Scrubbing Sandy’s stains

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Superstorm Sandy was not kind to the arts community. It upended not only paintings, equipment, tools and paper, turning them into tangled and soggy heaps, but also the livelihoods of hundreds of artists who have helped make the New York area a dynamic art capital.

Six weeks after Sandy, Pier Glass, a studio of four glass blowers on an old pier in the Red Hook section of Brooklyn, remains without power. Corrosive salt water destroyed its furnace, scattered grinding and polishing tools, shattered glass, and destroyed historic prints. It had also seen some water in last year’s Tropical Storm Irene, but nothing like this.
“With Irene, we had a few inches,” said Mary Ellen Buxton-Kutch, one of its glass artists. “That you can handle. We probably could handle four feet. But over five feet was catastrophic.” Artists, galleries and lofts, many that helped bring about a renaissance in the ribbon of all-but-abandoned warehouses that line New York’s coastal areas, face tens of thousands of dollars in repairs. Though no major museums reported damage, the toll among smaller operations and individual artists is steep. In response, various institutions and foundations are offering recovery help ranging from grants to free advice on how to rehabilitate damaged works of art.
Requests to the New York Foundation for the Arts for storm-related assistance
of $12 million among almost 500 artists in New York
and New Jersey, nearly 90 percent of them in New York, executive director Michael Royce said. The Craft Emergency Relief Fund, or CERF+, said it has received applications from 65 artists.
Pier Glass has received a grant from CERF+ and plans to seek more money from NYFA and other groups. It also plans a fundraiser even as friends have generously contributed in amounts of $1,000 and $1,500. “You still have all your bills to pay even as you’re getting this money,” Buxton-Kutch said.
Apart from the studio, she and her husband, Kevin Kutch, were flooded out of their house in Brooklyn’s Coney Island area and have been camping out with relatives and friends ever since the October 29 storm. Even without electricity at their studio, not working is not an option. Pier Glass does large private and public commissions and work for architects and museums, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art. “My partner has gone to another facility to rent because we’re trying to stay in business as well as rebuild,” said Buxton-Kutch, who estimated the studio suffered as much as $200,000 in damage. A new furnace would cost an additional $20,000. The institutions that lost buildings or property include both the obscure and the well-known. Salt water damaged some textiles and ceremonial batons at the New York City Police Museum and soaked about 60 boxes of paper archives at the New York City Opera, said Eric Pourchot, professional development director for the Foundation of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works.
At Westbeth Artists Housing in Manhattan’s West Village, eight feet of water inundated a labyrinth of studios in the basement of the artist colony about a block from the Hudson River, submerging paintings, sculptures and musical instruments. The adjacent Martha Graham dance company lost costumes and sets.
In New Jersey, a historic conservation group called Preservation New Jersey has reports of storm damage from 40 historical societies and house museums, some of it from falling trees and wind in addition to flooding.
Most waterlogged items can be saved, Pourchot said, but sometimes the time and the cost may be prohibitive. “For individual artists and galleries, that’s a terrifying decision,” he said. “Can they be saved in such a way that they can be sold?”

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