The French duo Boijeot & Renauld have logged one full week and three days of crossing Manhattan via Broadway. As you know they are embarking on an ambitious project where they intend to cross Manhattan with their living room, breakfast room and bedroom in tow. They started in Harlem on 125th Street and the last time we caught up with them they were moving down the Upper West Side and running into the inquisition of friendly and sometimes oddly parochial locals.
The first few days they enjoyed typical NYC Autumn weather with crisp air and sunny days. Then things turned for the worse with the prickly hurricane season wrecking havoc somewhere offshore in The Atlantic bringing heavy winds and downpours.
Boijeot . Renauld (photo © Jaime Rojo)
“One night we woke up and right before our eyes we experienced a cascade of water falling down from our plastic tarp. The water was taking the edges of the mattress and everything was so soaked that we used our photographer friend as a pillow, ” says Laurent Beijot.
Sebastien, Laurent and photographer Clement are keeping their spirits high despite the cold, the rain and the wind. New Yorkers are their fuel, their source of warmth and entertainment. They recently have been regaled with an impromptu recital on the street composed of two opera singers and one young violinist. As the singers and the musician performed on the street for the artists and their street guests a rather large crowd of spectators formed around their encampment for a quintessential New York Minute.
Boijeot . Renauld (photo © Jaime Rojo)
So far the love affair between the artists and the Upper West Side denizens continue with multiple offering of generosity: Food, well wishes, bathrooms and showers and many gestures of gratitude. “This is the first crossing ever where we have been told by so many passersby ‘Thank you for doing this’. It hasn’t just happened once or twice but all the time and we are floored with how nice New Yorkers are. When we did this in Berlin and in Paris almost no one stopped to offer any support let alone say thank you to us,” says Sebastian.
Boijeot . Renauld (photo © Jaime Rojo)
There were a couple of occasions when anxious merchants told them to move away from their storefronts and the police were called. Upon further inspection the police deemed the artists free of culpability or guilt of trespassing or blocking traffic and allowed them stay.
When we were visiting with them we witnessed several pedestrians stopping by to inquire about their presence on the street with so much furniture. The questions ranged from “Are you selling these furniture?” to “I give up! Can you tell me what’s going on here?” Unfazed, the artists responded to each questions with candor, humor and enthusiasm. The inquisitors usually seemed satisfied with their answers and wished them good luck.
Boijeot . Renauld (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Boijeot . Renauld (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Boijeot . Renauld (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Boijeot . Renauld (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Boijeot . Renauld (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Boijeot & Renauld: Crossing Manhattan With Your Living Room on the Sidewalk
Other Articles You May Like from BSA:
In Hazel's Eye : Fauxreel & Specter on Toronto Mural Under a Bridge
Canadian Street Artist Fauxreel and Brooklyn’s Specter collaborated recently on a commissioned mural under a bridge to commemorate the 2015 Pan Am Games that are hosting world athletes right now in To...
Canadian Street Artist Fauxreel and Brooklyn’s Specter collaborated recently on a commissioned mural under a bridge to commemorate the 2015 Pan Am Games that are hosting world athletes right now in To...
SEPE in Quezon City, Philippines Reflects the Streets Darkly
Beautifully disfigured, on the mottled edge of grotesques, Sepe’s portraits admire and recoil from humanity and its foibles. Here in the Phillipines in monochrome, his newest public works reflect the...
Beautifully disfigured, on the mottled edge of grotesques, Sepe’s portraits admire and recoil from humanity and its foibles. Here in the Phillipines in monochrome, his newest public works reflect the...
Fun Friday 03.30.12
1. Wooly Bully! (VIDEO) 2. "International Woman" at The Warrington Museum (UK) 3. "While Supplies Last" at Pawn Works (Chicago) 4. Crossing Borders at MSA Gallery (Paris) 5. Isaac Cordal “Wait...
1. Wooly Bully! (VIDEO) 2. "International Woman" at The Warrington Museum (UK) 3. "While Supplies Last" at Pawn Works (Chicago) 4. Crossing Borders at MSA Gallery (Paris) 5. Isaac Cordal “Wait...
Escif’s Urban Manifesto: Art, Activism, and the Everyday / "The Foundations of Harmony and Invention...
It would be challenging to extricate Escif’s work from the city and its daily routines. The city, with its cacophonous soundtrack created by its inhabitants' constant movement and the fluidity of the...
It would be challenging to extricate Escif’s work from the city and its daily routines. The city, with its cacophonous soundtrack created by its inhabitants' constant movement and the fluidity of the...
Coney Art Walls : 30 Reasons To Go To Coney Island This Summer
The gates are open to the new public/private art project called Coney Art Walls and today you can have a look at all 30 or so of the new pieces by a respectable range of artists spanning four decades ...
The gates are open to the new public/private art project called Coney Art Walls and today you can have a look at all 30 or so of the new pieces by a respectable range of artists spanning four decades ...