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YOUR NEW FAVORITE BAR—SIX NOTABLE NIGHTLIFE OPENINGS

November 13th, 2009 No comments

nymag.com

Blackout
916 Manhattan Ave., Greenpoint, Brooklyn; 718-383-0254
Only in Greenpoint could you find the fashionista scene located next to the Polish meat store. As for the interior, it lives up to the name—black mirrored tables, black leather banquettes, pretty-boy bartenders in black tees, and a tin roof painted … yeah, you get it. The bar is long enough to avoid drunken encounters with struggling Goth models, and a sizable back garden offers an escape from the deep chasm of blackness within.

Doghouse Saloon
152 Orchard St., nr. Rivington St.; 646-429-8780
Deceased music venue the Annex has been reborn as the Doghouse Saloon, a balls-to-the-wall frat bar with multiple flat-screen TVs, Skee-Ball, pool, beer pong, free hot dogs, half-off margs during Monday Night Football, karaoke, and a live eighties band on Saturday night.

The Sackett
661 Sackett St., Park Slope, Brooklyn; 718-622-0437
The owners of the Sackett placed their bar on a side street for a reason: They’re aiming to keep things quiet, in line with their relaxed Park Slope location. Inside, the space is simple but warm—brick walls, knickknacks tucked away on the shelves, and tiny café tables. There’s a juke box by the door stocked with indie tunes, and a sloppy blues-rock is played on the house speakers. There’ll be an outdoor area opening in 2010, and a menu of appetizers and artisanal, oven-cooked sandwiches before then.

SPiN
48 East 23rd St., nr. Park Ave. South; 212-982-8802
This swanky homage to Ping-Pong and cocktails is a cross between a members-only club and an eighties high-school gymnasium. The Susan Sarandon–backed club houses 13,000 square feet of table-tennis space, flanked by a full bar, mini-bleachers, and a VIP room with a D.J. booth and a Rirkrit Tiravanija–designed Ping-Pong table made entirely of mirrors, worth $60,000.

Uncle Charlie’s
87 Ludlow St., nr. Delancey St.; 212-677-1100
Nightlife fixture Michael Ng is hoping that the same recipe of success—off-the-strip locale, live showtunes, buff bartenders—that worked at the Midtown East Uncle Charlie’s piano bar will attract a younger crowd at this LES location. This time out, there’s also flat-screens, beer pong, and room for 200.

The Woods
48 S. 4th St., Williamsburg, Brooklyn; no phone
To succeed in Williamsburg, a bar needs three things: a cavernous space, a “we don’t try too hard” attitude, and constant supply of plentiful and cheap booze. The Woods, owned by the same guys who run its popular neighbor, Savalas, has safely nailed all three. If you’re daunted by the bordello-red chandeliers or immaculate wood finishes, fear not—the bartender is shoveling out $2 Miller Lite, in plastic cups no less.

SOFIA MALDONADO: PUERTO RICAN PRINCESS

October 2nd, 2009 1 comment

www.diptnyc.files.wordpress.com/2009/07/sofia1.jpg?w=450&h=228

Born in Puerto Rico, 25 year old artist, Sofia Maldonado has already left a lasting impression around the world.

“It’s not graffiti: I never use a can. Always a brush.”

As a way to bring beauty to life, the anarcho-muralist (as some have dubbed her) has found her way to painting countless murals across the island. “On weekends in high school I would go around Puerto Rico and paint female characters and organic forms on random walls. I like the textures of buildings as they deteriorate. I did a mural 177 feet long in Old San Juan, and an abandoned pool in the rain forest in Rio Grande that we turned into a skateboard park.”

While Sofia received a Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree from Escuela de Artes Plasticas in San Juan, as well as a Master of Fine Arts from the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, NY, she received recognition as a mural painter in her own country by creating her own visual language through bright colors and flowing brush strokes that simulate nature and the elements of her surroundings. A mix being said to include skateboarding, graffiti, the chaotic landscape of the Caribbean, and the Latina aesthetic, Maldonado also blends fashion trends and street culture with musical inspiration such as  reggaeton and punk. Most recently, she set foot to Cuba.

“I love the skateboarding scene—it’s a really refreshing, anarchist sport. For the Havana Biennial, I painted a park and gave away 40 skateboards. I’ve painted some rooftop ramps here since I’ve moved to New York, but they don’t last too long before they’re painted over. It takes a lot of time, and a lot of permission, to paint in the streets here.”

Sofia has also taught various workshops on murals, and has exhibited in New York, Puerto Rico and Europe. She was recently included in the “S” Files” Biennial at El Museo del Barrio in New York, NY and continues to work and reside in Brooklyn.

for more info and art by Sofia Maldonado go to:

sofiarte.blogspot.com
skatemypatria.blogspot.com