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Category Archives: Assignment Six – Final Project
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Time Square, Broadway Shows, Ellis Island, these are only a few of the attractions that are visited daily in New York City. When it comes to picking the best meal options some look to the most popular restaurants and are greeted by an hour long wait list to be crammed into a tiny table and rushed through the dinner. Here are the nine best restaurants and quick tips on what to order. The versatility in the culture in NYC brings a wide variety of restaurants to choose from. First stop is Lokal in Williamsburg, Brooklyn offers contemporary Mediterrian food. Followed by Spicy Shallot in Jackson Heights, Queens a cozy Thai restaurant with a $6 lunch special. Also in Jackson Heights is Ufc, which stands for unidentified chicken which serves four flavors of Korean chicken. Next, found in Midtown, Manhattan is Blockheads which serves Mexican food, well known for it’s burritos before the chain store Chipotle. Back to Astoria, Queens is Sunswick bar and eatery which serves only during the winter season fresh Apple Cider. Located in Red Hook, Brooklyn is Ikea which a Swedish furniture which holds its own cafeteria which sells well known Swedish dishes. Schnipers which is located in Midtown, Manhattan serves all American food ranging from mac and cheese to sloppy joes. The best and closest to Baruch College is Penelope which specializes in comfort homemade food, known for its Brunch menu only served on weekends.
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Anatomy of an artist
An artist is a person who interprets the world around them. The sorrows, the joys, the pain, the beauty are all seen in a particular way to be explained and relayed in some way. It can be argued that we are all artists. But those that are compelled to deliver this interpretation of the world as they see it are quite different. There is an inner drive in them; almost an audible voice for their ears only, that requires them to create. It pushes them. It fulfills them. It comforts and nurtures them. In a small studio in Greenwich Village an accomplished author and professor, beloved wife and mother, obeys that inner voice and delivers what she sees through oil paints. While she painstakingly teaches her students to find their place in the world she is simultaneously creating hers and where here art will take her. Here is the anatomy of an artist…
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Holiday Spirit in NYC
I did my final project on the holiday spirit in New York City. I tried to portray it not from a tourist’s view, but from an attentive New Yorker’s view. New Yorkers typically go about their day not really paying attention to their surroundings. They are the complete opposite of tourists, rushing to work or school while tourists get in their way by stopping in their tracks to look up at everything. New Yorkers, for the most part, will not stop by the Macy’s display windows to stare in awe. In fact, some New Yorkers won’t even be caught shopping in Macy’s around the holiday season. Tourists will stop to watch the street performers such as the break-dancers, the singers, and the carolers while New Yorkers will make their way around these large crowds.
As a native New Yorker, I decided to walk around the city and this time, I payed more attention to everything around me. I started in Herald Square where I came across a group of carolers, mostly adults, who were singing, “Joy to the World” and watched them where any other day I would have passed them. I noticed all of the stores around 34th Street that were having holiday sales, with huge window displays advertising the sales. One store in particular, Desigual, caught my eye because of all the colorful balloons tied outside the store to promote their sales. I thought it was interesting that they chose balloons instead of having elaborate displays in their windows.
Another interesting promotional tool I saw was the huge snow globe right in the middle of 34th Street and 6th Avenue. It had a MINI Countryman inside along with a snowman standing right next to it and was bound to make anyone stop and admire. I then went to Macy’s on 34th street, stopping to look at Wintuk characters on the way. It wasn’t the actual window displays of Macy’s that caught my eye, but the large crowds gathered in front of them. I wondered how many of them were native New Yorkers and how many were tourists.
Once I went into Macys, it was as if I had stepped into a whole new world. The amount of work that went into decorating everything was amazing. I’ve been to Macy’s around the holiday season too many times to count but never really took the time to appreciate the decorations. Everything from the ceilings to the walls were covered in holiday décor and I noticed a Smurfs theme. The Smurfs were splattered across all of the Macy’s shopping bags and there were huge cake-like tiers filled with Smurfs piled on top of each other. The congestion of people became overwhelming and I was reminded why many New Yorkers stay away from this Macy’s in particular.
Once I left Macy’s, I wandered over to Bryant Park where it was mayhem. Many skaters looked like they were having trouble skating because of how crowded it was. Their blue, rented skates looked pretty against the huge blue-lit Christmas tree in the background. As I walked to the tree I stopped to admire the two-story restaurant Celsius, where diners can watch the skaters over lunch, dinner, and drinks. I had never seen the Bryant Park Christmas tree and it was beautiful.
Walking back to 34th Street I promised myself I would start paying more attention to my surroundings. I believe that all New Yorkers should take some time out of their day, even if it is a few minutes, to really soak in this city that they call home. It definitely is not the most perfect city, but a greater appreciation will emerge.
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A Performance At Webster Hall
A friend of mine had invited me to go see him perform, but this was not without alterier motive. He had wanted me to take photos documenting his performance. I had not done concert/ live performance photography before this and had no idea what I was going to do. Finally, it dawned on me to document this in a way in which someone could get a sense of what it was like to be there at the show.
Webster hall on this night was pretty empty so feeding off of crowd energy was not an option. There seemed to be more going on at the bar than in the audience, but nonetheless the performances were still pretty stellar; they possesssed a great deal of expression. This kind of expression and passion they were displaying is something i tried hard at capturing. Whether or not I was successful in doing so remains to be decided.
The passivity of the crowd meant I had to focus a lot on what was going on stage and because I was not granted stage access, I worked hard to atleast capture something meaningful from the audience’s perspective. These are the results.
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Vineyard
I did my final project on the Vineyards of Long Island. Earlier on this semester I visited 3 vineyards on the Tip of Long Island where many of the New York wineries are located that were recommended to me by a local wine bar owner. At first I didn’t know what to expect never traveling that deep into Long Island before. But as I started to travel the scenery started to change. NYC’s towering skyline began to shrink into a forest of trees and small homes. The most relaxing 2 hour drive I’ve ever taken. Making Wine is a process that starts on the vines and ends in the bottle as you will see in my series of photographs.
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Christmas in NY
Christmas in New York is unlike any other cities you have seen. I’ve had the pleasure of being in many different cities throughout the world during Christmas time; no other cities come close to the amount of time, effort and spectacular visuals that New York puts in to make the holiday season special.
I was once here as a tourist during this time period and I was overly impressed by seeing all the beautiful decorations not only in one section of the city but pretty much the entire city in the Christmas spirit. In most cities, only a certain regions have been designated to be the key focal point in displaying the Christmas decorations. In New York, there are several ice rinks in various locations, huge stars hanging over streets, famous Christmas trees and even buildings that are wrapped like presents. I mean, where else could you see a Mini parked inside a snow globe!
People do not necessarily come to New York over the Christmas period simply to shop. You can do that anywhere in the world. People come here to get the whole experience of what Christmas should be like and the feeling that comes with it. As I walked around the city taking pictures, I am amazed at the amount of families that come to New York for the opportunity to experience this magical time.
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Tribeca/Times Sq.
So close but yet so different. This is my way of comparing two different neighborhoods in Manhattan, New York City. Tribeca, a neighborhood where New Yorkers live is very different from Times Square, a neighborhood filled with tourists. Fortunately for us natives there are areas in Manhattan where we don’t need to worry about walking around slow paced tourist’s trying to see the sights. However both areas are great in different ways.
By many criteria, Tribeca could be considered the best place to live in the city. It enjoys tons of transit, loft style apartments in industrial buildings and has already overtaken the Upper East Side as the city’s richest area. A walk down a street here will yield newlyweds often with newborns. Despite being in one of the biggest cities in the world TriBeca doesn’t get lost in the sea of neighborhoods but rather holds it’s own. Mailmen with their carts, classic looking diners and the wide array of residents manage to keep the authenticity here that is disappearing so quickly in other parts of the borough.
Times Square is a must see for tourists but usually a place locals avoid when trying to get from point a to point b. The naked cowboy and his enthusiastic fans is not a scene you will see in every neighborhood but that is what makes a trip here so memorable. The crowded streets that make it almost impossible to walk in is the norm. There’s no mistaking when one has entered times sq.
A train ride for a few stops could be like night and day. its really great to see that even in a borough that is only 23 sq miles there are so many different neighborhoods and each of them offers something different for everyone to enjoy.
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The Shorakapok Preserve
The Shorakapok Preserve in Inwood Hill Park is part of Forever Wild, which is a program with the goal of protecting “ecologically valuable” land. This first started earlier on in the semester as a personal project, which I chose to expand upon for the purposes of this project. The significance of this particular location is that it has the last natural forest and salt water marsh in Manhattan. I chose to expose this area when all the vegetation has died and very few people come to visit as well as incorporating some pictures of the forested areas when they were still alive. There is a great contrast to the city and to many this preserve does not even seem to be a part of Manhattan.
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