While pedaling up a hill, I saw this:
Now, the hill wasn’t particularly steep or long,
and I was riding Tosca, my Mercian fixed gear.
But right now she has a gear of 47x17, which isn’t high but isn’t
exactly a climbing gear. Still, I
managed to get up that hill without getting out of my seat or breaking a
sweat. But I have to admit that I liked
seeing “There’s Hope”—which is all I saw as I started the climb. It was only about halfway up when I realized
that the place was a barber- and beauty-shop.
Until I saw the subtitle, I thought it might be a storefront church or
one of those centers where twelve-step programs meet—neither of which would
have surprised me in that neighborhood.
I think it’s kind of funny that a barber- and
beauty-shop would have such a name.
Perhaps I should have gone in and asked whether they’d make the same
claim for someone who’s as completely un-photogenic as I am.
Anyway, after ascending that hill, I came to a
garden. Well, all right, the name of
one—sort of:
Somehow I never associated Eden with
mountains. In any event, I’m glad the
city created that green mall along Mount Eden Avenue, which traverses a
low-income neighborhood that immigrants from the Caribbean, Latin America and
West Africa call home.
A bit further up in the Bronx, I felt a bit like
an urban archaeologist when I came upon this, across from the WoodlawnCemetery:
Here in New York, one occasionally sees
advertisements that were painted on the sides of buildings decades, or even
generations, ago. Although almost nobody
would consider them Fine Art (at least, not with a capital “F” and a capital
“A”), some show a level of illustrative vividness—and pure-and-simple
imagination and craft—one rarely finds today.
That is why I have respect both for whoever created, and whoever
actually painted, those ads. I am sure those people are, unfortunately, long
dead.
Speaking of history: Believe it or not, in the Bronx, there’s a
still-standing house that’s even older than this country. This house was built sixteen years before the
Declaration of Independence—and two centuries before I was born:
The Valentine-Varian House
is now home to the Museum of Bronx History. Unfortunately, it wasn’t open when I got
there. But I’m going to make it a point
to go there again soon, when it is open.
If that house is still standing—and I climbed some
hills (by choice)—I feel that I can say, after all, There’s Hope!
P.S. Can you guess what this building is?