Known for avant-garde displays, Living Installation is back with another intriguing performance
Surely many people have loved and lost in Bushwick, but Jonathan Reed showed devotion to his wife Mary in a unique way.
Against the cold, gray, bleak background of Brooklyn in January, colorful things, and literally anything with the smallest hint of cheer, are sure to stand out
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On duty as Dr
By Katarina Hybenova
Have you been longing for a place to work out that is close to your home but haven’t been really willing to do the leg work (pun intended)?
It’s hard to figure out what’s more impressive about the new technology-inflected dance work, BODSOFTWARE, which debuted at gallery space
Winter’s bearing down on us, and everyone’s already battening down the hatches and getting ready to cuddle up against the cold
A self-described “naughty marketplace” sets up shop with an “intersectional feminist perspective.”
Built in 1925, the congregation actually traces its origins to Bushwick Avenue in 1853.
After a run at Fringe Festival, Maggie Crane returns to Bushwick with her tales of ‘death, disability and dunkin donuts’
How a flurry of small businesses are changing a corner of Queens
Popular on TikTok, this local bones salesman says: “I would love myself to be skeletonized”
At “Quince,” get immersed into the magic of a quinceañera.
“I was able to let go of my grip,” the owner of one French restaurant in Bushwick says
Mary DeVincentis’ new exhibit “Alone In This Together” conveys poignant narratives from moments during the pandemic of unimaginable, surreal circumstances fraught with connection, dark humor and hope.
“I think the fact that this is becoming a conversation is important. Just that within itself is creating a lot of positive impact,” said Anya Sapozhnikova, co-founder of House of Yes.
Taking my 80-year-old parents on a tour of Bushwick, nearly 30 years after they moved away.
Since the fateful month of March 2020, the Ridgewood bar and restaurant has added a general store and a farmer’s market, with an oyster fest and multiple pop-ups around the corner.
Analyzing the work of Pranav Sood, a Bushwick-based artist and Indian immigrant whose recognizable bright, mosaic paintings tell dream-like stories.
A former head chef at Mission Chinese makes her solo debut at an all day cafe in Ridgewood
“If you’ve never seen what a hero looks like, look at the nurses in Bushwick: this is them, this is who they are.”
A new arts platform called Paradice Palase wants to sell art for under $800 and ‘wearable art’ for even less
The Bushwick painter and photographer’s latest show ‘dives into the sacredness within the trans experience.’
Just in time for Valentine’s Day, a new movie showcases love stories set at the House of Yes, on Myrtle Avenue and also Irving Avenue
191 Knickerbocker ends with Chapter 7 bankruptcy
As New York braces for a second wave of coronavirus, Bushwick’s essential workers, small business owners and artists reflect on their experiences and lessons learned.
In order to survive the pandemic, several Bushwick bars have brought the party outdoors to meet drinkers in the warm spring air. Here a few area watering holes doing Bacchus’ work.
This column’s opening entry profiles two business owners – a distiller and a sake brewer – and their navigation through the treacherous COVID waters of New York City.