Fading Ad Blog Rotating Header Image

Bowery

Closed Section of the Bowery Subway Station – NYC – Jordan Jacobs

© Jordan Jacobs

End Corporate Personhood – Bowery, NYC

© Frank H. Jump

Adultry – Germania Bank Building Graffiti – Bowery, NYC

© Frank H. Jump

Dragonfly & Flower Mosaic – Germania Bank Building – Bowery, NYC

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Bowery Figurines

© Frank H. Jump

After Dark Wheat Paste – Acrylic Paper – Bowery, NYC

© Frank H. Jump

Nether Bmore Wheat Paste – Bowery, NYC

© Frank H. Jump

Turn-of-the-century Man – Bowery, NYC

© Frank H. Jump

In Pursuit of Magic – Bowery, NYC

© Frank H. Jump

Germania Bank Building Street Art – Jay Maisel’s Studio & Residence – 190 Bowery, NYC

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Jay Maisel (born January 18, 1931, Brooklyn, New York) is an American photographer. His awards include the Art Directors Club Hall of Fame, the Lifetime Achievement Award of the American Society of Media Photographers, and the Infinity Award of the International Center of Photography.

Maisel studied painting and graphic design at Manhattan’s Cooper Union and at Yale University, and became a photographer in 1954.

One of Maisel’s most known images is his photograph of Miles Davis that appeared on the cover of Davis’s album Kind of Blue. In 2009, Andy Baio created an image based on the original Kind of Blue album cover for the cover of a chiptune tribute album titled “Kind of Bloop”. Attorneys representing Maisel demanded damages and that the resulting image be removed from the chiptune album, resulting in an out-of-court settlement of $32,500 from Baio.

Maisel lives with his family in the historic Germania Bank Building in lower Manhattan. Built in 1898, the 35,000-square-foot (3,300 m2) single-family mansion contains 72 rooms over six floors. Maisel purchased the building in 1966 for $102,000 when the neighborhood was in severe decline. The building’s value estimated at $30 to $50 million in 2008. New York Magazine called it “maybe the greatest real-estate coup of all time.” – Wikipedia