Sunday, February 26, 2023

An Abundant Life - Popping Up

Last weekend Sixth Street Vintage started a series of pop-up days that will be happening over the next few months at 408 6th Street where the shop has been located for many years. Over the time that I have been starting YES Gallery the pop-up shop has been in planning stages, and it's lovely to have it begin. I've written about Sixth Street Vintage in these pages before a few times because the owner is someone whose taste is so excellent and who created a space that was always such a beautiful one to experience, and it's wonderful to be able to visit and shop with her again. She also still has estate sales that are so much fun to go to, but her shop is a special kind of place and I've already found some treasures to add to my collection, including a sweet little nightlight that I put immediately in YES Gallery as a whimsical addition to the seaside, nature and bird theme that runs throughout the artwork and the space.

As I wrote in one of my first blog posts about Sixth Street Vintage back in 2015, it is one of my dearest and most favorite places to visit and shop. The owner, Sharon Florio, is a woman of truly classic beauty and style, who brings her expertise and expert eye to fill the space with eclectic, beautiful, witty, gorgeous and thoroughly treasurable treasures. She's a treasure herself, having a store and experience that go back many years, along with exquisite taste that only selects the best of the best. Just one piece from Sixth Street Vintage can transform any room. If you're lucky enough to own several, you'll have a home full of masterpieces. You can find clothing and accessories there too, chosen with the same perfect eye for design and line.

For more information about the pop-up hours and days, visit the Instagram page in the link below and look out for the sign on the sidewalk for a wonderful shopping adventure.


Sharon Florio
On A December Day
A Few Years Ago
At Sixth Street Vintage
408 6th Street
Hoboken, New Jersey

And A Recent Sweet
Sixth Street Vintage Pop-Up Shop Find
A Shell Nightlight Complete With A Flamingo
That Made Its Way To YES Gallery




Blessings,

Jannie Susan




Sunday, February 19, 2023

An Abundant Life - Celebrating Blessings

I began planning an event for February 13 almost right after the last event at YES Gallery. It's part of what I try to do there to have a smaller event each month so that Artists can be celebrated and community members can have a chance to come together for more conversation that they might usually be able to have at one of the regular openings. The opening parties are lots of fun, but there are so many people coming and going that it's difficult to take the time to really talk about the art and really see the work in the gallery in depth. The smaller events give people more time together to talk and share ideas and inspiration.

Right after the last opening, I was introduced to Commissioner Romano of Hudson County, and as I wrote last week he invited me to be on his show. While we were talking during the taping, I invited him to the event on February 13, but I know how busy he is and I didn't know if he would actually be able to make it. But on the day of the event he called me to say he'd be there, and not only did he attend, but he offered to speak to the guests, and he spoke such wonderful words that made the evening a very special one.

Years ago when I was just beginning to learn monologues for auditions in college and when I moved to New York City, I had discovered a book of plays by Sam Shepard and a series of monologues titled "Savage Love" that was meant to be performed as a one person play. I chose the first in the series, one called "First Moment" for my contemporary monologue and I auditioned with that for so many things. It had been many years since I had performed it, and I'd been wanting to for a while now. I had it in my heart that I wanted to do it again at an art event, and when I opened YES Gallery I started to think that it was finally the right time and place. I kept it a surprise and only told a very few people, and on the evening of February 13, I performed it again. It was in keeping with the Valentine's theme of the evening and as I prepared it and thought of all of those years ago, I remembered times past and the people I knew and where I had been and where I am now.

The food that evening was from Cafe Vista which is just around the corner from YES Gallery. I had stopped in there one day just before my birthday and the different things I tried were so wonderful that I decided to ask if they could prepare the menu for the next small event. Everything they served was done so beautifully and with such excellence, and the tables and counters glowed with abundance.

It was such a memorable time, with so many special things on a very special evening. Every time I think about different aspects of it, all I can think of is how much I am blessed. Sharing the history of the monologue by Sam Shepard and performing it again brought back all the old memories of how wonderful his writing is and how much it opened my world and my mind and heart to what playwriting and theater could be. There were so many lovely people in the gallery that evening, and to have the Commissioner attend and speak was an honor. YES Gallery is such a beautiful place to celebrate together as a community, and to join each other and share our gifts and stories and blessings.

 
YES Gallery
Valentine's VIP Event
February 13

With Commissioner Anthony Romano And Kim Nieves
Photograph By Ray Colon




Menu By Cafe Vista
527 Monroe Street
Hoboken, New Jersey








Blessings,

Jannie Susan

Sunday, February 12, 2023

An Abundant Life - Wonderful Conversations

I wrote last week about the closing celebration for Dom's Bakery which has been a neighborhood gem for more than 120 years not only for their wonderful bread but because of the generations of bakers and family members and friendships that have graced its space. Joe Sivo, the wonderful community member who invited me to the closing celebration is also a neighborhood gem, priceless in his kindness and sense of community and caring, and someone who knows and cares about so many people that being with him made it possible for me not only to attend the closing celebration, but to meet some wonderful people who I had known about but hadn't met before.

As this wonderful soul took me through the crowd to the back kitchen so that I could see the more than 120 year old coal burning oven at Dom's, he began introducing me to people along the way, letting them know that I had opened an art gallery in Hoboken, and that I wanted the door to be open for youth and families in the community to visit and enjoy a welcoming space where they could experience art of all kinds. One of the people he introduced me to as I was photographing the coal burning oven was Commissioner Anthony Romano of the 5th District at the Hudson County Board of Chosen Commissioners, a lifelong resident of Hoboken who in addition to his current roles as Vice-Chairperson of the Board of County Commissioners, Chairperson of the Public Safety Committee, Personnel Committee, Economic Development and Housing Committee, and the Senior Citizens & Veterans Affairs Committee is also a member of the Hudson County Schools of Technology Board of School Estimate, the Hudson County Community College Board of Trustees and its Board of School Estimate, and also serves as a member of the Education Committee, the Finance, Budget & Administration Committee, Public Resources Committee, and Tourism and Cultural Affairs Committee. He has an illustrious history as someone who has dedicated his life to advancing the interests of the public, having retired in the rank of Captain with the Hoboken City Police Department after more than thirty years of service making community neighborhoods safer, and he was an advocate for children long before taking his oath to represent residents at the County level. Examples of his service to local youth include a former teaching career at Hoboken High School and his current commitments as the President of the Hoboken Babe Ruth League and the Chairman of the Hoboken Municipal Alliance Against Drugs and Alcohol. He also served on the Hoboken Board of Education from 2006-2009. In addition to his service roles, he encourages academic achievement, having graduated from St. Peter's University with a B.A. in History and M.S. in Criminal Justice from New Jersey City University. He later went on to complete the Command and Leadership Program at West Point and teaches as an Adjunct Professor at St. Peter's University.

On the day of the closing celebration at Dom's Bakery, Commissioner Romano was busy in his role of ensuring that the wonderful owners and staff of the bakery who had been beloved by so many were given the recognition and respect that their own years of service deserved, along with celebrating them with their family and friends in the community. When we were introduced, he took the time to speak with me, and invited me to be a guest on his show, "Stick @ Nite" and continue our conversation about the Gallery. It was such a kindness on his part, and when I followed up with him he connected me with the show's Producer who scheduled me for February 7.

It was so exciting to take the journey up to the studio and to have the opportunity to speak with Commissioner Romano on air about YES Gallery and the community events and outreach to youth and families that are part of my vision for the space. I am so grateful and full of hope for all of the possibilities for creating ways to make YES Gallery a welcoming space for everyone in the community to share art and beauty and life.


Commissioner Anthony Romano
Stick @ Nite
Hudson Media Group





Blessings,

Jannie Susan




Sunday, February 5, 2023

An Abundant Life - Neighborhood Classic

On the day after the third opening show party and my birthday celebration at YES Gallery, I was in the process of reorganizing and putting things back together when Joe Sivo, one of the wonderful community members who stops by on occasion, walked in the door and invited me to the closing party for Dom's, a bakery that has been making bread in a coal fired oven for generations back to more than 120 years ago.

On my way to the gallery I had walked by Dom's but the line was so long and the crowd of people outside was so large that I felt overwhelmed by the thought of waiting and wading through the throng and so I went on my way to YES Gallery, thinking that I'd never have the opportunity to try their bread and see their shop again. But God had other plans, and when Joe stopped by with his invitation, I asked him to wait a few moments while I finished up a few things and then off we went into the mild January afternoon.

The celebration was memorable for its close to home goodness, and seeing the oven where the bread has been baked for more than 120 years was a travel back in time that was a beautiful experience. I wish I could say I'll be back to Dom's, and maybe I will one day find myself in that space again when whatever happens there comes to new life, but Dom's as it was will live on in memory as something unique and special, not only because of the wonderful bread and impressive history of the oven, but because of the people who worked and lived their lives there, giving daily bread along with their friendship and care for the community.


Dom's Closing Celebration
Hoboken, New Jersey
The Last Bread Baked
The Morning of January 28







Blessings,

Jannie Susan