NYC Culture on the Cheap: Weekend 7/27

Free and Cheap Things to do in NYC July 2012, Affordable New York City, Free Cultural Events in NYC, collabcubedClick to enlarge

Some free and cheap (affordable) cultural events that look interesting to us for this weekend in New York City:

1. Street Art Williamsburg Street Art Walking Tour 2-hour tour, Saturdays at 2:30 pm. Meets at N7th Street but  email hello@streetartwalk.com to reserve a spot and confirm details. $20 per person.

Alternatively: Historic Harlem Walking Tour, Saturday 7/28 at 11 am. $18.

2. ArtJoseph Albers in America  at the Morgan Library, through 10/14. Admission:$12 Student/Senior $8. Fridays 7-9 pm FREE.

3. MusicThe Metropolitan Opera Summer Recital Series. Friday 7/27 at Brooklyn Bridge Park; 7-9 pm; FREE.

4. FilmAi Weiwei Never Sorryis the first feature-length film about the internationally renowned Chinese artist and activist, Ai Weiwei. At IFC Center starting Friday 7/27; Adults $13; Seniors $9. Check link for showtimes and tickets.

5. Art/Food – Check out Big Kastenmann sculpture by Erwin Wurm at The Standard Hotel. Then head upstairs to Le Bain on the roof top from 2 pm on (21 and over) and have a crepe ($5 to $8) while sitting on a waterbed with a great view of the High Line and the Hudson. And of course there’s always a walk on the High Line post-crepe! All weekend.

6. MusicAntipop Consortium at the New Museum. Alternative hip hop ensemble described as fragmented rhythms of contemporary electronic music with the confrontational, interrogative stance of rap. Friday 7/27 at 7 pm. Members $10, General Admission $12

7. MusicBreakout Sessions Music Fest sponsored by Brooklyn Brewery at 1031 Grand St., Williamsburg. Saturday 7/28 from 3pm to 11pm. 10 bands, 9+ hours of music, 4 hours of open bar. $10 in advance, $12 at the door. Tickets here.

8. MusicMostly Mozart Festival Preview Concert  at Avery Fisher Hall, Lincoln Center. Saturday, 7/28, 7:30 pm. FREE

9. Theater Into the Woods by Stephen Sondheim Delacorte Theater, Central Park through 8/25, 8 pm.  Tickets same day in the park (line up early) or same day virtual ticketing here. All weekend.

10. Leisure/FoodOne of our favorite summer things to do is hop on the East River Ferry from Long Island City after WarmUp at PS1 or Brooklyn Flea in Williamsburg and ride down under all three bridges with lovely views of Manhattan getting off at Pier 11 at Wall Street (approximately 1 hour from the LIC/Hunters Point; $4 per person.) From there Adrienne’s Pizza on Stone Street for a delicious old style pizza pie and a little feel of Europe in NYC. All weekend.

11. Music/FilmMuppet Movie Sing-a-long with the Loser’s Lounge in Prospect Park Bandshell.  Saturday, 7/28, 7:30 pm (doors open 6:30)  FREE

12. TheaterOxygen presented by B-Floor Theatre Company (Bangkok) at Flamboyan Theater, CSV Cultural Center, 107 Suffolk St. Oxygen is a visual, movement and multimedia exploration of Thailand’s tumultuous political situation from 2010 to the present. Friday, 7/27 through Sunday, 7/29. Check for showtimes and tickets here. $20. All weekend.

Also in Music: The Head And The Heart / Lost in the Trees, at Prospect Park Bandshell, Brooklyn. Friday 7/27, 7:30 (doors open 6:30)

Also in Film: NewFest 2012 at Lincoln Center. NY’s premier LGBT Film Festival. Check for showtimes and tickets. Tickets $12 for members; $14 General Admission. All weekend.

Olympics 2012: Okay, so it’s more of a sports event than a cultural one, but you can watch the opening ceremonies surrounded by others at Big Screen Plaza, at the Eventi Hotel, (851 Sixth Avenue  at 30th St) tonight Friday 7/27, 7-11:30 pm. FREE.

For more ongoing summer weekend suggestions (i.e. The Clock at Lincoln Center, Yayoi Kusama Retrospective at the Whitney and more) see our previous Culture on the Cheap posts here and here. Also: check back throughout the weekend for possible updates. Also, also: feel free to leave suggestions in the comments.

Rob & Nick Carter: Neon Postcards

Neon Postcard artworks, Rob and Nick Carter, Postcards from Las VegasNeon Postcard artworks, Rob and Nick Carter, Postcards from Las VegasNeon Postcard artworks, Rob and Nick Carter, Postcards from Las VegasLight Installations, postcard art with neon signs, hotel signs, Rob and Nick CarterClick to enlarge

London based artistic couple Rob and Nick Carter create art that revolves around light, color and form in mediums that range from painting and photography, to installations and film. Their series titled Postcards from Las Vegas originates from a mutual love and collecting of postcards throughout their childhoods. They have enlarged some of their favorites and interjected contrasting retro-style Las Vegas neon signs from motels, strip clubs and diners. I love the results!

Photos courtesy of the artists.

Shelter ByGG: Gabriela Gomes

experimental housing concept, mobile sustainable module, Gabriela Gomes, Portuguese architectureexperimental housing concept, mobile sustainable module, Gabriela Gomes, Portuguese architectureexperimental housing concept, mobile sustainable module, Gabriela Gomes, Portuguese architectureClick to enlarge

This cloud-shaped, cocoon-like shelter is the design of Portuguese architect Gabriela Gomes. The bright red exterior is made of a unique non-polluting, recycled cork, with a minimalist interior that consists of a double room with bathroom using ecological materials in its construction and solar paneling for energy as well as LED lighting, keeping with its sustainable goal. The mobile habitat—that goes by the name Shelter ByGG—seems to be taking reservations and will be delivered via flatbed truck to a series of locations. You can make your reservations here.

Photos by Joao Morgado and renderings courtesy of the architect.

via contemporist

Shi Jindian: Steel Wire Sculptures

Contemporary Chinese art, intricate Wire sculptures of motorcycles, jeeps, bicycles and cello, cool artContemporary Chinese art, intricate Wire sculptures of motorcycles, jeeps, bicycles and cello, cool artContemporary Chinese art, intricate Wire sculptures of motorcycles, jeeps, bicycles and cello, cool artClick to enlarge

There’s a strange juxtaposition in Chinese artist Shi Jindian’s steel wire sculptures. His subject matter tends to be, for the most part, solidly masculine with motorcycles and military vehicles as prime examples, but his delicate wire mesh sculptures make them look delicate and almost ethereal. Jindian’s pieces are reminiscent of Do Ho Suhs work, but only in that they are light and translucent, the technique, oddly enough, is more comparable to Olek’s crocheted works. Shi Jindian learned, by trial and error, how to crochet the two-dimensional strands of wire into three-dimensional forms using tools of his own devising. His wire meshes start out as wrappings around common objects. When the mesh is complete, he destroys or extracts the object, leaving only its steel “shadow”. Each of the works takes years to make and is accurate to the smallest detail.

Photos: saviems; and Arrested Motion

via White Rabbit Gallery and beautiful decay

Kendell Geers: Neon Type Play

Neon typography installation, Kendell Geers, Believer, Cool typography, art installationNeon typography installation, Kendell Geers, What do you believe in, Cool typography, art installationNeon typography installation, Kendell Geers, Bubbled neon type, Fuck, Light art installationNeon typography installation, Kendell Geers, Type play, words within words, Light art installationClick to enlarge

South African-born artist Kendell Geers, presently lives and works in Brussels. He gained international notoriety when he urinated in Marcel Duchamp’s Fountain in Venice, and previously had publicly refused to serve in the South African Defense Force, along with 142 others, and was consequently exiled. Clearly, a force to be reckoned with. Geers is known for work that takes aim at both the art establishment and society in general as well as for questioning our existing moral codes. Working in a wide variety of media, he uses and subverts familiar signs from art history and pop culture.

Above are some of his typographic neon sculptures.

Photos: Yvonne Lambert Gallery, Stephen Friedman Gallery, Goodman Gallery

Metro Valencia: Luis Ferrer

Cool subway/metro station in Spain, colored glass, nicely designed machines and seats, contemporary architecture in Spain, Luis FerrerCool subway/metro station in Spain, colored glass, nicely designed machines and seats, contemporary architecture in Spain, Luis FerrerCool subway/metro station in Spain, colored glass, nicely designed machines and seats, contemporary architecture in Spain, Luis FerrerCool subway/metro station in Spain, colored glass, nicely designed machines and seats, contemporary architecture in Spain, Luis FerrerClick to enlarge

I love this new metro/subway station Estación de Metro Carolines-Benimàmet in Valencia, Spain, designed by architect Luis Ferrer. The multi-colored glass boxes-within-a-box design not only gives the station a light appearance, as if floating over a bed of stones, but each box serves a purpose as well: two function as emergency stairs, one as office space, and the largest contains the ticket booths, elevator banks, and escalators. The colors and prints on the glass, apart from looking great, refer to the basic elements of earth, water, fire, and air, adding increasing warmth as one descends to the lower levels (perhaps a nod to the underworld?) The light fixtures and furniture were all designed in the architect’s studio with the idea of mass-production in mind for future stations.

It’s all fun, smart and beautiful as all design should be.

Photos by David Frutos and also courtesy of the architect.

Adalberto Abbate: Selfportrait

Contemporary Italian Art, Political commentary art, Adalberto Abbate, GAM, Selfportrait: Build, Destroy, RebuildContemporary Italian Art, Political commentary art, Adalberto Abbate, GAM, Selfportrait: Build, Destroy, RebuildContemporary Italian Art, Political commentary art, Adalberto Abbate, GAM, Selfportrait: Build, Destroy, RebuildClick to enlarge

Sicilian artist Adalberto Abbate lives and works in Palermo, Italy. His work ranges from sculpture to photography, as well as street and installation art, but in all its forms is political. His most recent solo exhibit, Selfportrait: Build/Destroy/Rebuild includes this series of ripped photographic portraits. According to Abbate, these represent our confused society in a continuous state of reprogramming and with that our identity as well. The ego is no longer I, but becomes You, He, She and Them. The lines between good and evil, responsibility and guilt, combat and resolution are all blurred causing irreparable damage. His exhibit at GAM, symbolizes the passage of energy, an idea of change, a charge from rage and consciousness that was concretely manifested in the Arab Spring.

Photos courtesy of the artist.

via tribeart

It’s Not Paper! Plates

Paper Plate Platter made in melamime, cool tableware, fun tableware, fun design, eco-friendly designPaper Plate Platter made in melamime, cool tableware, fun tableware, fun designPaper Plates made in melamime, cool tableware, fun tableware, fun design, paper cups in porcelain, It's Not Paper!Click to enlarge

Strolling around the village this weekend we came upon this very fun faux paper plate platter at Mxyplyzyk. We were familiar with the porcelain crumpled paper cups from a few years back, and the more recent I am Not a Paper Cup porcelain coffee cup, but the It’s Not Paper! Paper Plate Platter and Plate sets were totally new to us and a must-have for Daniela, who will be returning shortly to purchase a set of the plates.

NYC Culture on the Cheap: Weekend 7/20

FREE and CHEAP Things to do in New York CITY, NYC, July 2012, 7/20-23/2012, affordable Cultural EventsClick to enlarge

Here are some of our suggestions for free and cheap cultural events in New York City this weekend:

1. Theater Slowgirl by Greg Pierce, with Sarah Steele and Zeljko Ivanek, at Lincoln Center’s new Claire Two Theater. All tickets $20. Extended through August 5, 2012.

2. ArtGhosts in the Machine at the New Museum. The new exhibit spans fifty years and traces the complex historical passage from the mechanical to the optical to the virtual. FREE Saturday (7/21/2012) 12-5pm with a visit to the museum’s block party. Otherwise $14 General Admission/$10 Student. FREE every Thursday 7pm-9pm. Through September 30, 2012.

3. MusicB.o.B FREE Secret Show at the Highline Ballroom; Sunday, July 22 at 9pm. Doors open 7:30pm. FREE with Ticket. Tickets available at the box office.

Also: Williamsburg Salsa Orchestra at the Brooklyn Bowl, Sunday, July 22, at 8pm. Doors open 6pm. $5.00

4. Comedy/PerformanceD’FunQT: Stand Up or Die at Dixon Place (LES) Fri and Sat, July 20 & 21 at 9:30 pm. Tickets: $15 advance, $20 at the door, $15 students / seniors
Written and performed Leguizamo-style, this one-person show celebrates the joy of survival in a world often intolerant of difference. As a queer boy/stud/trans person, D’Lo unapologetically takes center stage and uses his fluidly morphing form and spot-on timing to bring the fierce with the funny.

5. ArchitectureNew Practices New York 2012 exhibit at the Center for Architecture. Mon-Fri: 9am to 8pm Sat: 11am to 5pm, through September 8th. FREE

6. Design/PerformanceGlassLab Glassmakers from Corning Museum of Glass create pieces with contemporary designers. Glass blowing and all. Saturdays and Sundays from 1 to 6:30 through July 29th. This weekend designers include Peter Buchanana-Smith and Paul Sahre. On Governors Island. FREE.

7. Art – Rineke Dijkstra: A Retrospective at the Guggenheim. Large-scale color photographs. Portraiture with a twist. Through October 8, 2012. Pay-what-you-Wish Saturdays from 5:45 to 7:45.

8. TheaterUncle Vanya at the Soho Rep in Tribeca, through August 26th. 99¢ Sundays same day at the door. Line forms one hour before show. Limit 2 tickets per person. 7:30 pm. 99¢.

9. DancePilobolus at the Joyce Theater. Through August 11, 2012. A limited amount of tickets available for $10 by calling the box office (212-242-0800). At the time of posting, only 1 ticket was left for this weekend, so best to try in advance. Showtimes and programs vary.

Also in Music: Bebel Gilberto/Criolo/Flavio Renegado/Beco Dranoff Saturday, July 21, 3-7 pm, Summerstage at Central Park. FREE

Also in Food: Les Salonnieres Country Blues Potluck Under the Stars. Dinner and Wine tasting. Bring a country-themed dish. Saturday, July 21, 7pm – 1am. Williamsburg Private Residence. Tickets $10.

More Food: 3rd Ward’s 5th Annual Pig Roast. Saturday July 21, 4pm to midnight. 195 Morgan Ave, Bushwick. FREE with RSVP

Also in Film: Coming Home: Short Films. Friday, July 20, 8pm. Rooftop Films at Metrotech Commons. FREE

Art on the Beach: Coney Island Annual Sand Sculpting Contest and Unity Day. (Here’s a video on last year’s event) Saturday, July 21, 12-5 pm. FREE.

Check last week’s Culture on the Cheap for additional (ongoing) events.

Molecule: East Village Water Café

Purified tap water cafe in East Village, NYC, to-go and refill options. MoleculePurified tap water cafe in East Village, NYC, to-go and refill options. MoleculePurified NYC Tap water, East Village Water Cafe, MoleculePurified NYC Tap water, East Village Water Cafe, MoleculeClick to enlarge

A unique kind of café has just opened a few avenues over from us: Molecule – A Water Café. The idea behind this new shop is to serve filtered (“purified”) NYC tap water using their $25,000 filtration system; a seven-stage processing treatment to create what the owners call “pure H2O.” There’s the to-go option, in a nicely designed glass bottle for $2.50 which you can have plain or with vitamin supplements and/or herbal infusions at an additional cost. If you bring your own container, water refills are provided at a range of $1 for a canteen to $10 for 5 gallons. A delivery service is in the works as well as “water blessing” events.

Being a big fan of unfiltered NYC tap water, I’m not sure I’ll be consuming Molecule’s water for now. The whole concept makes me chuckle a bit (I guess a Brita filter doesn’t cut it anymore) but I do like their branding.

Here’s co-owner Adam Ruhf discussing Molecule in a WSJ Video.

Photos: scoboco’s flickr; DNAinfo; and EV Grieve

via gothamist

Mariska de Groot: Quadtone

Light and performance art installation, Mariska de Groot, Royal Academy of Art, The Hague, cool installationLight and performance art installation, Mariska de Groot, Royal Academy of Art, The Hague, cool installationLight and performance art installation, Mariska de Groot, Royal Academy of Art, The Hague, cool installationClick to enlarge

This looks interesting. Dutch designer and artist Mariska de Groot has recently developed an undercurrent fascination for straight forms, stroboscopic movement and analogue machines. She started building cinematic instruments and installations based on optical sound–moving form and light to create sound—as soon as she came in contact with the principle of synthetic sound on film.

Earlier this month at the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague, as part of their Graduation Exhibition, de Groot exhibited/performed her piece Quadtone-Lumisonic Rotera.

Quadtone – lumisonic rotera’ is a mesmerising light-is-sound projection performance in space. Graphical patterned wheels code a beam of light, which portable light-sensitive speakers convert into audible frequencies. All leftover light is visual sound.

Here is her Light Synth piece in action:

The rotating discs are beautiful in themselves!

Photos: Ed Jansen and KABK

via Ed Jansen’s flickr

Pedro Reyes: Capulas

Capsules, Capulas, Swings, cocoon-like structures by Pedro Reyes, contemporary Mexican artistCapsules, Capulas, Swings, cocoon-like structures by Pedro Reyes, contemporary Mexican artistCapsules, Capulas, Swings, cocoon-like structures by Pedro Reyes, contemporary Mexican artistClick to enlarge

Contemporary Mexican artist Pedro Reyes tends to combine the fantastical with the functional in his art. Trained as an architect, many of his projects convey an underlying interest in structural design. His Capulas are such works. These cocoon-like capsules are woven using traditional Mexican techniques at an architectural scale. People are invited to interact with these structures by sitting inside or walking through them. Some of the Capulas hang from above, while others are elevated from below.

Reyes appears to have a kind of manifesto as part of his Capula projects, which reads as follows:

If a Room has rigid walls/ the Capula shall be elastic
If a Room divides the inside from the outside/the Capula shall be permeable
If a Room is grounded/the Capula shall hover
If a Room is steady/ the Capula shall rock or swing
If a Room has walls that block the light/ the Capula shall radiate the light
If a Room creates a fixed field of vision/the Capula shall be kinetic
If a Room needs furniture/the Capula will turn itself into furniture
If a Room hides from the view/the Capula allows a glimpse
If a Room is an ensemble of parts/ the Capula shall be a continuum
In fact,
a sense
of essence
is,
in essence,
the essence
of sense,
in effect.
Cupola
Cupule
Capsule        +
Couple
Copulate
Capillary
_________
CAPULA
Photos courtesy of the artist; Celebrate Big; and flickr

via molaa

Jarbas Lopes: The Debate Series

Vinyl campaign posters woven together to create an interesting effect, Jarbas Lopes, Brazilian artVinyl campaign posters woven together to create an interesting effect, Jarbas Lopes, Brazilian artVinyl campaign posters woven together to create an interesting effect, Jarbas Lopes, Brazilian artClick to enlarge

Brazilian artist Jarbas Lopes works in a variety of mediums, but much of his art pays homage to the Brazilian tradition of colorful weavings and craftmaking. He is probably best known for his bicycles woven with rattan that are still functional and meant to be interacted with. Here, in his woven “paintings” titled O Debate (The Debate), Lopes uses plastic/vinyl political campaign posters of both known and unknown politicians, tears them into strips and then weaves them together fusing the images, ultimately creating  hybrid political personalities. Some incorporate local Brazilian politicians, while others use images of American politicians such as Barack Obama, Hilary Clinton, and George Bush.

Photos courtesy of the artist; Volta; Taxi Art; entretenimiento; and Tilton Gallery.

Patricia Waller: Broken Heroes

Superhero art, Patricia Waller, Galerie Deschler, Broken Heroes, Superheroes and childhood characters in unfortunate situationsSuperhero art, Patricia Waller, Galerie Deschler, Broken Heroes, Superheroes and childhood characters in unfortunate situationsSuperhero art, Patricia Waller, Galerie Deschler, Broken Heroes, Superheroes and childhood characters in unfortunate situationsClick to enlarge

Maybe it’s just me, and that I’ve recently become more aware of it, but there seems to be a lot of Superhero-themed art around lately. Even just strolling through the Chelsea Market a couple of weeks ago, the walls were covered with photos of superheroes in everyday poses by photographer Gregg Segal.

Currently at Berlin’s Galerie Dreschler, the Germany-based artist Patricia Waller has an exhibit entitled Broken Heroes. These sculptural pieces illustrate superheroes and cartoon characters in what look like humorous situations at first glance, but upon closer look, they evoke a sadness through their misfortunes and personality disorders.

Waller views her work as a critical reflection on the cult of celebrity, today’s substitute for the superhero:

They are role models and bearers of hope, they reflect our longing for the special. Heroes don’t just appear, they are created. The pressure to always look your best, the obligation to constantly be positive, and the knowledge of being observed all the time can result in identity disorders…

If you like these you might also enjoy Marcos Minunchin’s photos and Igor Scalisi Palminteri’s Superhero Saints.

Photos courtesy of the artist and Galerie Deschler.

Claudia Hersz: Identidade

Brazilian contemporary art, photography, identidade, identity, Rio, Claudia HerszBrazilian contemporary art, photography, identidade, identity, Rio, Claudia HerszBrazilian contemporary art, photography, identidade, identity, Rio, Claudia HerszI happened upon this set of photos on flickr titled Identidade (Identity) by Brazilian artist Claudia Hersz and really love them. Such a simple idea leading to such a great effect. Hersz has always felt that those big black bars placed over children’s eyes in photos to preserve their identity, in many ways have the opposite effect: they rob them of their identity. By symbolically placing a mirror in place of the black bar, she feels that the reflection returns a little of the stolen identity.

Photos: Claudia Hersz’s flickr.

Phlegm in New York

English Street Art in NYC, Phlegm, West 17th Street mural, Chelsea, street art, graffitiEnglish Street Art in NYC, Phlegm, West 17th Street mural, Chelsea, street art, graffitiEnglish Street Art in NYC, Phlegm, West 17th Street mural, Chelsea, street art, graffitiEnglish Street Art in NYC, Phlegm with Know Hope, East Village, street art, graffitiEnglish Street Art in NYC, Phlegm, East Village mural on grate, street art, graffitiClick to enlarge

I passed a large mural on my way to Chelsea and the Meatpacking District twice this week and the second time I decided to take photos and research who was behind the elaborate 3-part work. Turns out UK street artist Phlegm was visiting New York City this month and completed his first three murals in the U.S. right here in Manhattan—the other two in the East Village—and one of them an addition to an existing work by Know Hope (second from bottom.)

You can see a video of the bottom mural in progress here.

Bottom two photos by Matthew Kraus. All other photos by collabcubed.