Photo by Donna Aceto
The events in Charlottesville quickly caught up with concerns about war in North Korea in anti-Trump demonstrations on both Aug. 13 and 14.
Fire and Fury Aimed at Trump Homecoming
TRUMP FURY continued on p. 4
Photo by Nathan DiCamillo
Jill Slaymaker works on a piece for her solo exhibition at 660 Tenth Ave., between 46th and 47th Sts.
CONVINCING HELL’S KITCHEN ARTISTS TO STAY PUT BY NATHAN DICAMILLO Janet Restino’s advice to young artists is that they live outside of Manhattan, yet she herself has been making art here since 1992. And she’s among the recent beneficiaries of an effort encouraging like-minded souls to maintain their base in Hell’s Kitchen. “A lot of the creative force in Manhattan has been forced out due to real estate costs rising,” Alan Boss, owner of Hell’s Kitchen Flea Market, said. “It’s sad to see them abandon their studios on the West Side so we could have another bank or pharmacy.”
August 24 - September 6, 2017 | Vol. 03 No. 17
ARTISTS continued on p. 4
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On Aug. 1, the Hell’s Kitchen Foundation, the flea market’s community sponsor, announced that Restino and nine other artists living in Hell’s Kitchen have won grants of between $500 and $5,000 to support their work. The grants, in their second year, are based on the quality of the artists’ work as well as their financial need. The foundation, funded by the flea market, plans to approach businesses about hanging art for a fee, “having local businesses support local artists,” its chair,
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BY LEVAR ALONZO President Donald Trump returned home on Aug. 14 — his first visit since taking office — to a not so warm welcome. Several thousand people waited outside Trump Tower chanting, “Not my president” and “Shame,” shame,” shame.” But the president’s motorcade came from a different direction, bypassing the enormous crowd. Sanitation dump trucks and hundreds of yards of metal barricades were stationed to contain protestors, who carried signs reading, “The White House is no place for white supremacy” and “Trump loves hate.” The previous weekend’s racial tensions in Charlottesville — which led to the death of 32-year-old Heather Heyer, killed when a car driven by an alleged neo-Nazi plowed into a crowd of counter-protesters — combined with alarm over the president’s recent overheated rhetoric toward North Korea spurred demonstrators to spend more than four hours boisterously giving Trump a thumb’s down. Hawk Newsome, president of Black Lives Matter of Greater New York, was among the counter-protesters