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At age 16, J. Hoberman was old enough to crash the gates when Beatlemania overtook Shea Stadium on August 15, 1965—but, as luck would have it, he never made it in. Three nights later, Bob Dylan ...
In “Everything Is Now,” J. Hoberman recreates the theater, film and music scenes that helped fuel the cultural storm of the ’60s. By Evelyn McDonnell Evelyn McDonnell’s latest book, “The ...
Hoberman re-immerses the reader in the underground art movements of the 1960s: trashy and camp films by Jack Smith, fourth wall–smashing plays by the Living Theater and the Performance Group, free ...
In the astonishing “Everything Is Now: The 1960s New York Avant-Garde—Primal Happenings, Underground Movies, Radical Pop,” J. Hoberman assumes the roles of Google Earth satellite, Leica ...
Richard Brody reviews J. Hoberman’s “Everything Is Now,” a cultural memoir of the downtown avant-garde in 1960s New York.
The Village Voice looks at Jim Hoberman's latest, "Everything is Now," which will have a book launch party at Artists Space on June 6, 2025.
A plethora of Jewish artists I first became aware of Hoberman before I moved to New York in mid-1977 through Art Spiegelman’s Arcade: The Comics Review, several issues of which contained ...
However, hexagonal pencils have come to dominate the market, and are the most familiar design to most of us. Why? It turns out to be a mix of ergonomics, practical issues, and manufacturer costs.
Houston-based Vortex Cos., which provides trenchless water and sewer infrastructure products, announced last week that it has acquired Williamsburg -based Prism Contractors & Engineers. Founded in ...
Hoberman, who also goes by the first name Rina, worked as a therapist for LifeStance Health in Melville, where she advertised that she worked with children up to age 17.
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