LW! e-newsletter
February 14, 2011
Newsletter TitleMonth Year

Landmark Lovin' on LW! Blog!


Happy Valentine's Day!

 

Since launching the Love Your Landmark project earlier this month, New Yorkers of all ages have been sharing images of the landmarks they just can't get enough of! 

Whether it's Haruka's iconic Lincoln Center, or Lisa's Art Deco (former) Horn & Hardart Automat, or little Vivian's Empire State Building (when you see the submission, you'll agree our "West Side only" rule was worth bending!), the love just keeps on comin'!

Show Your Love!


A new Love Your Landmark photo is posted daily on our blog!  Make sure your favorite landmark gets the love and recognition it deserves--print your "I [heart] This Landmark" sign, get out there and snap a photo!  Everything you need is right here.  What are you waiting for?  Spread the love!

 

Upper West Side Goes to Hollywood!

 

Ghostbusters
Ghostbusters (1984). For the film's major setting, the production designer adapted the landmarked 55 Central Park West by adding several stories and a new roof.
  
Celluloid Skyline:

"A marvelous--miraculous--book."

~Jane Jacobs

  

Author and architect James Sanders will present 70 rare and unusual studio production stills and frame enlargements to show the Upper West Side as it has appeared in feature films in the postwar era, including:

 
The Apartment (1960),

  West Side Story (1961),  Rosemary's Baby (1968),  
The Panic in Needle Park
(1971),
Up the Sandbox
(1972),   Annie Hall (1976),
The Pick-up Artist (1986),
and You've Got Mail (1997). 

Among other images, we will see the original scouting shots for The Apartment, photographed on West 69th Street in 1959 for use in recreating the block at Columbia Studios in Hollywood.  Using these films and others, Mr. Sanders traces the astonishing physical, social, and cultural transformations of the area from the late 1950s to today. 

          

"Drawing on exhaustive scholarship from wide-ranging sources, Sanders' unique contribution is showing us through an architect's lens how various social and cinematic developments merge... Clearly a labor of love, Celluloid Skyline helps you see both the city and the movies anew." - Francine Russo, Village Voice     

James Sanders
, AIA, is the author of Celluloid Skyline (2002), an architect, and the co-writer with Ric Burns of the 8-part PBS series New York: A Documentary Film, which received an Emmy Award and
an Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Silver Baton Award.
         


Wednesday, March 2nd, 2011 at 6:00PM

Slide Lecture and Book Signing

Q&A to follow


 Macaulay Honors College at CUNY

35 West 67th Street, 2nd Floor 

**SPACE IS LIMITED**

 

Tickets are $25 and must be purchased in advance.

Call 212-496-8110 or email landmarkwest@landmarkwest.org.