The Miraculous
The Miraculous: New York
86. The South Bronx
By Raphael RubinsteinThe mayor of New York City borrows a life-size fiberglass sculpture of a shirtless young man with a boombox and a basketball (he holds the ball under his left arm, while his right foot rests on the boombox) to place on the front lawn of his official residence on the occasion of presenting a filmmaker renowned for his depictions of everyday urban life with the keys to the city.
The Miraculous: New York
87. East Village, SoHo, Midtown
By Raphael RubinsteinOn November 5, 1969, a Saturday, an artist living at 340 East 13th Street, gets out of bed at 17 minutes after noon. Using rubber stamps, he notes this fact on a postcard that he mails to an art critic living at 138 Prince Street.
The Miraculous: New York
88. A Hotel (now demolished) at Fifth Avenue and Eighth Street
By Raphael RubinsteinA husband and wife, both artists, both Mexican, are living in an apartment at the Hotel Brevoort in Greenwich Village. Following the politically motivated censorship of a mural commission the husband has been working on at 30 Rockefeller Center, he is frustrated to learn that two other major U.S. commissions have been cancelled.
The Miraculous: New York
89. 2 Fifth Avenue
By Raphael RubinsteinBefore moving into a new apartment building overlooking Washington Square Park, a photographer and his wife, both Hungarian émigrés, go through every apartment in the still-unoccupied building to find the ideal vantage point for the photographs the husband plans to take.
The Miraculous: New York
90. 2 Fifth Avenue, 131 West 15th Street, 200 and 220 West 21st Street
By Raphael RubinsteinSome six years after the death of his beloved wife from cancer, a photographer asks his assistant to finally take apart his late spouses bed. After all, he is nearly 90 and its time to put his life in order. In the course of disassembling the bed, the assistant comes upon some boxes of enigmatic black-and-white photographsmany of them depicting old disjointed dolls, possibly happened upon at flea markets or deliberately posed in a studio, its impossible to knowcredit stamped with a womans name.