Part of the allure of the Chelsea, beyond the creepy yet tantalizing feeling that the place is thick with spirits, is that from the inside looking out, New York can still feel gritty. Its cavelike hallways are lined with paintings, striking collages and old electrical wiring caked with innumerable coats of paint. A palpable heaviness lingers, especially in the first-floor room where Nancy Spungen was staying with her boyfriend, Sid Vicious, when she was stabbed to death in 1978. Artists, photographers, composers and producers still live there, making the place part art colony, part living museum.Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
Monday, August 1, 2011
Historic Chelsea Hotel Closes to Guests
At New York Times, "A Last Night Among the Spirits at the Chelsea Hotel":
Labels:
New York,
News,
Popular Culture,
Punk Rock,
Rock and Roll
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