Downtown

MINIPNG Brings Maximum Creativity To Audubon Street

by | Sep 20, 2023 9:05 am | Comments (1)

Karen Ponzio Photos

MINIPNG.

Audubon Street is a promenade of institutions that ignite creativity and keep it alight. For the past year that street has also housed the storefront of artist/designer MINIPNG (a.k.a. Eiress Hammond), who has made a home away from home for fans of her original handmade clothing as well as lovers of vintage pieces and accessories from the late 90s and early 00s. This Saturday, Sept. 23, she is co-presenting an event that will be bringing an even larger creative crew to the street from 12 p.m. to 6 p.m.

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Memorial Uplifts Activist's Fighting Spirit

by | Sep 13, 2023 11:38 am | Comments (10)

Nora Grace-Flood photos

Photos of Petrulis on display at his memorial service.

Organizer Billy Bromage calls for more people to pick up Petrulis' fight by joining U-ACT and supporting the groups' demands.

The brother of the late homeless rights advocate Keith Petrulis sent a message from California to a church full of grieving New Haveners — thanking a community of unhoused activists for serving as family to the sibling he never knew, and calling for cross-country housing justice to prevent more people from dying alone on the streets.

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22 Years Later, Co-Op Remembers 9/11

by | Sep 11, 2023 8:01 pm | Comments (4)

Maya McFadden photo

Assistant Principal Talima Andrews-Harris: “I am New York.”

Cooperative Arts & Humanities High School Assistant Principal Talima Andrews-Harris remembered how, 22 years ago to the day, she arrived at her job as a first-grade teacher in Atlanta after having recently flown back south from her family’s home in Brooklyn. 

She recalled being excused from her classroom by a colleague, who let her know that she should get in touch with her New York City relatives — because, she’d soon find out, her home city had just been attacked.

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NHFPL Whets Appetite For Free Film Series

by | Sep 7, 2023 8:28 am | Comments (0)

Karen Ponzio Photos

David and Diego meet over ice cream in the film Strawberry & Chocolate.

Last Friday the New Haven Free Public Library decided to serve dessert first, as Strawberry & Chocolate was screened as the inaugural film in the Ives Branch’s September Free Friday film series. The 1993 Cuban film, directed by Tomás Gutiérrez Alea and Juan Carlos Tabio, was also the first of four films that will be screened every Friday in September at 2 p.m. in honor of Hispanic Heritage Month. 

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4,500 Run Through New Haven

by | Sep 4, 2023 7:34 pm | Comments (5)

Lisa Reisman photo

Start of 5K at 2023 Faxon Law New Haven Road Race.

Quintessential New Haven,” Ruth Koleske pronounced, as she stood near the corner of Temple and Elm awaiting her husband on a sun-drenched Monday morning. 

She was referring to the Faxon Law New Haven Road Race, which played out for its 46th Labor Day. In all, 4,500 runners competed in various races, including the 20K, which Koleske was following, the 5K, a 13.1‑mile race, and a fun run for kids.

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First Day, Fresh Start At Co-Op

by | Sep 4, 2023 8:58 am | Comments (1)

Lucy Gellman / Arts Paper photo

Co-Op student Tahzir Streater: "It's gonna take a lot of practice."

Harriett Alfred stepped forward, running her right hand alongside a piano that had sat silent all summer. She took a deep breath, her face glowing in the morning sunlight. In the second row, senior Jamie Harris lifted her Spongebob-patterned nails to the desk, knowing exactly what was coming next. It was her last first day of high school, and she was ready to lead the charge.

Good mooor-ning!” Alfred belted. In a still-sleepy soprano, Harris answered, her voice blending with over a dozen for the first time in months. She was ready to be back.

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Overdose Awareness Follows Another Life Lost

by | Sep 1, 2023 3:19 pm | Comments (4)

Nora Grace-Flood photos

"Gypsy" Kathleen McKenzie — with her bag of overdose prevention materials.

Gypsy” Kathleen McKenzie arrived at the Green for her daily walk with a purse full of nasal Narcan slung over her shoulder as usual — and wound up stocking that bag with Narcotics Anonymous brochures, fentanyl test strips, bracelets with phone numbers for addiction service providers, and more naloxone kits.

She took that stroll just days after another New Havener was found dead at 37-years-old of an overdose downtown and on the same day that the city hosted a parade of providers distributing information and resources for International Overdose Awareness Day.

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Tenants, Labor Unite Against Eviction Notices

by | Aug 31, 2023 8:30 am | Comments (55)

Thomas Breen photos

At Wednesday's anti-eviction rally ...

... and march from City Hall up Whitney Ave.

Powered by the vocal support of elected officials and labor organizers — and by their own cheers of up with the tenants” and down with the slumlords” — renter activists and allies took to the streets to protest a raft of recent eviction notices that they critiqued as union-busting retaliation.

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Enviros Drink To Climate Tech Dreams

by | Aug 25, 2023 10:43 am | Comments (12)

ClimateHaven CEO Ryan Dings: “We’re an incubator, accelerator, and a convenor.”

Yale post-doc Wangbiao Guo has just received a patent for a multi-stage system that captures carbon from the air by the use of algae. 

All he needs for the next step is about $500,000 to finance a pilot/prototype to begin to take the product to market — and that’s why he was enjoying an American Snappy Lager Thursday night over at 770 Chapel St.

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Yale Art Gallery Crosses The Atlantic

by | Aug 25, 2023 9:08 am | Comments (3)

Yale University Art Gallery

In a New Light: Paintings from the Yale Center for British Art.

While the Yale Center for British Art (YCBA) undergoes renovations, the Yale University Art Gallery (YUAG) has volunteered to host a selection of their paintings in an exhibition entitled In a New Light: Paintings from the Yale Center for British Art.” The show — running now through Dec. 3 — houses over 50 paintings, mainly from the 18th and 19th centuries, that attempt to capture the scope and breadth of British life at the time through a series of intimate glances into another country’s art and culture. In a New Light” offers a glimpse into British painting with little explanation and few qualifiers, allowing viewers to simply view the artwork and draw their own conclusions.

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Black Wall Street Lifts Up Black Businesses

by | Aug 21, 2023 8:55 am | Comments (14)

Eleanor Polak photo

On the Green for Black Wall Street.

The New Haven Green swarmed with tents. Music boomed from the loudspeakers, covering everything from Everybody Wants to Rule the World” by Tears for Fears to Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)” by Shakira. The air hung heavy and sweet with the scent of fried dough and freshly-applied sunscreen. The second annual Black Wall Street Festival had begun.

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Flags Fly High At Puerto Rican Festival

by | Aug 14, 2023 7:40 am | Comments (5)

Eleanor Polak Photos

The crowd on the Green at the Puerto Rican Festival.

Ramon Rivera attends the annual Puerto Rican Festival on the New Haven Green every year — and Saturday was no exception. He sells Puerto Rican flags of varying sizes and colors, each latched to a wooden dowel, making them perfect for waving in the air or propping against chairs, strollers, and even traffic cones. I like being with my people,” said Rivera, who is Puerto Rican himself. It brings us back home as a family.”

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Collage Workshop Provides Breath Of Fresh Air

by | Aug 11, 2023 8:58 am | Comments (2)

Shelley Stoehr-McCarthy and son Luca McCarthy make collages.

Inside the upstairs gallery at The Institute Library at 847 Chapel St. sat a table littered with paper, magazines, paintbrushes, glitter, scissors, stickers, and a giant jug of glue. Outside it was rainy and humid, but the room — set aside for a collage workshop entitled A Time To Breathe: an Oasis Workshop” — formed a little oasis itself. Not just a refuge from the weather, but a safe space for creativity to roam free.

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Flaming Lips Embrace College Street

by | Aug 8, 2023 8:57 am | Comments (1)

Brian Slattery Photos

Wayne Coyne at Monday night's show.

Giant inflatable pink robots. Enormous balls filled with confetti. And a veteran band, playing as well as ever, fronted by a singer who was all heart. Now-venerable psychedelic rockers The Flaming Lips returned to College Street Music Hall Monday night to an ecstatic, sold-out crowd ready to take in a show that delivered heaps of fun — and empathy.

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Service & "Sacred Conversations" Fill The Green

by | Aug 7, 2023 1:57 pm | Comments (2)

Jerusalem Peace Builders students Malak Swidan, Tavor Hazani, Hafeed Khalaily

If you pack survival kits for the homeless, or hammer in some boards on an affordable house in-the-making, or set upright fallen tombstones in an old Jewish cemetery that needs some love, you’ll be powerfully transformed — and that act of peace-making might just change the world.

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Noir Vintage & Co. Time Travels Downtown

by | Aug 7, 2023 12:40 pm | Comments (2)

Laura Glesby photos

Entrepreneur and stylist Kim Poole browses Noir Vintage & Co.'s back room.

Meanwhile, store owner Evelyn Massey, right, hugs supporters in a burst of emotion.

With the snip of a ribbon, Evelyn Massey opened up a portal through time in the form of a vintage shop styled after a Harlem Renaissance salon, the culmination of a long-simmering dream.

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Sound Bath Sundays Set Tone For Mindfulness

by | Aug 7, 2023 8:25 am | Comments (1)

Karen Ponzio Photos

Jim LoPresti shakes away the stress with his bamboo leaf rattle.

If asked where one might go in New Haven for a moment or two of meditative stillness, few people would suggest Crown Street, known for its bustling and crowded restaurants and bars as well as a bevy of sounds that would challenge any symphony. But one place offers, among other wellness and restorative practices, a chance to take in an hour of music made specifically to center its participants and give them a chance to remain present and thoughtful in their minds and bodies.

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Omola Studio Brings Art To The Blake

by | Jul 27, 2023 8:54 am | Comments (0)

Autumn Nelson

Self-Indulgence.

Autumn Nelson’s canvas is the first piece in The Past Pushes Forward” — an art show installed in the top floor of the Blake Hotel at 9 High St., now until August 31 — to greet viewers as they exit the elevator. It’s hung in just the right spot so that the canvas functions as a double of the subject matter. The mirror that reflects the painter is held up to the viewer as well. Do we love ourselves as much as Nelson loves herself? How much are we allowed to love ourselves? Why is it fraught to even ask that question?

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