If you weren’t able to stop by the Left Forum at Pace University last weekend, you may have thought you missed out on my photographs. Well you didn’t! The event was extremely successful, breaking last year’s record of 3,000 attendees. Noam Chomsky was the closing speaker and the theme for 2010 was “The Center Cannot Hold: Rekindling the Radical Imagination.”
My essay was titled “Socialist Still Life”
Located in the premier area of downtown, the Bauen has everything a hotel could need- a bustling cafe, ornate rooms and a dramatic history. What makes the Bauen special is that it’s not just a hotel- it’s a cooperative. After Argentina’s financial crisis in 2001, the owners left town, leaving the workers unemployed and the hotel vacant. In March of 2003, the former employees took action and reclaimed the business for themselves. They made repairs and beds and before long, the doors were open. Since then, battles in court have rocked the Bauen, but it remains one of the flagships of recuperated business. Despite international coverage, guests are not always aware that they are staying in a hotel that exists due to an exciting economic and social reform. I chose to focus on the experience of the unknowing guest- photographing objects, rooms and lightly touching upon the invisible laborers, in order to show the subtleties of this remarkable place.
Posted: March 26th, 2010
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Irene Kaplan, 67, has enjoyed decorating her new apartment with statuettes, books and pictures from calendars.
The transition into supportive housing was easy for her, but she noted, “One size doesn’t fit all.”
Mentally Ill Look for Home in NYC
by Amy Zimmer / Metro
For 16 years Irene Kaplan lived in a 200-bed home for mentally ill adults in Coney Island.
“You just twiddled your thumbs and smoked yourself to death,” she said. Last year, in an experiment, the state moved her and 59 others into their own apartments where they get visits from case workers. She quit smoking during her first week in a Brownsville apartment.
A Brooklyn federal judge, who found large scale homes violated the Americans with Disabilities Act, this month ordered the state to create 4,500 units of supportive housing like Kaplan’s.
Last week the state lost its bid to stay the court order.
While Kaplan says she found a new lease in life, others are concerned at having supportive housing next door. In Far Rockaway, where over half of Queens’ adult home residents reside — and where there are many vacant apartments that could become supportive housing — residents are bracing themselves.
“A number of these poor souls, quite frankly, should not be on their own,” said Jonathan Graska, district manager of the local community board. “Nurses have called us and said they won’t take their meds.”
Coco Cox’s neighbors in Norwood don’t know she spent three years in an adult home in Riverdale, but she doesn’t hide her visits from caseworkers — the point is to integrate.
“There are millions of people with mental illness,” Cox said. “They’re on the subway with you, working with you. You just don’t know it because they take care of themselves and take medications.”
Posted: March 16th, 2010
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Please join me for the opening of my show at the Greenwich Village Bistro.
There will be drinks, live music, delicious food, and Emily Anne Epstein photographs on the walls.
I hope to see you all there!
Posted: February 8th, 2010
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