Pipes
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January 2012
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by Pipes on Jan 11, 2014 11:41:06 GMT 1, Nice dreadnatty where is that?
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nipper
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October 2006
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by nipper on Jan 11, 2014 22:33:51 GMT 1,
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nipper
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October 2006
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by nipper on Jan 11, 2014 22:35:40 GMT 1,
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nipper
New Member
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October 2006
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by nipper on Jan 11, 2014 22:38:21 GMT 1,
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nipper
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October 2006
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by nipper on Jan 11, 2014 22:39:18 GMT 1,
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nipper
New Member
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October 2006
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by nipper on Jan 12, 2014 11:07:18 GMT 1,
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nipper
New Member
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October 2006
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by nipper on Jan 13, 2014 16:53:17 GMT 1,
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dreadnatty
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February 2013
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by dreadnatty on Jan 13, 2014 17:10:50 GMT 1,
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dreadnatty
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February 2013
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by dreadnatty on Jan 13, 2014 17:11:24 GMT 1, Bushwick...near MECKA gallery
Bushwick...near MECKA gallery
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dreadnatty
Junior Member
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February 2013
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dreadnatty
Junior Member
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February 2013
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by dreadnatty on Jan 27, 2014 0:38:18 GMT 1, Brooklyn Artist El Sol 25
Brooklyn Artist El Sol 25
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kbfrombk
Junior Member
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October 2013
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by kbfrombk on Feb 2, 2014 19:35:03 GMT 1, I was in Bushwick last night and it turns out the bar we were headed to for a party had this NYCHOS gem on it.
Pretty impressive in scale!!
Saw a couple COTS/ENX pasties across the street as well.
I was in Bushwick last night and it turns out the bar we were headed to for a party had this NYCHOS gem on it. Pretty impressive in scale!!
Saw a couple COTS/ENX pasties across the street as well.
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dreadnatty
Junior Member
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February 2013
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by dreadnatty on Feb 17, 2014 21:55:57 GMT 1, Hanksy Presents: Surplus Candy
Hanksy Presents: Surplus Candy
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dreadnatty
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 5,431
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February 2013
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by dreadnatty on Mar 4, 2014 2:58:41 GMT 1, The 9 Can't-Miss Attractions of Armory Week 2014
THE ARMORY SHOW March 6 β 9 at Piers 92 & 94
The Armory Show is the big daddy of New York's art fairs, the marquee event that lends its name to the week's festivities and lures emerging and established galleries from around the world, along with the collectors who patronize them and the artists and the scrum of art-world professionals who converge on these events like wildebeests on a watering hole. This year's edition is of particular interest because its annual "focus" section is being devoted to new art from China, organized by the highly regarded curator and sinologist Phil Tinari. Everyone will want to see what he and the commissioned artist of the fair, the mercurial provocateur Xu Zhen, come up with.
THE ADAA FAIR March 5 β 9 at the Park Avenue Armory
Technically called the Art Show, the ADAA Fair is organized by the Art Dealers Association of America at, confusingly enough, the Park Avenue Armory, and brings a select group of vetted blue-chip galleries to present work to a tony Upper East Side clientele. Known for its curated approach and inclusion of many attention-grabbing solo-artist booths, the fair also reliably has a few wild cards up its sleeve in terms of cutting-edge presentations by younger artists. Must-see displays include the solo booths by shiny-painting star Jacob Kassay at 303 Gallery, conceptual photographer Sara VanDerBeek at Metro Pictures, outsider-art icon James Castle at Peter Freeman, Inc., and the increasingly influential painter Jack Whitten at Alexander Gray Associates.
INDEPENDENT March 6 β 9 at 548 West 22nd Street
The Independent art fair, which takes place in the former Dia Art Foundation building in Chelsea, is by far the hippest of the week's fairs, showing challenging, curator-friendly work from a hand-picked assortment of galleries from around the world. If Armory Week were a high school, Independent would sit at the cool kids' table, and the fair has attitude and edgy glamor to spare. That's where I'd buy something if I were in a shopping mood. Fairgoers will want to check out the presentations of artist-run Chinatown gallery 47 Canal, Berlin's KOW and SociΓ©tΓ©, Paris's Balice Hertling, and the ever-adventurous Gavin Brown's Enterprise from New York.
SPRING/BREAK March 6 β 9 at 32 Prince Street
Down the food chain a bit is the Spring/Break art fair, a newcomer to the scene that is returning for its third edition down in an old schoolhouse on the boarder of SoHo and Little Italy. Run by curators rather than your typical assortment of market makers, this fair will have some quirkier work alongside real emerging finds. A highlight will be the paintings by the great Walter Robinson, a New York art world legend who just so happens to be Artspace's resident columnist.
THE (UN)FAIR March 6 β 9 at 500 West 52nd Street
If that's not enough fairs for you, then there's the (Un)Fair, which bills itself as a guerilla-style art show where, quote, "attendees will discover and explore a cohesive, experiential indoor and outdoor environment" that includes performance art and other arty attractions. The quality is likely to be generally low and perhaps a bit dΓ©classΓ©, but curiosity-seekers may have a good time there.
"ROBERT HEINECKEN: OBJECT MATTER" VIP preview March 3 at MoMA
MoMA's much-anticipated survey of Robert Heinecken's photo-based artworks won't debut to the public until the middle of March, but if you can swing a plus-one to the museum's VIP preview on March 3, you definitely should. A pioneering Los Angeles artist whose darkroom experiments and liberal appropriations of mass-media materials put him on an intersecting trajectory with the New York-based Pictures Generation of the 1980s, Heinecken is underappreciated on this coastβbut won't be for long after the city sees this show.
THE WHITNEY BIENNIAL March 7 β May 25 at the Whitney Museum
Finally, the tentpole event of the week is not an art fair but an earthshaking phenomenon that comes along every two years and upends the art world, mints new stars, and changes the way we look at contemporary art. That would be the Whitney Biennial. Put together this year by a trio of curators, including Chicago painter Michele Grabner, MoMA media and performance curator Stuart Comer, and ICA Philadelphia's Anthony Elms, the show this year will feature a range of poets, performers, painters, artists of all sorts, and a mysterious guest appearance by the late David Foster Wallace. This show will provide grist for the art conversation throughout the year, and is mandatory viewing.
THE WHITNEY HOUSTON BIENNIAL March 9th at 20 Jay Street, Suite 207
Taking place in Dumbo, the Whitney Houston Biennial is a one-night-only art fair that puts a humorous name on a welcome cause: showcasing work by 75 up-and-coming women artists. Created by the curator and artist Christine Finley as a feminist answer to the Whitney Biennial, the show picks up a popular verbal play that the Whitney itself fully endorsesβafter all, the museum's softball team is called the Houston Whitneys, and last year the artist Jana Euler used her show in the Whitney lobby to debut a large-scale painting pairing the museum's iconic Marcel Breuer building with the floating ghostly head of the late pop star.
THE BRUCENNIAL March 7 β April 4 at 837 Washington Street
Those impish anonymous artists behind the Bruce High Quality Foundation collective are at their crypto-earnest shennanigans again with the return of their grab-bag group show of mostly young emerging artists with a few bigger and older names mixed in. Backed by the young dealer and art-world scion Vito Schnabel, the exhibition is bound to be a breezy and antic snapshot of a certain slice of the city's art scene (it could probably be renamed the Brooklynennial), and the opening will surely be crammed with aggressive fashion statements, irony, and freely flowing beer.
The 9 Can't-Miss Attractions of Armory Week 2014
THE ARMORY SHOW March 6 β 9 at Piers 92 & 94
The Armory Show is the big daddy of New York's art fairs, the marquee event that lends its name to the week's festivities and lures emerging and established galleries from around the world, along with the collectors who patronize them and the artists and the scrum of art-world professionals who converge on these events like wildebeests on a watering hole. This year's edition is of particular interest because its annual "focus" section is being devoted to new art from China, organized by the highly regarded curator and sinologist Phil Tinari. Everyone will want to see what he and the commissioned artist of the fair, the mercurial provocateur Xu Zhen, come up with.
THE ADAA FAIR March 5 β 9 at the Park Avenue Armory
Technically called the Art Show, the ADAA Fair is organized by the Art Dealers Association of America at, confusingly enough, the Park Avenue Armory, and brings a select group of vetted blue-chip galleries to present work to a tony Upper East Side clientele. Known for its curated approach and inclusion of many attention-grabbing solo-artist booths, the fair also reliably has a few wild cards up its sleeve in terms of cutting-edge presentations by younger artists. Must-see displays include the solo booths by shiny-painting star Jacob Kassay at 303 Gallery, conceptual photographer Sara VanDerBeek at Metro Pictures, outsider-art icon James Castle at Peter Freeman, Inc., and the increasingly influential painter Jack Whitten at Alexander Gray Associates.
INDEPENDENT March 6 β 9 at 548 West 22nd Street
The Independent art fair, which takes place in the former Dia Art Foundation building in Chelsea, is by far the hippest of the week's fairs, showing challenging, curator-friendly work from a hand-picked assortment of galleries from around the world. If Armory Week were a high school, Independent would sit at the cool kids' table, and the fair has attitude and edgy glamor to spare. That's where I'd buy something if I were in a shopping mood. Fairgoers will want to check out the presentations of artist-run Chinatown gallery 47 Canal, Berlin's KOW and SociΓ©tΓ©, Paris's Balice Hertling, and the ever-adventurous Gavin Brown's Enterprise from New York.
SPRING/BREAK March 6 β 9 at 32 Prince Street
Down the food chain a bit is the Spring/Break art fair, a newcomer to the scene that is returning for its third edition down in an old schoolhouse on the boarder of SoHo and Little Italy. Run by curators rather than your typical assortment of market makers, this fair will have some quirkier work alongside real emerging finds. A highlight will be the paintings by the great Walter Robinson, a New York art world legend who just so happens to be Artspace's resident columnist.
THE (UN)FAIR March 6 β 9 at 500 West 52nd Street
If that's not enough fairs for you, then there's the (Un)Fair, which bills itself as a guerilla-style art show where, quote, "attendees will discover and explore a cohesive, experiential indoor and outdoor environment" that includes performance art and other arty attractions. The quality is likely to be generally low and perhaps a bit dΓ©classΓ©, but curiosity-seekers may have a good time there.
"ROBERT HEINECKEN: OBJECT MATTER" VIP preview March 3 at MoMA
MoMA's much-anticipated survey of Robert Heinecken's photo-based artworks won't debut to the public until the middle of March, but if you can swing a plus-one to the museum's VIP preview on March 3, you definitely should. A pioneering Los Angeles artist whose darkroom experiments and liberal appropriations of mass-media materials put him on an intersecting trajectory with the New York-based Pictures Generation of the 1980s, Heinecken is underappreciated on this coastβbut won't be for long after the city sees this show.
THE WHITNEY BIENNIAL March 7 β May 25 at the Whitney Museum
Finally, the tentpole event of the week is not an art fair but an earthshaking phenomenon that comes along every two years and upends the art world, mints new stars, and changes the way we look at contemporary art. That would be the Whitney Biennial. Put together this year by a trio of curators, including Chicago painter Michele Grabner, MoMA media and performance curator Stuart Comer, and ICA Philadelphia's Anthony Elms, the show this year will feature a range of poets, performers, painters, artists of all sorts, and a mysterious guest appearance by the late David Foster Wallace. This show will provide grist for the art conversation throughout the year, and is mandatory viewing.
THE WHITNEY HOUSTON BIENNIAL March 9th at 20 Jay Street, Suite 207
Taking place in Dumbo, the Whitney Houston Biennial is a one-night-only art fair that puts a humorous name on a welcome cause: showcasing work by 75 up-and-coming women artists. Created by the curator and artist Christine Finley as a feminist answer to the Whitney Biennial, the show picks up a popular verbal play that the Whitney itself fully endorsesβafter all, the museum's softball team is called the Houston Whitneys, and last year the artist Jana Euler used her show in the Whitney lobby to debut a large-scale painting pairing the museum's iconic Marcel Breuer building with the floating ghostly head of the late pop star.
THE BRUCENNIAL March 7 β April 4 at 837 Washington Street
Those impish anonymous artists behind the Bruce High Quality Foundation collective are at their crypto-earnest shennanigans again with the return of their grab-bag group show of mostly young emerging artists with a few bigger and older names mixed in. Backed by the young dealer and art-world scion Vito Schnabel, the exhibition is bound to be a breezy and antic snapshot of a certain slice of the city's art scene (it could probably be renamed the Brooklynennial), and the opening will surely be crammed with aggressive fashion statements, irony, and freely flowing beer.
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mmmike
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 2,421
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March 2010
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by mmmike on Mar 4, 2014 3:45:39 GMT 1, Thanks for posting I'm heading to ny Thursday and will be there through the weekend.
Here is what I had been planning to go see before reading your post. What do you think of these others and how much time do you think it takes to see each of them.
Sotheby's Canadian abstraction Volta ny - Friday and sat 10am to 8pm, sun closes at 5 - 76 mercer street (soho) Armory - Thursday to Sunday 12 to 7pm - pier 92 & 94 Scope 11 to 8pm, Friday 7 on Sunday - 312 west 33rd street Fountain art fair fri, sat 12 - 7, sun to 5 - 69th regiment armory (Lexington ave & 26th street) City as a canvas daily 10 to 6 - 1220 fifth ave (at 103rd street)
Thanks for posting I'm heading to ny Thursday and will be there through the weekend.
Here is what I had been planning to go see before reading your post. What do you think of these others and how much time do you think it takes to see each of them.
Sotheby's Canadian abstraction Volta ny - Friday and sat 10am to 8pm, sun closes at 5 - 76 mercer street (soho) Armory - Thursday to Sunday 12 to 7pm - pier 92 & 94 Scope 11 to 8pm, Friday 7 on Sunday - 312 west 33rd street Fountain art fair fri, sat 12 - 7, sun to 5 - 69th regiment armory (Lexington ave & 26th street) City as a canvas daily 10 to 6 - 1220 fifth ave (at 103rd street)
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dreadnatty
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 5,431
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February 2013
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by dreadnatty on Mar 4, 2014 4:20:12 GMT 1, Id go with Volta,Armory and Scope but the guy to ask is AFR1KA. Shoot him a PM.
Id go with Volta,Armory and Scope but the guy to ask is AFR1KA. Shoot him a PM.
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dreadnatty
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 5,431
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February 2013
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by dreadnatty on Mar 4, 2014 4:35:02 GMT 1, Also can check this out if you have time: www.mcny.org/content/city-canvas
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Gard
Junior Member
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June 2012
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by Gard on Mar 4, 2014 9:45:29 GMT 1, Looking forward to this week Armory, Volta, Scope and Whitney Biennale is my main plan, but open to other options.
Looking forward to this week Armory, Volta, Scope and Whitney Biennale is my main plan, but open to other options.
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jusdeep
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 2,797
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October 2007
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by jusdeep on Mar 4, 2014 13:54:53 GMT 1, Anyone have any suggestions for New York, first week or so in April? Museums, places to go, galleries & shows, sighs to not miss, places to eat etc. Prefer nothing too touristy. Thanks in advance JD
Anyone have any suggestions for New York, first week or so in April? Museums, places to go, galleries & shows, sighs to not miss, places to eat etc. Prefer nothing too touristy. Thanks in advance JD
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Deleted
π¨οΈ 0
ππ»
January 1970
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by Deleted on Mar 4, 2014 15:41:22 GMT 1, it's an obvious one, but MoMa is a must. same with PS1 in LI City. The folk art museum is small but pretty cool. lost of good cafes and record shops in the village. Prospect Park in Brooklyn is really nice (there's a zoo!) and won't be as crowded as Central Park. You can get free tickets to The Daily Show and The Colbert Report. Coney Island is still pretty great. The high-line is really neat, but parts of it are pretty crowded usually. Try to catch a UCB Theatre show (I think they still have free shows once a week, and there's usually an SNL member or two performing)
it's an obvious one, but MoMa is a must. same with PS1 in LI City. The folk art museum is small but pretty cool. lost of good cafes and record shops in the village. Prospect Park in Brooklyn is really nice (there's a zoo!) and won't be as crowded as Central Park. You can get free tickets to The Daily Show and The Colbert Report. Coney Island is still pretty great. The high-line is really neat, but parts of it are pretty crowded usually. Try to catch a UCB Theatre show (I think they still have free shows once a week, and there's usually an SNL member or two performing)
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dreadnatty
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 5,431
ππ» 6,992
February 2013
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shechtmr
New Member
π¨οΈ 443
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August 2012
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dreadnatty
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 5,431
ππ» 6,992
February 2013
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dreadnatty
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 5,431
ππ» 6,992
February 2013
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by Dexter Bulldog on Mar 4, 2014 16:07:20 GMT 1, mission chinese i beleive is currently closed. he has mission cantina which just opened which is getting good reviews for mexican. also on the lower east side for mexican i liek barrio chino. they dont take resevations so go early or late. redfarm on hudson in the village is a great spot for chinese. they actually have the best soup dumplings in nyc pizza ill also add joes pizza on bleeker and carmine. open til 4 am, great ny slice. eatly is great, go for lunch and get this prime rib sandwich here : www.eataly.com/nyc-rosticceria resto on 29th and park does a great burger and has an excellent beer selection. theres tons of great burger spots, but this one requires very little work. a lot of places can have huge waits.
mission chinese i beleive is currently closed. he has mission cantina which just opened which is getting good reviews for mexican. also on the lower east side for mexican i liek barrio chino. they dont take resevations so go early or late. redfarm on hudson in the village is a great spot for chinese. they actually have the best soup dumplings in nyc pizza ill also add joes pizza on bleeker and carmine. open til 4 am, great ny slice. eatly is great, go for lunch and get this prime rib sandwich here : www.eataly.com/nyc-rosticceria resto on 29th and park does a great burger and has an excellent beer selection. theres tons of great burger spots, but this one requires very little work. a lot of places can have huge waits.
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by Dexter Bulldog on Mar 4, 2014 16:09:08 GMT 1, and obviously moma..
and obviously moma..
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jettad
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 1,057
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October 2011
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by jettad on Mar 4, 2014 16:30:01 GMT 1, When I went to New York I spent a lot of time wandering Manhattan, but someone on this board recommended the Bushwick Collective in Brooklyn. I spent most of the day just wondering the area. A great place to kill some time and see some great street art.
Here is a quick link to a NYTimes article on some of the street art areas. (this article is old so places like 5 Pointz are no longer there sadly)
When I went to New York I spent a lot of time wandering Manhattan, but someone on this board recommended the Bushwick Collective in Brooklyn. I spent most of the day just wondering the area. A great place to kill some time and see some great street art. Here is a quick link to a NYTimes article on some of the street art areas. (this article is old so places like 5 Pointz are no longer there sadly)
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Deleted
π¨οΈ 0
ππ»
January 1970
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Visit NEW YORK πΊπ² Street Art, Galleries, Events, by Deleted on Mar 4, 2014 16:34:59 GMT 1, When I went to New York I spent a lot of time wandering Manhattan, but someone on this board recommended the Bushwick Collective in Brooklyn. I spent most of the day just wondering the area. A great place to kill some time and see some great street art.Β Here is a quick link to a NYTimes article on some of the street art areas. (this article is old so places like 5 Pointz are no longer there sadly)
Yeah great place and now quite a few places to grab a bite or a beer. Just avoid the Pixel Pancho, that chicken Abatoir is pretty damned disgusting
When I went to New York I spent a lot of time wandering Manhattan, but someone on this board recommended the Bushwick Collective in Brooklyn. I spent most of the day just wondering the area. A great place to kill some time and see some great street art.Β Here is a quick link to a NYTimes article on some of the street art areas. (this article is old so places like 5 Pointz are no longer there sadly) Yeah great place and now quite a few places to grab a bite or a beer. Just avoid the Pixel Pancho, that chicken Abatoir is pretty damned disgusting
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