At New York
City, a glorious day
N. B. Andrews June 15, 2016
New
Yorkers were out in force yesterday in the glorious
spring like weather.
The magnificent
kaleidoscope/collage/tapestry that makes up one of
the greatest cities on earth was on display; young,
elderly, marine Corp fit, disabled, wasp, Jews,
Asian, Latino, Africans, Arabs, masters of the
universe, rockers....and of course our contingent.
We started from uptown and worked our way south.
Me, in the warm company of two ladies -the roommate
aka arm accessory and Ms. Jane wise cracking,
left-wing, ebullient New Yorker......with a duck butt
hair cut.
The ladies were stepping in boho
chic; me- blue Polo, cream Chino, a vintage safari
jacket....muted spectator loafer.
We passed
in front if the Museo El Barrio where a dj had set
up and had mixed some serious old skuul; he had some
passers by stomping. Ms. Jane did a few steps for
some three minutes......"I like dancing around", she
said
First stop was the NYC Museum with its
haunting photographs of the grinding poverty of the
South Bronx from the 1970's.
These were
juxtaposed with Tiffany jewels, objects d' art etc
of the wealthy New York families of the Gilded Age-
the Vanderbilt, Rockefeller, Astor etc.
The
lesson was clear and unequivocal.
It is what
it is.
Another exhibit showed the take no
prisoners cartoons of Rosalind "Roz" Chast, the hard
hitting lady cartoonist of the New Yorker magazine.
In the room, people could not stop themselves from
episodic loud and all consuming guffaws.
My
best was a man and his spouse both wearing T-shirts
with captions. His read, "Be yourself"; hers- "I am
with stupid".
The Museum Shop was slamming
with wicked vibrant original canvas paintings by
young New York artists.....if only......
After leaving the museum, on the street corner a
sextet was pumping some edgy jazz funk.
Kids!!!!!
Must all have been less than 12
years old; trombone, clarinet,tenor, drum, bass and
keyboard.
Two of them reminded me of my kiddy
days; a white kid with sky blue spectacles playing
the tenor and a Black kid, again with glasses on the
drums.....both obvious nerds but with an edge.
I have not clapped so hard in a long time.
Museo El Bario; the Austrian German Museum; the
Jewish Museum, the Guggenheim, the Met......all with
their goodies and treasures to polish and adorn the
mind and raise it from its native darkness.
Meanwhile, the whole of 5th Avenue had been closed.
There were street performers, artists creating art
and chalk available for anyone who wanted to draw
anything on the road itself.
And of course as
we made our way, the spontaneous comments and
remarks from New Yorkers and requests for fotos as
on several occasions we were told, "you guys look
good" or "those pants, I swear are hot; where did
you get them?".
The ladies had orders for
their clothes- this is New York!
A Turkish
Restaurant on the Upper East side is where we
finally took refuge at about 8:30pm.
https://www.zagat.com/r/beyoglu-new-york
I
could not help but recall my tough days as a
surgical intern at Lenox Hill Hospital (the flagship
upper east side/silk stocking district hospital) in
the early 1980s....how time flies.
A Turkish
Sauvignon Blanc went remarkably well with the mezee,
swordfish, and lamb as we dined on the sidewalk and
watched the city heave, shuffle and twist as it went
by.
The obligatory Nicaraguan Corona rounded
things off once we returned to the patio in Harlem.
Earlier in the day, we had held court at a
neighborhood Indian Restaurant.....in Harlem- in an
elegantly renovated brownstone right on Lenox
Avenue.
The decor was eclectic but coherent
and smart. The owner showed us around.
http://www.chaiwali.com
Gentrification does
have its good sides.
So does having a side
walk in our cities.
So does having covered
drains.
So does having enlightened people in
charge.
Y'all be safe (in a Texan drawl
please)
N. B. Andrews
New York City
June 15, 2016
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