teenage-jesus-jerks.jpgPost-punk pioneers of late '70s No Wave movement, Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, will be performing at the Music Hall of Williamsburg on October 3rd. The band was founded by Lydia Lunch and James Chance and though short-lived, was one of the most influential underground bands to come out of New York City at the time. Their live shows lasted ten minutes and consisted of thirty-second songs that aimed to destroy what Lunch referred to as the "traditionalism" of punk rock music. Their music was dark, nihilistic and emitted in short, violent blasts of what Rolling Stone referred to as "utterly unendurable" music, while tastemaker critics like Lester Bangs held Lydia and company up as pure genius and a complete deconstruction of the safe cruise control punk and new wave had settled into.

Tickets for the show are $20 and can be purchased through their website.

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john-yoko.jpgIconic photographer Annie Leibovitz could lose her entire portfolio if she fails to meet a deadline to pay back a $24 million loan she owes. Last year she put up her portfolio and several pieces of real estate - including three townhouses in New York City - as collateral in efforts to consolidate her debt. The money, loaned by Art Capital, is due today. It is unclear if she will pay it off, file an extension, or declare bankruptcy.

Leibovitz began her career in the '70s working as a staff photographer for Rolling Stone Magazine which she left in '83 for a job at Vanity Fair Magazine. She has photographed a naked John Lennon and Yoko Ono on the day of his death, a very pregnant Demi Moore, and Queen Elizabeth II. More recently she has taken controversial photos of "topless" pop-tart Miley Cyrus. Spokespeople for both sides had no comment today.

Annie Leibovitz Faces a Loan Deadline [NYT]

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six-by-six-gallery.jpgWe are very excited to learn that next month the new Six By Six Gallery will open at 531 East 13th Street between Avenues A and B. The art gallery is dedicated to small format 6"x6" original works of art and welcomes anyone to contribute. Gallery Submission Packages are for sale at the gallery's website.

The concept of Six By Six is inspired by a yearly event held at their sister gallery in Chelsea, Charmingwall, in which they ask their artists to create original pieces in a 6"x6" format for "The Tiny Art Show."  An all inclusive art gallery is a much needed breath of fresh air in a neighborhood drowning in bars and nail salons.

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howl-2009.jpgToday kicks off downtown's annual Howl! Festival under the direction of FEVA, the Federation of East Village Artists. The three day festival, named in honor of the poem by Allen Ginsberg, is a celebration of New York City's East Village and Lower East Side art scene. Though at times the festival seems like a homage to the frenetic, creative energy of the '80s, it's a much needed relief to the frat bar atmosphere of the current East Village scene. Events include Art Around the Park at which Tompkins Square Park gets wrapped in canvas and painted by local artists Saturday and Sunday.

The festival begins this weekend though Howl! Festival sponsored events are scheduled throughout the month. Check their website for scheduled events or get your hands on the Howl! Program Calendar at East Village Howler.

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kiss-loves-you.gifTonight Anthology Film Archives is screening Jim Heneghan's documentary KISS I Love You. For ten years the filmmaker followed Kiss fans capturing all the idol-worship, disappointments, and rivalries between various fans and tribute bands, and emerged with a film that treats its subject remarkably even-handedly.

It reveals the band who've always said they put their fans first as cold and profit-hungry, but more importantly shows a remarkable devotion among fans to the self-proclaimed "hottest band in the land". It's an affectionate portrait of some of the faithful who turned fandom into a lifestyle, even a career - and of the not always gratifying consequences when the worshipers and the worshiped cross paths.

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sylvia-ji.jpgIf you are one of the few people left in the city this weekend check out the final viewing of Joshua Liner Gallery's Summer Group Exhibition which runs through September 5, 2009. The exhibition showcases 24 artists including gallery regulars and emerging artists. Artists include:

Candice Tripp, Chloe Early, Cleon Peterson, Damon Soule, Dave Kinsey, Evan Hecox, Greg Simkins, James Roper, Joe Sorren, Jud Bergeron, Kenji Hirata, Pat Rocha, Robert Hardgrave, Ryan McLennan, Shawn Barber, Stanley Donwood, Stella Im Hultberg, SUB (Tony Curanaj), Sylvia Ji, Tat Ito, Tiffany Bozic, Travis Louie, Tristram Lansdowne and ZAnPon.

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i-heart.jpgIn his continual effort to trade a benign, white-washed version of New York City for tourist dollars, Mayor Bloomberg took the liberty of removing graffiti from the buildings that surround the newly refurbished High Line park. In November of 2008, a NYC based conceptual artist hand-painted a 7'x5' mural of his take on the iconic 'I ♥ New York' symbol to celebrate the refurbished High Line. He writes on his website:

"This painting was at once homage to Highline's graffiti and street art as a protest to the rumored erasure to come before the public opening of the Highline Park."
The mural and all nearby graffiti were painted over in the Spring of 2009 despite the wishes of an architect associated with the project to keep it. An article earlier this year on Gothamist quoted him as saying:

"An architect associated with the Highline rehabilitation tells our source, 'We fought to save it but the mayor and the Parks authority have a zero tolerance policy. Really really sucks...I just heard from the director of planning at the Friends of the Highline. He says that the Highline organization does not consider itself responsible for protecting the historic graffiti that adorns the buildings adjacent to the highline. He also said that the mayor's office made private decisions with the property owners without consulting the public.This unilateral decision is troublesome. I hope you agree with me that they should have run public conversations about whether to preserve any of this stuff.'"

ax-ad-high-line.jpgOf course the graffiti and street artists aren't the only ones who have to worry about offending the High Line crowd. A billboard advertisement for Armani Exchange featuring a woman clawing at a 30-foot crotch was quickly replaced after the park's opening. And we won't even get into the porno-riffic Standard Hotel.

The original 'I ♥ New York' piece along with some then and now photos of the High Line park can be viewed on the artist's website.

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Thank you for visiting Trigger Magazine. Please pardon our appearance while we get our site ready for our September, 2009 relaunch.

Trigger Magazine in an online magazine that promotes New York City based artists and artist related organizations. If you are an artist and would like to be featured in Trigger, drop us a line. if you are a writer and or blogger and would like to write for Trigger, let us know.

In the meantime follow us on Twitter and enjoy our archives below.

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the-splasher.jpg

New York Magazine just published a rather lengthy article about the person who has come to be known as the "splasher." Seems he gets off on trashing street art around the city on which he posts glass-infused manifestos. Now the street artists are upset because their vandalism is getting vandalized. SVA grief counselors must be working overtime.

The Vandalism Vandal [New York Magazine]


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