The
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Archives
1998-2004
September
2005 Ð In the summer of 1998, when we published our first issue, Brooklyn,
New York City, and the world were very different places. More peaceful, to be sure. Less in thrall to the aggressions of
money and power. Willliamsburg, although the neighborhood had recently been
Òdiscovered,Ó still seemed adrift in some alternative postindustrial
universe, an autonomous zone happily uncoupled from ManhattanÕs treadmills.
There was a freedom in the air that had much to do with low rents and the
larger economyÕs apparent lack of interest in us. I think of the spontaneous voodoo artwork at the old
Amtrak yards along the waterfront at North 7th. The intoxicating vapors wafting from
that spice warehouse on Berry Street. Sunbathing and picnicking on the piers which were
quickly collapsing into the East River.
Swimming in the river at night, with ManhattanÕs lights spread out
before us like strange constellations.
Time seemed to flow a little more slowly here, the sky was broader,
and the breeze often smelled of the sea...
Looking
back through the W.B.O.Õs past
issues and choosing what to include on this site, I was suddenly struck by
how drastically things have changed.
The first years of the 21st century have been ominous, to
say the least, and it is difficult to ignore the signs that we are on the
brink of even larger catastrophes.
Much of the work collected here bears eloquent witness to this
urgency, at the same time speaking from a faith that another, more sane world
is possible. To have offered
this forum to our contributors has been deeply gratifying.
In
1998, of course, the great engines of real estate development and
gentrification had already begun to grind here. Williamsburg had become home to a Ònew Bohemia,Ó as New
York Magazine said on its cover,
and with an endorsement like this it was only a matter of timeÑas one
commentator put it, ÒArtists are like pilot-fishÑthen come the sharks.Ó Today, on North 8th
Street, the ironwork for a tower of sixteen-stories rises on block where the
highest building is four. On
Kent Avenue in the Southside, Schaefer LandingÕs 135 condo units are mostly
sold, with one-bedrooms starting at $650,000. The Domino Sugar property will almost certainly become
high-rise condos, and a wall of 40-story residential towers is rumored to be
on the drawing board for the remainder of the NorthsideÕs undeveloped
waterfront. And throughout the
neighborhood nearly every block has a smaller project underway. Opulence, luxuryÑone sees these words posted everywhere,
shamelessly.
What
originally attracted many new residents here, aside from lower rents, was a
neighborhood which had preserved a certain human scaleÑa scale where people
do not feel dwarfed and inconsequential, where an ecology of human
interaction can flourish in a give-and-take among equals. The redevelopment
of Williamsburg was necessary, and no doubt, inevitable. Will it be possible to keep
development from going to far?
Does New YorkÑor the worldÑreally need more opulence, more luxury?
Ando
Arike
Editor
copyright ©
Williamsburg Observer Publishing 2005 Human Rights Reserved
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Archived
Issues:
August
2004 Anti-RNC
Convention
Issue
June
2003 Empire Issue
September
2002 Cultural
Collapse
Issue
July
4, 2001 Autonomy Issue
October
1998 Nietzsche
Birthday
Issue
September
1998
More
to come...
Contributors
1998-2004:
Mona Harden
Reverend Billy
Jill Rapaport
Carl Watson
Tsaurah Litzky
Trystero Montevideo
Roman Stoad
Carri Skoczek
Vic Thrill
Eric Redlinger
Lex Grey
Ebon Fisher
Bill Not Bored
Surveillance
Camera Players
Andi Kovel
Meghan Mahar
Jim Lundquist
Kinko the Clown
The Bindlestiff
Family Circus
Maiden India
Turk Stuzel
Honey Porter
Ecume des Jours
Anita DiBanco
k*
Rasha Refaie
Nancy Donskoj
Berit Anderson
Ben Williams
Doreen Bowens
Kathe Burkhart
Noam Mor
Kirsten Youngren
Jillian McDonald
Brian Kelly
Sarah Barker
j.u.l.i.e.t.a.
David Kay
Kevin Kosar
Jenna Pignato
Edwin Diaz
Joe Maynard
Trong Nguyen
The Butter Network
Edward Thirst
Axis of Eve
Naomi M. Melendez-Mekkaoui
Supporters
1998-2004:
Two Jakes
Vera Cruz
Main Drag Music
86 Used Books
The Read Cafe
Go Yoga
MikeyÕs Hookup
Brooklyn Animal
Resource Coalition
BQE Pet Supply
Spoonbill & Sugartown
Booksellers
Metaphors
Roebling Liquors
Brooklyn Brewery
Southside Lounge
Fly Right StudioTattoos
Blackout Books
Big Genius Art Supply
Ocularis
The Stable Dance &
Yoga Studio
Squeeze Bar
Affinity Healing Arts
& special thanks to
Kerry Smith @ the
Right Bank CafŽ
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