As the sun sets on summer, we gathered for a much-anticipated tradition: the DLG annual end of summer sunset cruise. We were rewarded with beautiful weather this year as we sailed around majestic New York City landmarks. Taking in views of the Statue of Liberty, the Brooklyn Bridge, and Downtown Manhattan from the Hudson is nothing short of magical. We love taking a moment to pause from our hard work to enjoy food, drink, and each other’s company. Now we look forward to what autumn and winter have in store for us all.
“Unframed” By JR
Photos by Andrew Markey
Ellis Island, the famed entry point for millions of nineteenth-century American immigrants, is offering an exhibit that welcomes visitors to a part of the island that was abandoned and closed to the public for over fifty years. “Unframed – Ellis Island” by French street artist JR guides visitors on a hard hat tour through the long-abandoned Ellis Island Immigrant Hospital.
“Unframed” brings to life the real people who passed through the immigrant hospital a hundred years ago. For the installation, JR combed through archival photos that were taken in the hospital a century ago. From there, he installed the photos onto the structure of the hospital itself, floating doctors over the surgical theater, crowding immigrants onto the walls of the waiting room, and placing nurses along the halls. The installation breathes eerie life into those who once passed through the hospital’s halls, searching for a new life in America.
Give Us Those Who Seek a Better Life
"You Know Who I Am" by Paola Pivi
The Statue of Liberty stands in New York Harbor and has welcomed people to New York since 1886. For decades, immigrants processed through Ellis Island saw the enormous copper statue upon arriving at US shores. Though Ellis Island no longer processes arrivals to the US, the statue remains an iconic symbol of freedom and welcome. In a new work called “You Know Who I Am,” on view on the High Line in New York City, artist Paola Pivi has repurposed the image of the statue to reflect on those ideas of freedom and welcome in the US today. She created a smaller-scale replica of the Statue of Liberty and added a series of emoji-style masks, each representing “an individual whose experience of freedom is connected to the United States, offering the sentiment that anyone could be represented within the symbol of the statue.” Currently, the mask portrays Marco Saavedra, “an artist, poet, restauranteur, longtime immigrant rights activist, and community organizer based in the South Bronx.” After many years of activism and organizing, Saavedra set a legal precedent for undocumented activists when he was granted political asylum in 2021. The image of his face on the iconic statue puts the history of American immigration in conversation with the modern immigration landscape.
Listen to an interview with Mr. Saavedra here.
Office Holiday Party
This week, we had our annual office holiday party! We celebrated by taking a cruise around the southern tip of Manhattan, where we got to see landmarks like the Statue of Liberty and the Brooklyn Bridge up close. The Statue of Liberty, of course, has been welcoming immigrants to New York City since 1886, holding up her torch to light the way to America’s shores. The Brooklyn Bridge has been a notable feature of the city for even longer, as it was designed by a Prussian immigrant in the 1860s and was completed by his daughter-in-law in 1883. After taking in the views of the skyline and the city’s rich history, we headed over to the Spanish Diner at Hudson Yards for delicious food and drinks and lots of lively conversation. We had a wonderful time celebrating the holidays in our beautiful city!
Reclining Liberty by Zaq Landsberg
Tucked against a stand of trees at the top of a hill in Morningside Park is an unusual sight: the Statue of Liberty taking a rest. Artist Zaq Landsberg’s “Reclining Liberty” is a massive musing on the state of American ideals. The Statue of Liberty is a classic New York symbol, standing proudly in New York Bay to welcome visitors and immigrants to the United States. But in Landsberg’s version, she seems tired, taking a pose inspired by the Reclining Buddha, meant to depict the Buddha in his last moments of life. The pose has a hopeful connotation, however, as it can be understood to represent the last step on a path towards enlightenment. With this work, Landsberg is questioning whether Lady Liberty, or indeed if the US is “an entity forever upright and tall, is it an eventual decline and fall, or is there another stage for the country that will transcend this symbol altogether?" The sculpture manages to be humorous and charming, while provoking serious contemplation about American ideals.
I Lift My Lamp Beside the Golden Door
Dorothy Iannone, a Berlin-based artist, has created a large-scale mural installation near 22nd Street on the High Line. Iannone's work is inspired by Egyptian frescoes, Byzantine mosaics, and ancient fertility statues. In between her three colorful Statues of Liberty is the final line from Emma Lazarus’s poem The New Colossus: “I Lift My Lamp Beside the Golden Door.” The mural re-imagines the Statue of Liberty "anew as a symbol of the openness of New York City and the United States to those seeking asylum, freedom, or simply a better life" and also brings "a bit of joy to an often exhausting and demoralizing political debate." The mural is on the High Line through March 2019.
Angle of Perception
Boat Dance 2017
It’s one of our favorite events of the year: the firm’s annual “Boat Dance.” Everyone took a break last night from working hard preparing visa petitions to enjoy some good food (shrimp cocktails!), conversation, and drinks! Despite menacing skies and thunderstorm forecasts, our boat, The Manhattan, took us all on a lovely ride on the Hudson and East Rivers where we were able to view Ellis Island, Governor’s Island, and the Brooklyn Bridge. Although it was a bit windy, the weather turned out great in the end, and we all were able to watch a beautiful sunset at the Statue of Liberty. Alla, Gabby, Ashley, and Lourdes (shown above) had some great laughs and even learned a valuable lesson—don’t wear skirts on a windy boat!