Showing posts with label nyc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nyc. Show all posts

Friday, March 1, 2019

Riverdel Hits The Spot in Brooklyn


After my wonderful Chelsea morning of Lynette Yiadom-Boakye at Jack Shainman and Charles White at David Zwirner, I headed to the Brooklyn area with timed tickets to the Frida Kahlo exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum. Beforehand, I thought to try lunch at Riverdel just minutes away.
Riverdel is a lovely small eatery and grocery with plenty of vegan cheese options. They serve breakfast all day and have sweets galore at the register. Decision making is difficult in a place like this, but it brings a big smile to my face knowing that veganism is so much more than what people perceive it to be. The food creativity is endless for us.




While I waited for my food, I received a horrible rejection letter on Single Awareness Day of all days. It destroyed a little hope, a little dream of making art and cooking from the herb garden for three whole weeks in Vermont-- a state never visited. When my Riverdel order arrived on its light wooden tray, a thick croissant sandwich stuffed with vegan bacon, tofu, cheddar, tomatoes, and arugula, my sadness melted. The first bite was incredible, hot and flavorful. Rejection be damned by the delight of delicious comfort food. Afterwards, I had the lightest, scrumptious macarons-- matcha and lemon. They were sweet, airy treats that concluded lunch perfectly.




Riverdel is definitely a fine place to fill spirits. Whether in a good mood or in dismal disposition, this joint in Brooklyn has all the joys required to make anybody's day-- vegan or not. The food is amazing and the workers are very kind. I wish every restaurant in New York City was just as sweet.

Thursday, February 28, 2019

Sate Me


“Hecuba’s eyes are full of dreams of love and marriage. To someone. Someday. When the hunger has truly passed.”- from Lynette Yiadom-Boakye’s grotesque horror story, Dinner With Jeffrey

I vividly remember the summer of 2017– the frequent returns to the fourth floor dimension of matte maroon painted walls and dimmed lights that enhanced the contemplative mood set by Lynette Yiadom-Boakye’s Under-Song For a Cipher at the New Museum. Seventeen, full-length portrait paintings had quenched a need for Black—specifically dark skinned Black—representation that popular media still has yet to uphold without negative stereotyping. Portraiture began classically white and privileged. The art cannon remains bolted with mostly white men artists inside it. Yiadom-Boakye’s Black figures are contradicting that history. Formally speaking, the candid theatrics in their vulnerable black eyes, their slender bodies existing during an uncertain time, the subtle difference between skin hues of sepia, umber, sienna, Van Dyke brown, etc… there is something significantly endearing about a Lynette Yiadom-Boakye portrait.

Now, almost two years later, both Jack Shainman galleries in Chelsea promise a quixotic romance in Yiadom-Boakye’s latest exhibition, In Lieu of a Louder Love. Thus, on a fairly cold Single Awareness Day—Valentine’s Day for most—I again saw my undeniably dark brown skin reflected back, prominently displayed in large, monochromatic paintings. Much like Kerry James Marshall’s penchant for placing unambiguous descendants of Africa as pivotal vehicular points throughout his impressive career, Yiadom-Boakye presents a valid case for inclusivity in the art world by tenderly painting the Black figure. She paints them with masterclass proficiency, renders them with an arsenal of rich and lush techniques.


At Jack Shainman’s West 20th Street location, titles are absent (even on the website). Four paintings are in the front gallery. Two share a wall, split a breath apart like a traditional diptych. A dark brown woman with neat, straight-haired ponytail on the right and a dark brown man on the left fully occupy a canvas each, situated against white walls with arms on white tabletops. They wear white t-shirts. Their long, slender fingers prop chalky cigarettes up to their hidden mouths. The woman defiantly gazes out at the viewer, challenging whomever should question her, perhaps daring her to put away the unhealthy habit. The man, however, is internalized, his downward eyes concentrating only on that cigarette. This casually styled pair—seemingly escaping a classic Norman Rockwell illustration—advertise a sophisticated coolness, embodying The Gap meets Marlboro, their limber Black bodies strategically placed in leading roles.

On the middle wall, a smiling woman stares out directly—a reader—in a thin strapped greenish black dress and red tights. An open book lies before her. Whilst encased in an ominous, nearly pitch black background, she is triangularly arranged-- her bent legs, the area between her upper arm, waist, and knee, her extended arm, her arm above her knees implying. The master painters often incorporated mathematical symmetries in their compositions and Yiadom-Boakye is certainly no exception. Her opaque brush strokes also display a French Impressionist quality, whispering Édouard Manet sweet nothings onto canvases sleek with her quick gestures. Like the smoking woman in the diptych, the reader’s sclerae—the whites of her eyes—her teeth and glint at the side of her dress are gleaming as though a camera flash exposed the intensity. Manet may have used Black models, most notably Laure in Children in the Tuileries Gardens and Olympia, Yiadom-Boakye’s Black composites are not objectified props performing second fiddle to white models. Every figure feels vaguely familiar, like they may have existed in passing as friends, family members, strangers on street corners, celebrities, ancestral spirits. They are simple dressed characters without ornamentation, without exoticism.


In the gallery rear, Yiadom-Boakye’s Black bodies are sharing physical spaces, interacting, zealously smoking more cigarettes, dancing like Edgar Degas portraits brought to modernity. They wear muted pink tank tops, striped shirts, leotards, feathered tops, and tights, their charismatic forms either relaxed, intense, or poignant. A painting on the back wall suggests the exhibition title. A woman (wearing retro black framed glasses similar to Yiadom-Boakye’s real-life quirky fashion sense) leaning on her side overlooks a sleeping man. Red glasses lay above his closed eyes and his hands are protectively upright, fingers at his white collar. Her arm rests on the side of her face, the other in a delicate clasp, her gaze focusing intently on him. They are either at a grassy park or a clandestine backyard, lying on a red blanket, the shades of the shadowy hour signaling twilight. Perhaps she had been staring at him all afternoon, a fanciful woman reveling in the throes of a platonic or romantic relationship. Maybe he is not snoozing, instead puckering his full lips for a kiss. Either way, the painting suggests intimacy, suggests love—the kind of love Hecuba herself would envy.

Another painting screams My Bloody Valentine. Red is a hot and pulsing main attraction, seeming to thump sonorously like a wild heartbeat. In a vertical oriented composition, the seated solitary figure dons a crisp white t-shirt, black pants, and brilliant sanguine blouse with his gloriously long arms outstretched on a velvety crimson chaise. The orange red hue of the figure’s cropped hair almost blends into the fiery background. With his head turned to the side and his content pose, he is sharply outlined in this seductive palette interplay. The soft, beguiling forms makes one believe that Hallmark’s Mahogany line could use Yiadom-Boakye’s sensuous painting for holiday cards.


On the walk to the second gallery, I reminisce an unforgettable August evening. In a stimulating conversation with New Museum curator Massimiliano Gioni, Yiadom-Boakye revealed meshing up her source materials, collaging them together to invent fictional abstractions as a prose writer would do with a palette of words. Her figurative paintings— usually completed in one session— contain attractive individuals that do not look alike. She also insists that her writing and painting are not connected, that these practices are separate entities. Yet, Hecuba’s passionate dreams mirror the basic desires to see Blackness depicted in multifaceted complexity, to escape the monolith. Hecuba’s love deprivation may be a Black woman’s hope to bear witness to her own reflection genuinely depicted by a gentle hand. Hecuba’s meals— her gold digging boyfriends— seem a dark and damning metaphor of the art world. They’re the dead white men still outselling most living artists. Minorities wait in lines for a serving of praise to survive on. Sadly, only a select few will be cherished at a time.




West 24th Street continues the harrowing sentiments of In Lieu of a Louder Love, Yiadom-Boakye lusciously delivering transcendental narratives that challenge gender perception anew. In a small portrait, a handsome bearded man is profiled in a dramatically thick, greyish pink scarf— a pink scarf that takes as much compositional room as his face. His one sharp eye is downward, his expression pensive. Another man lets a wild white owl span out its brilliant wings affixed to his hand. A seated woman is laughing, a panting fox beneath her spread out on a black and white tiled floor. These enigmatic, warm-toned portraits feature murky greens and browns surrounding the figures with raw canvas revealed in jarring little pieces. It is if to deliberately escape the myth, the joke that one cannot see a Black person in darkness.


However, the grandest pleasure is four midnight blue panels —a quadtych— of dark skinned women in white leotards and hunter green tights, their arching bodies shaped like crescent moons. Three face the fourth—the fourth body facing them. Perhaps she is an instructor, guiding them into proper formation. Moreover, this series responds beautifully to a painting in the other gallery location. On a singular canvas, four male dancers are dressed in the same hunter green with one male interrupting the linear.

Yiadom-Boakye’s evocative Black figures fulfill a huge void in this post-contemporary age of painting. Their extraordinary presences are supposed to be here. The disturbing, eyebrow-raising stories found in the back pages of Yiadom-Boakye’s exhibition catalogues, however, propel the reader to reread like an avid viewer studying the intriguing contrasts in her paintings. Although Dinner With Jeffrey’s Hecuba showcases gruesomely bizarre behavior (aiding and abetting murder), she would eat her lovers’ parts with her family—ultimately devouring unworthy men in a succubus vacuum—and pine away for the fairy tale ending. In Lieu of a Louder Love is the urgent love letter that ardently confesses how much marginalized Black bodies matter to the one woman painter who would not deny us our due.

Friday, December 29, 2017

Best of 2017: The Incredible Majesty of Kehinde Wiley's "Trickster"

This hauntingly gorgeous portrait of Wangechi Mutu as a provocative goddess in a royal blue toga style dress, holding a snake. The coiled reptile's stripes mimic the flying twisted locs in her free flowing hair.
One of the best art gallery exhibit highlights of 2017 starred Kehinde Wiley's impressive new paintings at Sean Kelly Gallery in New York City.
The art loving visitor is firstly seduced inside near darkness, wandering around spacious grounds like a lost, hungry traveler in a forest field, the paintings playing storied trees planted on every wall. Clad in alluring mystery, these tremendous, cloak and dagger narratives were spaced apart with single, focused lights casting luminous brilliance upon celebrated contemporary black artists, some of the most compelling painters, photographers, sculptors, and multi-disciplinarians of this moment-- Mickelene Thomas, Hank Willis Thomas, Derrick Addams, and more. Each easily identified artist has become a fictionalized character straight out of a spine tingling Grimm, stripped of modernity, transformed into period costume, regal defiance vividly illustrated in their body language and facial expressions.

Barefoot Rashid Johnson and Sanford Biggers.
Art history buffs love talking about the specifics of hand direction. In the past, in paintings especially, viewers read images left to right, carefully paying close attention to what acts hands perform. Wiley's articulated gestures took away oppressive authorship, allowing black bodies to become valiant protagonists more than lower class subjects. No longer slaves or props, Wiley's myriad of friends appear like Caravaggio or Gentileschi figures, caught in vicious acts (in his portrait of painter Lynette Yiadom-Boakye for example), surrounded in single light sources, either staring out through the canvas or turning away. He has Rashid Johnson's hand on Sanford Biggers shoulder in a tender, bonding moment wearing matching flowing pink shirts, Wangechi Mutu wielding snakes like a sultry Medusa like goddess in a fetching blue toga dress and bounded braids, and Kerry James Marshall in an oval composition using his hands as an educator in three parts.

Glenn Ligon resembled a larger version of Da Vinci's shockingly small Mona Lisa, sitting in comfortable clothes and loafers along a fabric draped rocky place.


Those shoes (and no socks).....

Kerry James Marshall, himself a painting master, is shown in three distinctive acts.

This elegant portrait of Carrie Mae Weems standing amongst rocky mountains and a picturesque desert sky landscape is a stunning achievement. Elaborate patterns and folds of her gold dress are remarkable, her jeweled hand in a powerful clutch, and her curled updo has queenly justice.

The weighted fist holds the glittered rock like a weapon, an extension of power and grace, that there is no fear of harm when this object is nestled sin this fierce grasp.

Wiley is a painter known for putting musicians, rappers, and other pioneers in his Art Noveau meets black realism pedestals. In "Trickster," he includes his fellow black visual artist peers, this body of work a deeper close up of the black artist as the documentarian of the present. Each and every one of these people are creating the works the world needs to see and remember.

Sunday, October 8, 2017

Vegan Mofo Post #7: Birthday Dinner At Modern Love Brooklyn

The birthday girl heads off to Modern Love Brooklyn after an uplifting time in Harlem.
Yesterday was a good day.
Sunny, amiable New York City weather charmed and seduced from borough to borough. I dallied in Greenwich Village for breakfast and thrift shopping. I visited my favorite art haven, Studio Museum Harlem in Harlem, finding solitude in the paintings of Amy Sherald from the dynamic Fictions exhibition and Lynette Yiadom-Boakye's pastel sketches of Harlem, an unexpected treat in a curated body of works about Harlem and Jacob Lawrence.

Posing with Amy Sherald's work at Studio Museum Harlem. New dress and usual Jean-Michel Basquiat artwork tote (Adam, my attentive waiter at MLB knew it was his work).
Prior to attending The New Yorker Festival (where Ava DuVernay waved at me from the crowd, yes I'd like to think she did), I made reservations for one at Modern Love Brooklyn, a chic all-vegan eatery, specializing in ritzy fine dining with an emphasis on plant-based comfort food. In between drinking water (my usual drink of choice) and watching people enjoy iced cocktails, giant mock pork chops with pink applesauce and giant sandwiches, I delighted in my special "treat yo' self" meal at this popular hot spot owned/created by vegan cookbook author Isa Chandra Moskowitz.

Sleek and elegant menu.
Classy interior.
Seared Brussels Sprouts with garlic aioli, sorrel, and pine nuts-- off the charts incredible. I love that the lemony smell of sorrel affectionately enters the nostrils before the silver fork digs in for the first wondrous bite.
This is a whimsical plate. The bottom layers have layers of wickedly smooth red pepper cashew mac n cheese, blackened cauliflower, sauteed kale, tomato vinaigrette, and spicy pecans with triangular pecan-cornmeal encrusted tofu gracefully topping. Hands down one of the most eloquent, creative vegan mac n cheese dishes ever eaten in a restaurant thus far.
Simply exquisite.
Thank you Adam for taking my photo with this marvelous pumpkin praline cheesecake topped with coconut whipped cream and complemented spice blend.
This is an amazing dessert to end the meal--sweet and creamy, chilled to perfection, lots of complex textures and warm notes, very generous slice.

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Vegan Mofo Post #3: Artisadough Doughnuts

Beautiful doughnuts. 
Today, I'm sharing a spectacular treat-- doughnuts!

I visited New York City a few weeks ago to attend the 21st Annual Urbanworld Film Festival. Prior to attending, I had a scrumptious breakfast in Brooklyn (my love Champs Diner). Afterward, due to the word of mouth, I came to Chicky's General Store to acquire Artisa Dough, a black owned doughnut company ran by Chef Shalom otherwise known as The Meditative Chef. His sophisticatedly crafted, uniquely conceived doughnuts contain no sugar, purely sweetened by plant-based nature. This charming quote on the site:

"Artisadough is plant-based art on a plate and our gift to you."

Now I didn't have the best customer service experience at Chicky's, and doubt that I'll return soon, but Chef Shalom's doughnuts are worth remembering. I had walked to the C Train station with two grease dripping bags, these sweets sweating in the intense, unexpected heat. So thus, they lost their original beautiful appearance, a little of the taste, but not their yummy potential.

The Pumpkin Chai Spice Latte doughnut, which I hungrily devoured during the film premiere of sci-fi, urban fantasy Brown Girl Begins, was absolutely delicious. I thought it genuinely mimicked the overall cake doughnut appearance and flavor, filled with tis the season sweetness, that distinctive pumpkin taste my tastebuds love and cherish. In the darkness, I mourned the loss, wishing to have bought only this doughnut, as opposed to wanting to try everything, but that's the vegan way-- giving all vegan treats an equal chance.

Unfortunately, the frosting of this Pink Lemonade donut melted away in the bag.  Still good and yeast-y.  Although, I think most of the Pink Lemonade flavor was supposed to be in the frosting. 
Mexican Chocolate Doughnut.
The creative, out of this orbit Purple Haze (very, very delicious) had Thai blue flowers and Madagascar vanilla-- definitely my second favorite. The flowers provided amazing flavor (that of which I didn't expect).
Two doughnuts melting onto one another. I learned not to carry around doughnuts in the heat. As you have witnessed, none of the doughnuts really looked like they came from the store. 
Price wise, Artisa Dough is a bit more expensive than Dun-Well Doughnuts, fairing a bit on the Cinnamon Snail side. They're $4.50 each at Chicky's and from Artisa Dough's site an online order of half-dozen is $35 (three flavor picks), and a full dozen is $60 (six flavor picks). For the future, I can see myself splurging on one or two doughnuts at a time, especially Pumpkin Chai Spice Latte and Purple Haze and sharing these joys with my friends.

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Return to Biss: Revisiting Cocoa V

I sampled the delicious salted caramel chocolate. The beautiful pattern is stenciled on.
If I believed in heaven the first time around, it flew tenfold on the next visit to Chocolat haven, Cocoa V. A few weeks ago, I decided to pop by for a treat and reprieve, having already decided that the convenient location was a perfect early dessert fix.  I met Pamela, the owner, who made me the most amazing salted chocolate milkshake and chatted about contemporary film/TV with Chelsea over chocolate samples and chocolate picture snaps. She told this wonderful story of a vegan man from France who had visited actual location where Chocolat was filmed. Apparently, Cocoa V remind him (and me) of the place. I made a mental note to include that in my November trip to Paris.
Furthermore, Cocoa V, with Leon Bridges playing rustic, smooth blues in the background, has a treat for every kind of chocolate lover. From the chocoholic addictive fiend to the person who's that "once-in-a-while-gotta-have-chocolate, everyone is going to having either a slice of cake, a piece of candy,  a bag of bark, or a scoop of ice cream.

Brownies weren't present in my last visit. Alongside tasty looking sandwich cookies, doesn't cellophane wrapped treasures  make your mouth water with hungry anticipation?
Macaroons and chocolate dipped pretzels were also enticing treats that were new to me.
Gold dusted Yes Bars have a dose of Willy Wonka "Pure Imagination" magic appeal.
The double chocolate salted caramel milkshake made with coconut based ice cream and chocolate chips is absolutely scrumptious! I also took yummy S'mores Bark to go. Giant clusters of crunchy graham cracker and soft, gooey marshmallows doused in incredible dark chocolate will bring out the adult camper in anyone. 

Monday, July 17, 2017

Yummy Sushi Smorgasbord At Hana

Who knew one could be fully satisfied from two kinds of sushi?
On New York City's lower east side, among puffed gray clouds promising rain, I walked past Hana on Rivingston Street three times before entering dimly lit establishment. For starters, I'm not sure where I believed that sushi couldn't be qualified as early dinner. Maybe because sushi is generally small and cute chopped veggies wrapped around rice, the bad rep decided that that wasn't enough food.
Hana has a an earthly color palette, warm brown hues coating polished tables and floors. The music was kept at a ginger tone, allowing people to have normal conversation and eat with relish. 

Hana has a special vegan menu featuring Forbidden Rice. Items like Shitake Mushroom Sushi, Baked Tofu Sushi, and Carrots Sushi sounded quite exceptional, but I went for the Asparagus Sushi (organic black, brown and red grain rice with asparagus, avocado, and spicy vegan mayo) and Sweet Potato Roll (my personal favorite).
Beautiful sushi, served on this elegant black bar, was off the charts delicious. I loved the spicy mayo is this my beloved Just Mayo?) over the Forbidden Rolls blending with rich creaminess of the avocado and crunchy asparagus.
To die for sushi.... I will definitely come again. Hana is a chic spot with friendly service, eclectic lighting, and excellent food.