4:12 PM
news
By IVAN PEREIRA
City opens up affordable art space in Long Island City
Photo credit: Bloomberg visits the Spaceworks Performing Arts Facility in Long Island City. (Mayor’s Office)
City artists seeking a new pad to show off their work can now head to Long Island City.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg opened the Spaceworks LIC building on Tuesday and began offering applications for artists to rent any part of the 30,000 square foot space for their projects.
The building, located at 33-02 Skillman Ave., is the first of five affordable art spaces that will be located throughout the city as part of its new initiative to attract and enrich talent.
“Arts and culture is thriving in every neighborhood in all five boroughs, and supporting the artists who make up New York City’s creative community is critical,” the mayor said in a statement.
The Spaceworks Queens building includes three large rehearsal spaces for dance and theater and one music practice studio.
Eun Young Choi, program director at the New York Art Residency Studio Foundation, lauded the initiative as a way to let artists focus more on their work and less on scrounging for money to cover ever-increasing studio rent.
“Most artists have to make a living and then have this extra fee each month to pay for a studio and pay for materials,” Choi said.
Choi said the Sunset Park-based nonprofit is in the middle of relocating elsewhere in the neighborhood after the landlord of their previous industrial space jacked up rents 47%, forcing about 50 artists to find another space.
She estimated that affordable studio space should for around $500 a month.
“The more affordable it is, the more time they’ll have to work in the spaces.”
The $200,000 project that’s completely privately funded, will run for at least two years. Applicants must be New York residents, present a portfolio and resume and pay a $10 fee to be considered.
Other locations that are under consideration for a Spaceworks building are Gowanus, Williamsburg and Governor’s Island.