The Knockturnal
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • Music
  • Lifestyle
  • News
  • Videos
  • Covers
  • Merch
Tag:

Tribeca

EntertainmentEventsThe Latest

“Richland” Tribeca Review: An Enriching Watch

by Dano Nissen June 13, 2023
written by Dano Nissen

Richland has all the trappings of a picturesque American small town.

It has diners, high school football, town parades and a smattering of hometown heroes and their kids and their kids’ kids. All this rests on contaminated land, from improper nuclear waste storage from the power plant that has driven the economy for the past half century. As it happens, the plant supplied plutonium for the atomic bombs dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima at the end of the Second World War.

Director Irene Lusztig’s documentary “Richland” takes a look at the legacy of the nuclear history in the eponymous town.

Pierce under the facade of many towns in America and you’ll find a radioactive underbelly. There are unsavory and complex histories to contend with, dominating industries with questionable practices and deep ideological rifts between its denizens. So this isn’t a film just about a nuclear town. It captures a disturbance felt all over the country. Its subject town’s focal point, uranium enrichment, happens to be a great metaphor: it brings energy, death, destruction, longevity, decay, prosperity, blight, advancement, regress. You can use that array of terms for plenty of institutions that backbone the history of many towns in this country.

Richland carries baggage that sounds familiar to many places. Beyond the scope of nuclear debate, there are salient moments to today’s public conversation writ large. For example, high schoolers and their parents debate the appropriateness of having a mushroom cloud mascot for their school team “The Bombers.”

The film captures so well the universal essence of small industry town life. And it gives breath to all its nuances and perspectives by letting its inhabitants speak for themselves. We’re not subjected to lectures from proselytizing pro or anti nuclear talking heads. Instead, we sit down at a diner table or a high school quad or living room and hear what people have to say about Richland, until we get an illuminating mosaic of thoughtful positions and the people behind them.

“Richland” premiered at Tribeca Film Festival June 11.

June 13, 2023 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
EntertainmentEventsThe Latest

Audible’s “The Space Within” Premieres in Tribeca

by Sydney Wheeler June 11, 2023
written by Sydney Wheeler

At the Tribeca Film Festival yesterday, Audible hosted the world premiere of “The Space Within” featuring Jessica Chastain.

Continue Reading
June 11, 2023 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
EntertainmentFilmThe Latest

“Smoking Tigers” Tribeca Review: Liminal Spaces

by Dano Nissen June 10, 2023
written by Dano Nissen

“Smoking Tigers” is about liminal spaces. The spaces in between. 

Continue Reading

June 10, 2023 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
FilmThe Latest

Cinema Center To Activate During Tribeca Film Festival Week With Event Lineup Featuring Cindy Lauper, Judy Greer, Michael Shannon, Alicia Silverstone and More

by Staff June 7, 2023
written by Staff

The Cinema Center Event Programming Runs Opening Weekend of June 10th through June 18th, 2023.

Continue Reading
June 7, 2023 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
EventsFashion & BeautyThe Latest

The Blonds Close Out NYFW With Diamonds & Glamour

by Tony Bowles March 10, 2023
written by Tony Bowles

New York Fashion Week always brings the most creative and talented designers, but there is something uniquely special about the talented duo of The Blonds. It was a perfect ending of a wonderful season with many of the shows taking place at Spring Studios in TriBeca.

Continue Reading
March 10, 2023 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Jennifer Elster David Bowie Installation Take Heed (2022)
ArtEntertainmentEventsLifestyle

Art Review: Jennifer Elster Taps Into Visceral Memory With New Show at The Development Gallery

by Benjamin Schmidt December 13, 2022
written by Benjamin Schmidt

Jennifer Elster has always been a deeply reactionary artist. Whether it is rebutting (or accepting) seismic shifts in the culture or simply responding to a question posed or a happening taking place, her multi-modal replies are always candid and fizzling with raw, determined energy.

Elster has always consumed with world as anyone else does- receiving and interpreting on an on-going basis. But rather than letting things happen to her passively, she posits and responds urgently and instinctually. Stepping into the Take Heed show, now on view at The Development Gallery in Tribeca, one feels as if they’re stepping outside for the first time after an apocalyptic event.

Crystalizing the flurry of cultural norms that have been introduced in the past two years, Take Heed is the first honest retrospective of work that was created or heavily reconsidered under the shadow of an on-going global pandemic and an affronting war.

Taking shape amid the soaring columns and roiled tin roof and wood of the Tribeca space, the show feels like a shell of what once was and a space being repopulated once more. The dust has settled but hasn’t yet been swept away. A mount of KN95 masks, a signature element of the deepest valley of the COVID-19 pandemic, are positioned on a pedestal, taking on the performance of a future relic. In fact, preservation seems particularly important to Elster in this show, with many works being encased in plexiglas or wood.

A series of large-scale self-portraits, originally executed in 2016, featured Elster in military fatigues and gas masks. The works, faraway and innocuous at the time of their execution, are revisited within the collective gasp and gaze of an egregious war taking place in Ukraine. Have no doubt, conflict rages globally. But distance can breed unfounded comfort.

Elster’s instinctual quips, done in chiseled marker, are not flailing in conspiracy, but are bright-red warning lights. “Warhead” (2022) is one of the most delicate and thought-provoking pieces the artist has completed in recent memory, adding to an ongoing series of “head” works that address, in the most abstract way, the awe-inspiring dynamism of the human condition.

 

When Is It Enough?, 2015, 2020, Acrylic on paper with hands and no body, 44.5h x 44w x 44d inches

Unlike previous shows, Elster is no longer angry. She’s done defending herself. Now she is a communicator. Her prophesies have come true and she’s been prepared for a long while. Now she invites the broader world to involve themselves. Of course, there is humor. There is realism. Elster remains as buoyant as ever, motivated by- believe it or not- absolute optimism.

Bowie as the character of Ramona in a photograph taken by John Scarisbrick for Bowie’s 1995 1. Outside album. Styled by Jennifer Elster

Viewers will relish in the opportunity to revisit one of Elster’s most remarkable achievements: the styling of the late David Bowie. In a new installation, the image, which is celebrated for its deeply collaborative and improvised instant, enters into a new territory of multi-dimensional bliss by way of cut web around the enlarged image. “Bowie and I went very deep. I wanted to pay tribute and incorporate but not overwhelm the show.”

Elster’s work are available to purchase for the first time at ChannelELSTER.com/art-gallery and on Artsy. Most of the show has sold, but there are collectible Limited Editions Gaeclee canvases and Digital C-Prints that will be available upon proposal.

Take Heed will be on exhibition through January 5, 2023 at The Development Gallery in Tribeca, NYC.

Shop the J. Elster collection here.

December 13, 2022 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
EntertainmentFilmThe LatestVideo

Exclusive: Writer/Director Rebeca Huntt Talks Her Debut Feature, “Beba” [VIDEO]

by Briana Atkins June 28, 2022
written by Briana Atkins

Beba tells the story of Rebeca Huntt through the eyes of Rebeca Huntt.

Continue Reading

June 28, 2022 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
LifestyleThe Latest

Restaurant Review: Filé Gumbo Bar

by Megan D'Souza June 24, 2022
written by Megan D'Souza

Ever wonder where to get your gumbo fix in Manhattan? We found the answer: Filé Gumbo Bar.

Continue Reading
June 24, 2022 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
EntertainmentEventsThe Latest

On The Scene: “Alien (The Other)” Premieres at Tribeca Festival

by Sydney Hargrove June 23, 2022
written by Sydney Hargrove

Doordash’s “Beyond The Dash” program probes that with the right support, it’s Dashers are capable of anything.

Continue Reading
June 23, 2022 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
EntertainmentEventsFilmThe Latest

On the Scene: ‘Good Luck to You, Leo Grande’ Tribeca Premiere

by Dano Nissen June 21, 2022
written by Dano Nissen

“Good Luck to You, Leo Grande” puts viewers up close and intimate with the two leads as they get, well, intimate. 

Continue Reading
June 21, 2022 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Digital Cover No. 19

The Knockturnal Merch

Follow Us On The Gram

Follow on Instagram

About The Site

We are a collective of creative tastemakers made up of fashion, music and entertainment industry insiders. It’s all about access. You want it. We have it.

Terms Of Use

Privacy Policy

Meet The Team

CONTACT US

For general inquiries and more info on The Knockturnal, please contact our staff at:
info@theknockturnal.com
fashion@theknockturnal.com
advertising@theknockturnal.com
editorial@theknockturnal.com
beauty@theknockturnal.com

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin
  • Youtube

© Copyright - The Knockturnal | Developed by CI Design + Media

The Knockturnal
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • Music
  • Lifestyle
  • News
  • Videos
  • Covers
  • Merch