Vintage 1970s Photos Show Lost Sites of NYC's Lower East Side
A quest to find his grandmother's birthplace led Richard Marc Sakols on a mission to capture his changing neighborhood on film.
This month, The Sprint Flatiron Prow Art Space, also known as the museum without walls, introduces the timely installation Flakes. Artist Chelsea Hrynick Browne equates her small, hand-cut Origami paper cutouts to fellow New Yorkers – each one of the small works unique, elusive, quirky, beautiful. “We are all flakes!”
Her colorful creations are inspired by math, philosophy, technology and nature, and her work can be found nationally. You might recognize her style in local pieces that are in permanent collections, such as NYU Hassenfeld Hospital. She has been in many exhibits including Twelvetide, Neighborhood Church of Greenwich Village, Bushwick Open Studios, Artists and Fleas, Grand Central Public Library Exhibition, and on and on. Hailing from Madison, Wisconsin, Ms. Hrynick Browne lives in the East Village.
The installation, January 21
The Sprint Flatiron Prow Art Space exhibit, Flakes, will be on view through March 16.
Next, read about the secrets of the Flatiron Building and the secrets of Madison Square. Contact the author at AFineLyne.
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