Reportage illustration received some much deserved and often overlooked attention last month with author DB Dowd’s The New York Times op-ed piece on the late reportage illustrator Robert Weaver. Robert Weaver is considered one of the illustrators at the forefront of reportage illustration in the 50’s and 60’s. A slide show of the work discussed […]
View post →Just after the truck left its load on the street, the backhoe was in the scene again and moving the earth into the holes left by some of the work. Like bees everyone returns to their previous positions and starts at their tasks again, cutting planks to hold the earth back, wheeling loads around, and […]
View post →It seems hard to imagine life anywhere in NYC these days without walking under scaffolding, around a barricade, or in this case through a cage. Pedestrians herded from one end of the block to the other and then looped north, south, east, west and north again just to cross the street. Inside the cage on […]
View post →About a week after the last drawing on Second Avenue I found myself in front of the Key Food on the corner of 2nd and 92nd Street, one of the many businesses greatly disturbed by the construction. The access to these buildings is getting more and more limited. It was good to see the engine […]
View post →I came back down a little while later that same Tuesday and found that the sliver of a sidewalk that led to Laundry Boy was gone. (No, I don’t do laundry every day.) Standing on the northwest corner of 95th Street, facing south, the walk sign leads pedestrians right into the bucket of the front […]
View post →Talk has gone on for several years about the Second Avenue subway line, which I thought was part of the myth, and many businesses were rumored to be on their way out once the construction began. One of those reports was the demise of Rainbow on 94th Street. I orignally found it funny, since Rainbow […]
View post →Last week it seemed like Skanska, the company leading the Second Avenue subway construction, couldn’t work any closer to the buildings along the west side of the blocks affected by the digging. I was wrong. With vibration meters set up along each of the facades, the narrow aisle that leads into the residences and stores […]
View post →Life has changed slowly on Second Avenue north of 86th Street over the past ten years. That has all been altered as of late. Over the last decade a few very tall buildings have gone up on or just off of the avenue, new businesses have come and gone, old ones have been forced out […]
View post →To start, if you have not read Eddie Peña’s post on reportage illustration, go do it now and come on back. For one, he simply defines it as it is and elegantly goes on to describe his connection to reportage. The second reason is to see his drawing of the Eiffel Tower. I had the […]
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