that remain on my desktop until I decide to create a photo montage and share it with all of you. The longest running folder that hung around my on my desktop was,12 years. You can check that out here – I noticed a folder this week on my cluttered desktop titled, ‘Making Waves‘ and opened it. Apparently I had collected quite a few photos of paintings and prints I had seen in art venues as I traversed NYC. I was inspired to create today’s photo montage and I get to remove that photo folder from my desktop. Check out these fabulous works of art. Be inspired and go out there and make some waves. 
The Gates Project – 20 Years Later February 9, 2025
Posted by judylobo in Zoo.Tags: 2005, Art exhibit, Art instalation, Central Park, Christo, Jeanne Claude, Mayor Bloomberg, NYC, photography, The Gates Project
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Twenty years ago, I was lucky to work at The Gates Project when Jeanne-Claude and Christo created their fabulous site-specific work of art in 2005. The artists installed 7,503 vinyl “gates” along 23 miles of pathways in Central Park. From each gate hung a panel of deep saffron-colored nylon fabric. The exhibit ran from February 12, 2005 through February 27, 2005. Even though the exhibit officially ran for two weeks the installation and deinstallation of the project stretched out this work for almost two months. I believe this community work of art, was the beginning of the recovery for our wounded City from the devastation of 9/11 (thanks to Mayor Bloomberg for his decision to go ahead with this project). As a Gate Watcher, I held a long pole with a tennis ball on the end of it so that I could unfurl the saffron curtains if the wind wrapped them around their stanchions. I had the good fortune of speaking to thousands of visitors from all around the world about the project, about New York City, about life, art and politics for two weeks. It was an experience I will never forget. Many of you who are reading this blog came to visit me at my Gates post to share the experience. Every morning that we worked we would meet Jeanne-Claude and Christo at the Boat House for free breakfast where they would talk to us, both individually and as a group.They also were generous enough to take the time to sign our souvenir posters, books or whatever – every Friday afternoon – with their signature orange crayons. I have my signed prints proudly hanging in my living room. May they rest in peace and may their memory be a blessing, dear Jeanne -Claude and Christo. I created all of the photo montages seen here 20 years ago as a way to remember that singular experience.
Edges of Ailey January 19, 2025
Posted by judylobo in Zoo.Tags: Alma Thomas, Alvin Ailey, art, Art exhibit, Basquiat, Dance, Faith Ringgold, Jacob Lawrence, Kara Walker, Kevin Beasley, photography, Rashid Johnson, Romare Bearden, Whitney Museum
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We had wanted to see this exhibition since it opened back in September but life sometimes interferes with art. We finally went last Sunday and we were wowed. Edges of Ailey is the first large-scale museum exhibition to celebrate the life, dances, influences, and enduring legacy of visionary artist and choreographer Alvin Ailey. It consists of an immersive exhibition in the Museum’s 18,000 square-foot fifth-floor galleries—featuring works by more than eighty artists and revelatory archival material—and performances in the Museum’s third-floor theater, including AILEY in residence for one week each month during the exhibition. Included are performance footage, recorded interviews, notebooks, letters, poems, short stories, choreographic notes, drawings, and performance programs and posters gathered from Ailey’s archives and others forge a vital through-line in the gallery. The artworks are arranged by themes that shaped Ailey’s life and dances. Sections span an expanded Black southern imaginary that enfolds histories of the American South with those of the Caribbean, Brazil, and West Africa; the enduring practices of Black spirituality; the profound conditions and effects of Black migration; the resilience for and necessity of an intersectional Black liberation; the prominence of Black women in Ailey’s life; and the robust histories and experiments of Black music; along with the myriad representations of Blackness in dance and meditations on dance after Ailey. Artists exhibited among Ailey include Basquiat, Romare Bearden (a personal favorite of mine,) Faith Ringgold, Alma Thomas, Jacob Lawrence, Rashid Johnson, Kevin Beasley, Kara Walker and many more. This wonderful exhibit is on through February 9th.
Postcards from the Edge January 12, 2025
Posted by judylobo in Zoo.Tags: art, Art Deco, Art exhibit, Chrysler building, Coney Island, Empire State Building, Musuem of the City of NY, NYC, photography, Postcards, Rockefeller Center
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Remember writing postcards especially when you traveled? I used to send myself postcards at the end of a trip to see how long it took to get to my home. Once again the Museum of the City of NY has brought us an exhibit that makes one smile. During the 1920s and ’30s, the bold new look of Art Deco heralded New York’s arrival as a cosmopolitan metropolis: a center of architecture, design, fashion, and culture.The picture postcard, a form of modern communication, transmitted vibrant images and messages around the globe. Art Deco City: New York Postcards from the Leonard A. Lauder Collection illuminates the key role postcards played in transforming New York into an international capital during the years between World Wars. Featuring over 250 postcards as well as decorative arts, fashion, photography, drawings, and architectural models, Art Deco City immerses you into the dazzling style that defined the modern city. That said – I most certainly was underdressed. More than an aesthetic, Art Deco was the look that sold the city to the world. This exhibit is on through February 17, 2025. While visiting the museum please do not forget to experience the heart pulsing, fun, fast paced, colorful, “You Are Here” exhibit (which is right next to the postcards) and draws on the rich archive of movies set in New York, combining thousands of cinematic moments across 16 screens. That delightful movie experience is on through October of 2025. I have seen it multiple times and have enjoyed it over and over again. FYI – The MCNY is open every day.
Cut it Out! January 5, 2025
Posted by judylobo in Zoo.Tags: Art exhibit, Cut-outs, Henri Matisse, MoMA, Musuem of Modern Art, NYC, photography
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I confess that Henri Matisse (1869-1954) is my favorite artist. No one comes close to his talent in my eyes. How could we resist not taking in the latest MoMA exhibit of his inspiring cut-outs. These paper artistic treasures are light sensitive so MoMA only displays them every few years. This beautiful exhibit closes January 20, 2025. I encourage you to visit. In the late 1940s (after abdominal surgery left him in a wheelchair), Matisse turned almost exclusively to cut paper as his primary medium, and scissors as his chief implement, introducing a radically new operation that came to be called a cut-out. Matisse would cut painted sheets into forms of varying shapes and sizes—from the vegetal to the abstract—which he then arranged into lively compositions, striking for their play with color and contrast, their exploitation of decorative strategies, and their economy of means. Initially, these compositions were of modest size but, over time, their scale grew along with Matisse’s ambitions for them, expanding into mural or room-size works. A brilliant final chapter in Matisse’s long career, the cut-outs reflect both a renewed commitment to form and color and an inventiveness directed to the status of the work of art, whether as a unique object, environment, ornament, or a hybrid of all of these. FYI – MoMA has finally given its members their own entrance on West 54th Street. If you are a MoMA member I encourage your using this entrance to avoid the maddening crowds. 
Board Games December 22, 2024
Posted by judylobo in Zoo.Tags: American Folk Art Museum, art, Art exhibit, Board Games, checkers, chess, Chutes and Ladders, Monopoly, NYC, Percheesi
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Games have become BIG! I would imagine that you and your friends are wordle-ing, crossword puzzling, Scrabbling, Monopoly-ing, and all of the other newer digital games available today. One of my favorite museums in NYC is the American Folk Art Museum. Their current show Playing with Design: Gameboards, Art, and Culture, demanded two visits by me and I loved it both times. From the fabulous collection of Bruce and Doranna Wendel, it features over 100 game boards dating back to the 18th century. The exhibition includes early examples of classic games of Parcheesi, checkers, and chess, as well as hand-painted iterations of Monopoly and Chutes and Ladders made in the United States between the mid-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries. This fascinating exhibit is on through January 26th, 2025. FYI – the wonderful exhibition at the Shed, Luna Luna has extended its run. It is now on through February 23rd and I encourage your going to experience it.
The Season of Wreaths December 12, 2024
Posted by judylobo in Zoo.Tags: Arsenal Gallery, art, Art exhibit, NYC, NYC Parks Dept., photography, Seasonal, Wreath Interpretation, wreaths
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I go to this fun exhibit every year. The NYC Parks’ annual Wreath Interpretations exhibition returned to the Arsenal Gallery. This year’s collection of wreaths was created by artists, designers, and creative individuals of all ages who have used inventive and unexpected materials to re-envision the traditional holiday decoration. The Arsenal Gallery is located on the third floor of NYC Parks’ Headquarters in Central Park, on Fifth Avenue at 64th Street. Gallery hours are Monday – Friday, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m., except holidays. Admission is free and this art exhibit is open through January 2nd. 
Luna Luna December 8, 2024
Posted by judylobo in Zoo.Tags: Andre Heller, art, Art exhibit, Basquiat, Dali, David Hockney, Hudson Yards, Keith Haring, Kenny Sharf, Lichtenstein, LUNA LUNA, NYC, photography, The Shed
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This fascinating article in the New York Times (November of 2022) tells the story of how this 1987 artistic treasure, LUNA LUNA , conceived by artist Andre Heller was lost, then found, then hidden in storage in Texas and recreated by a handful of visionaries and a rapper named Drake yes, that Drake, came to be. We went last Thursday and had a delightful visit to this fun, fanciful, musical artistic experience. You need about an hour or so to experience the depth of the art and the story. It is at The Shed in Hudson Yards and is on through January 5th. It is fun for the whole family. 
Gingerbread Bake-Off 2024 November 24, 2024
Posted by judylobo in Zoo.Tags: Art exhibit, Gingerbread five borough bakeoff, Museum of the City if NY, NYC, photography
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Once again, the Museum of the City of NY brings us the five Borough Gingerbread Bake-Off. I have come to adore these creations even though I am not a gingerbread fan. I am always amazed by the detail and loving presentations from these fabulous local bakers. The Museum invites bakers from across the five boroughs to create gingerbread displays on the theme of “Iconic New York”—creating distinctive buildings, places, or things that represent their neighborhood, community, or borough. This fun exhibition is on through December 25th. The Museum is open seven days a week.
