-
The 187-Year-Old Lady Gets a Facelift and an Opening
She has a prestigious address, 1083 Fifth Avenue, just a block north of that venerable, but still brash-looking neighbor, The Guggenheim Museum. Housed in a lovely six-story, Beaux-Arts...
-
Winter Rebellion in NYC: The Indoor Park at Openhouse Gallery
By the time February rolls around, the bright-eyed longing for a winter wonderland has faded with the tangled string of Christmas lights, now stuffed away in a closet.
-
The World of Crime Through Two Photographers’ Eyes
Two photographers, two visions; born 30 years apart, one in 1899, and one in 1929, with only one naked city—New York—between them. Gritty, grotesque, compassionate, corrupt; the...
-
The Devil’s Woman: “The Devil’s Music, The Life and Blues of Bessie Smith”
Some shows and their stars just don’t know when to quit. And it’s a good thing, because Miche Braden, the brilliant, ball-busting Bessie Smith of this blockbuster hit has been making...
-
The Woman With The Paper Teacups
Cecilia Levy has a commanding presence. Even over Skype — the only method for our interview seeing as Levy’s in Sweden and I’m in Cleveland, Ohio — her voice is clear and strong....
-
The Master of Illusion: An Interview with Pavement Artist Kurt Wenner
Fumbling with your cell phone on your way to work, your alertness is unfocused as you step onto a crack in the sidewalk, leading into a gaping, yellow hole with hands and bodies sticking...
-
A Company to Watch: A Look into InProximity’s New Production
The Fall to Earth, a new full-length play by playwright Joel Drake Johnson, opens to the stark furnishings of a motel room—the king-sized bed, the requisite desk and bureau with a...
-
Bash: LaBute is Back in Black
Neil LaBute is a curious case among screenwriters and playwrights. His pieces often feel didactic and mean-spirited, aimed at the failures of the innocent (like Fat Pig) or...
-
The Beauty Within: Interview with Photographer Paco Peregrín
The art of photography can be an expression of a myriad of natural reflections from beautiful landscapes that have stood throughout the ages, capturing their untimely changes, to the...
-
The Duchess of Alba Is Alive and Well on Audubon Terrace
One hundred and eight years ago, American philanthropist Archer Milton Huntington (1870-1955) founded the Hispanic Society of America in a beautiful Beaux Arts building at 155th and...
Copyright GALO Magazine LLC 2024. All Rights Reserved. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of GALO Magazine LLC.
Site Designed by: Root Design Works, LLC