cover image The Slip: The New York City Street That Changed American Art Forever

The Slip: The New York City Street That Changed American Art Forever

Prudence Peiffer. Harper, $35 (448p) ISBN 978-0-0630-9720-9

Art historian Peiffer’s enchanting debut revisits the art scene that emerged in New York City’s Coenties Slip in the 1950s and early ’60s. A narrow street between piers in Lower Manhattan where ships were loaded and unloaded, Coenties Slip became a hotbed for artists in the 1950s, attracting abstract painter Ellswoth Kelly, Pop Art pioneer Robert Indiana, sculptor and collagist Lenore Tawney, and others. They “experiment[ed] in their illegal warehouse studios”; sourced found materials, including wood from sail masts, for their pieces; and worked at the forefront of pop art and other movements. Despite diverse styles, the artists found a sense of belonging with each other, as the Slip’s geographic isolation offered a “release from societal expectations” and “a sociopolitical refuge.” Change came in the 1960s with efforts to modernize the Financial District through the “widening of streets [and] the demolition of waterfront piers,” leading to the artists’ gradual departure. Peiffer vividly traces the community’s genesis and makes a detailed and persuasive case for its influence on other “alternative models to conventional city life.” It’s a gratifying deep dive into New York City art history. (Aug.)