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Dismantling Hell's Kitchen: A View from Pier 84

2/11/2019

 
One person's development is another person's destruction.
Hell's Kitchen Skyline at Pier 84 ©EBGallardo All Rights Reserved
©2018 EBGallardo. All Rights Reserved.

I took this photo of the skyline at Pier 84 in Hell's Kitchen in September 2018. I sat on it. Because I'm highly conflicted, even angry, about it. The image has earmarks of pics folk like to consume on social media: a golden hour shot of a glinty, pretty, and majestic New York City. A postcard city. But that is not the city I see, live in, or interact with.

What I see when I look at my image is disparity. I see displacement.

I see atrocious glass and steel buildings replacing affordable residential housing, small businesses, and warehouses that could be usefully re-purposed.
I see five cranes constructing those buildings not meant for me nor for the other long-term residents of Hell's Kitchen.
I see pieds-à-terre of foreign investors who purchase property but, by law, won't pay a dime of tax to the city. Even though they may also make a profit from renting said property through Airbnb.
I see the cost of rent and food escalating as a result.
Hell's Kitchen ©EBGallardo All Rights Reserved
©2018 EBGallardo. All Rights Reserved.
I see empty storefronts because the rent is too high and/or the landlord is holding the space for more money. That landlord receives a tax break regardless.

I see homeless people sleeping in front of those empty storefronts that are "for rent."

You might see pretty in my intro pic. I see disparity. I see displacement.

I don't live in a postcard. I live in a world where choices affect actual human lives. And so I ask you to consider your choices. What will they be?

Matthews-Palmer Playground Re-Opens in Hell's Kitchen

8/7/2018

 
Children play in sprinkler, Matthews-Palmer Playground, Hell's Kitchen, New York City
Tuesday, July 31, Matthews-Palmer playground formally re-opened after closing well over a year ago for  renovation. Some of us doubted it would reopen. Such is New York City.

Located across the street from the venerable Hartley House, the playground has been a cornerstone of Hell's Kitchen childhood and community since it opened in 1937 as the 45th Street Playground.

The playground is currently named after HK social activists May Matthews and Alexandra Palmer. 

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Tools of War NYC Summer Park Jams

7/17/2018

 
Hip Hop legend Grandmaster Caz at the wax, Tools of War Crotona Park Jam, NYC 2016
Grandmaster Caz, Tools of War Crotona Park Jam, 2016 ©EBGallardo All Rights Reserved
​
​​Tools of War grassroots Hip Hop is celebrating their 15th year producing old school summer park jams in New York City. 

​​NYC park jams are integral to the origin and growth of Hip Hop during the 1970s-1980s. ​
Park jams, then and now, are an opportunity for us to gather, lay down our differences, and discover our similarities. All while having fun. We could use more of that these days.

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Protest March: Justice for Stephon Clark, Hell's Kitchen NYC

3/31/2018

 
Streetscape of demonstrators and NYPD during during protest march for Stephon Clark, Hell's Kitchen NYC
Protest march for Stephon Clark, Hell's Kitchen, NYC ©2018 EBGallardo All Rights Reserved
The evening of Wednesday March 28th 2018, hundreds of New Yorkers marched from Columbus Circle to Times Square in protest over the fatal shooting of unarmed Stephon Clark by the police in Sacramento, California on March 18th. 

​22 years old and African-American, Clark was shot at 20 times while in his grandmother's backyard. He was hit by 8 bullets. 7 of them in the back.

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Farewell Hartley House: Hell’s Kitchen’s Home Away from Home

3/9/2018

 
Picture
Candlelight vigil, Hartley House. Hell's Kitchen, NYC. ©2018 E.B.Gallardo. All Rights Reserved.
The Hell's Kitchen community held a candlelight vigil for beloved Hartley House on Saturday, March 3, 2018. After 120 years of service, the institution abruptly closed its doors at 409-413 West 46th Street. Its three buildings sold for a paltry sum to Thornton Equities LLC.

The situation is heartbreaking. And it is baffling.

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NYC Street Life: Afrikumba Utibé Drummers

2/7/2018

 

The life of New York City streets is unique, both above and below ground. 

Afrikumba Utibé Drummers perform in the subway at Union Square StationAfrikumba Utibé Drummers, Union Square Station, NYC. ©2017 E.B.Gallardo All Rights Reserved.

​Not to say that life is always fun or pleasant. I think of those who stop atop subway stairs to check their phones, or walk three across on the sidewalk, or don't know enough to step to the right.

​Always, always step to the right.

But the life of NYC streets is vibrant. And it is ours. For now. So let's cultivate that life. Like a garden. Get our heads out of our phones and pull those earbuds out. Notice what's going on around us.  Take even a few seconds to be present and let it soak in. 

I write this to remind myself. A while back - in my rush to get from here to there - I blew past the Afrikumba Utibé Drummers performing in Union Square Station. Then I had an internal fight about practicing what I preach. I returned. And for a few minutes, I focused on the cool music mixed with the hubbub of the subway and of humans racing to get from here to there. I attended to the life of street I was on. I relaxed. I remembered who I am.

I am part of the City. And the City is part of me. Not simply a backdrop, the City is both the material and the context out of which my life is made. I count myself blessed.

This is what I know: I will never reach the life I'm rushing toward if I can't acknowledge the life I'm presently in. Time to chill.
​
Enjoy below the Afrikumba Utibé Drummers and a bit of what I witnessed by taking a time-out. And the next time you're thanking the MTA for the train that never comes? Look up at the life around you.

Goodbye Empire Tailors & Cleaners

1/17/2018

 

After 26 years serving Hell's Kitchen, on January 11, 2018 the Chong family closed the doors and shuttered the gate ​for the last time at Empire Tailors & Cleaners. ​

Empire Tailors & Cleaners family: Brian, Amanda, Tanya, and John Chong with Spider in the middle
Empire Tailors & Cleaners Hell's Kitchen New York City ©2018 E.B.Gallardo All Rights Reserved
​​The Chong's didn't want to go. They were forced out  - the landlord tripled the rent.  It's a shame. And it's shameful. Because we didn't just lose an excellent tailor and dry cleaners. We lost family. ​​
​
​The Chong's are Hell's Kitchen family.​ They understand a good neighborhood is a community of people committed to it and to one another. And so they were. 

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Bocafloja 'Vernacular' at Bronx Music Heritage Center

9/4/2017

 
Flyer for Bocafloja Vernacular/New York event

You don't want to miss Vernacular this Thursday, September 7th 2017 at the ​Bronx Music Heritage Center.
​
A night of spoken word, storytelling, dialogue, and music presented by the insanely talented multidisciplinary artist Bocafloja and Quilomboarte.

Live performances by Bocafloja, Josefina Baez, Fabian Villegas, and music by DJ Boo promise smart, savvy, multi-lingual mergings of art and politics. The objective is to engage a communal conversation about colonially, social imaginaries, and political participation beyond resistance. A good time for it. Always a good time for it. I’m in. 

Here’s a sneak peak at some of the awesome going down Thursday:
Thursday, September 7th 2017
7pm to 9:30 pm
$10
All Ages
​
Bronx Music Heritage Center 
1303 Louis Nine Blvd, Bronx, NY 10459
​2/5 Train to Freeman Street
​917-557-2354

Tsidii Le Loka: To the Rising Sun at Bronx Music Heritage Center

7/18/2017

 
Picture
Tsidii Le Loka. To the Rising Sun at the Bronx Music Heritage Center. © 2017 E. B. Gallardo

​Last Saturday, July 15th, ​South African Tsidii Le Loka gave an electric performance of her show 'To the Rising Sun' at the Bronx Music Heritage Center (BMHC). In celebration of Nelson Mandela's birthday (today, July 18th), the show featured the words of Mandela and the music of singer/activist Miriam Makeba. It was a standing room only crowd. The event was exceptional.

You'll know Ms. Le Loka as the original Rafiki in Broadway's the Lion King - for which she was nominated for a Tony - and the voice behind 'Circle of Life.'  Not only an extraordinary singer, she is also a full-service entertainer: vibrant, engaging, humorous.  She's backed up by equally talented singers and musicians.  When you get a chance, you must see this show. You'll not be disappointed.

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New York City Subway Music: Sean McCaul on Vibraphone

7/5/2017

 
A little video to help you ease back into work after the long weekend. ​​Sean McCaul, vibraphonist, bringing peaceful vibes to the stress of the F train. 
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    E. B. Gallardo
    is a documentary photographer and anthropologist based in New York City.

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  • Home
  • About
    • Publications
  • Contact
  • Gallery
  • Archive
    • New York City >
      • The NYC Tranzformerz >
        • Meet the Crew
      • Hell's Kitchen
    • Dominican Republic >
      • Dominican Baseball Prospects
      • Dominican Clubs >
        • Club Juan Alberto Ozoria, Boca Chica
  • Blog
  • Portraits
  • E. B. Gallardo Photography