NighthawkNYC.com Is 11 !!!

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Written & Photographed by Kenn Sava. (*- Unless otherwise credited)

July 15, 2026, NighthawkNYC.com turns 11! With some of the “scars” of all that has come before over Knicks Blue! (I explain here.)

Another challenging year is in the books, but I’m still here! A torn meniscus in October and then Baastrup’s disease (in May) left me with very limited mobility and debilitating pain for a few weeks each. A concussion in February brought post-concussion syndrome that went on for 2 months in between. My thanks to Dr. Kavita Sharma, who somehow got me back to being able to walk, Dr. Kimberly Peters, and Dr. Robert Kaufman for his ongoing treatment. Without them, I wouldn’t have been able to see the shows I did manage to see  in 2026 (let alone get to the food store). Most importantly, I was able to see the once-in-a-lifetime, 8 years in the making, Raphael: Sublime Poetry at The Metropolitan Museum of Art six times (normally, I would have made twice or three times as many visits). I’m very grateful to have been able to see as much as I did in Year 11, and I’m looking forward to sharing it with you. 

Was it you? If you blinked, you missed it! June 8, 2026. I took it down a few days later.

Meanwhile, during Year 11, NHNYC welcomed its 200,000 visitor on June 8th, a number that has now reached 218,000, as readership continues to climb for the 11th straight year. Also I was, and am, very pleased to have introduced the first-ever guest writer, Lana Hattan, to the site she pushed me to start in 2014!

Meeting Bella. May 15, 2015.

Her interview with Marc Chagall’s granddaughter, the renowned Floral Artist Bella Meyer, is part of her ongoing research into the life & work of Mark Chagall, and has never previously been published. I’m thrilled to have “Marc Chagall’s Granddaughter: An Artist In Her Own Right” here. The response to it has been very gratifying for both of us.

Roses by CJ Hendry at her Flower Market 2.0 Rockefeller Center, September, 2025.

Without a doubt, my most popular piece of Year 11 is “CJ Hendry: Color Pencil Mastery to Art SuperStar,” which has quickly risen to being one of my top 5 most read pieces ever! I chalk it up to the fact that there hasn’t really been much written about her to date, in spite of her achieving “super star” status. (I believe I was the first one to say she has!)

Christine Sun-Kim: All Day All Night, Whitney Museum, 2025

With limited mobility, I spent much of the year trying to catch up on the 4 great blockbuster shows from Summer, 2025, which kept me busy for most of the rest of 2025 and in to 2026. Important shows by Amy Sherald, Christine Sun-Kim, Hilma af Klint and Jack Whitten were all featured in Year 11. 

Sharing a street with the immortal Jimi Hendrix mere steps from his Electric Lady Studios, OG Anunoby is now a legend in NYC. July 12, 2026.

Then, what took place in NYC late on June 13th was something the likes of which I’ve never seen or experienced here. Ever! Having lived through prior championships by the Yankees, the Giants, the Cosmos(!), the Rangers, and the Knicks (in 1973), including being at the championship games for the Yankees in 1999 and the Rangers in 1994, and seeing the Champion Knicks in the 1973 playoffs, NONE of that, or even 9/11 (in a different way) prepared me for what I experienced that night and in the 2 months preceding June 13th. It left me wondering why so many people had such a huge reaction to it and related to it so intensely. Part of my series of pieces on extraordinary events in NYC, my take is “Living the Dream: The Knicks & New York City.”

A highlight from Year 11. Carmen Bambach at her show, Raphael: Sublime Poetry, Metropolitan Museum, April 14, 2026.

Knee deep in the depths of Raphael: Sublime Poetry on April 14th, I was shocked to realize the curator, Met Museum legend Carmen Bambach, was standing next to me! The curator of three of the greatest shows I’ve ever seen (Raphael, may be the ultimate), I swallowed hard and summoned the courage to speak with her. That story, and much more, in the piece (possibly another of my series of pieces on one show, which I’ve never seen anyone else do) that I’m hoping to write with your support. Here, in a Drawing that Raphael gifted to the great Albrecht Durer(!), Ms Bambach points out a Sonnet Raphael wrote on the lower right section of the piece, which circles back to the title she chose for the show, “Raphael: Sublime Poetry!”

I’m pleased to announce that there’s a new edition of my ever-popular Banner Retrospective, titled “11 Years of NighthawkNYC.com Banners,” which includes the latest one you see above.

For an even further look back see my 10th Anniversary piece, which is a retrospective of the first 10 years of Nighthawknyc.com!

As always, Thank You for reading my pieces, and Thanks especially to those of you who have donated or purchased items from my collections to enable me to continue. Last week, your donations enabled me to renew the web hosting for NighthawkNYC.com for the next four years! Everyone reading this owes you their thanks.

I am extremely proud & pleased to say NighthawkNYC.com made it to Year 11 being 100% FREE & AD-FREE! How rare is that today?  I now need your help to continue to add to the site and cover 2026 shows including the aforementioned Raphael: Sublime Poetry, which closed and became part of history on June 28th. More on the various ways you can help at the end, with my Thanks in advance. 

So, The Universe willing- ONWARD to Year 12!
Kenn. 

For Lana, my rock, who told me repeatedly that I would get through it all this year. 

*-Soundtrack for this piece is “Two of Us,” by Lennon & McCartney as recorded by The Beatles on Let It Be, a song Sir Paul says he wrote about himself and soon-to-be-wife, Linda Eastman. It’s seen & heard here in their Official Video, with appearances by Linda & Yoko Ono)-

NighthawkNYC.com has been entirely self & donation funded, FREE & AD-FREE for 11 years, during which over 360 full-length pieces have been published! If you’ve found it worthwhile, PLEASE donate securely by PayPal below to allow me to continue. Thank you, Kenn.

You can also support it by buying Art, Art & Photography books, and Music from my collection! Art & Books may be found here. Music here and here.

To send comments, thoughts, feedback or propositions click here. Click the white box on the upper right for the archives or to search them. Subscribe to be notified of new Posts below. Your information will be used for no other purpose.

11 Years of NighthawkNYC.com Banners

By Kenn Sava, with a tip of my Fedora to Edward Hopper.

Having run, on average, 4 banners a year these past 11 years, here’s a look back at what you saw when you looked above what I’ve written here since July 15, 2015: the NighthakwkNYC.com Banners I’ve run from Day 1.

Speaking of Day 1, July 15, 2015…Remember this?

Banner #1. July 15, 2015. Location- Somewhere Downtown, late. My adaptation of Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks, 1942, into a “Self-Portrait,” as I said, here. My piece on decades of looking for the site of the REAL Nighthawks, which remains my most popular piece ever, is here.

Banner #2 – NighthawkNYC Version 2.0 in honor of the First Anniversary, July 15, 2016, I decided to create my own version.

Banner #40b – My working file since July, 2016. The blue lines are the ghosts of all the layers that have been added to this image its first eight years! There are so many on it now, you can’t make out me or the cafe! Some of them are seen below…

Banner #3. Night flowers. In summer, 2023, this Deli became a cannabis shop…

Banner #4 – Outside Ai Weiwei’s powerful show Laundromat on the Refugee Crisis

Banner #5 – Chelsea, February, 2017. Seeing this reminded me of my boxed-in upbringing, as I wrote in my 10th Anniversary of Cancer treatment piece. This space is now the location of the Hauser & Wirth mega-gallery.

Banner #6 – The High Line, March, 2017. January, February and early March are the only times I’ll hit the High Line, which is too crowded the rest of the year. I’ve still never been to Hudson Yards (15 blocks behind me here). By choice.

Banner #7 – The Strand Bookstore, minutes after closing, December, 2017, back when it closed at 10:30pm every night. Not at 9pm as it does now!

Banner #8 – Madison Square, January, 2018

Banner #8 – Unpublished experiment featuring my dear friends, the Birdies from my “On The Fence” series, seen on their infamous perch on West 24th Street.

Banner #11 – The Entrance to Michelangelo at The Met, February, 2018. Behind the screen is the faux scaffolding for the Sistine Ceiling section.

Banner #18 – Hell’s Kitchen, March, 2018

Banner #21 – 7th Avenue, April, 2018. A sort of “nighthawks” at the all-night coffee house…

Banner #23 – 18th Street, May, 2018

Banner #11 – The steam pipe explosion on 5th Avenue. Looking uptown from 5th Avenue and 18th Street to the Empire State Building as repairs to the surrounding buildings damaged by  the explosion continues, July 26, 2018.

Banner #22 – Meatpacking District, September, 2018,

Banner #25 – Live on the D Train, November, 2018

Banner #32 – March, 2019, West 19th Street. My banner as it was before everything hit the fan. I ran this one longer than any other so far.

Banner #32a – March 22, 2020. The covid shutdown is a week old. I’m home, like everyone else.

Banner #32b – July 20, 2020. NighthawkNYC.com is 5 years old! Restaurants & cafes are allowed to open for take out and delivery orders, only.

Banner #34 – Unpublished experiment in response to everything being boarded up here. It showed a lack of trust in the community, their customers, which angered me when I was living with all of it, so I made it as a joke but didn’t run it.

May 3, 2021 – The vaccine has kicked in and I’ve returned after a year away from the banner. At least to Eddie’s Cafe. I had yet to go inside any other restaurant.

Banner 32c – NighthawkNYC.com is 6! July, 2021. Twyla’s quote still fits.

Banner #26 – With Richard Estes Double Self-Portrait, May, 2022.

Banner #27 – Parking Eddie’s Cafe in the middle of 6th Avenue in the Flatiron facing south, June, 2022, One World Trade Center next to my left ear. Working on that logo!

If you had told me at a number of points this past year, I’d be hanging a “7 Years” Banner, I’d have seriously doubted it!

August, 2022. On East 42nd Street.

October, 2022. From Chelsea Piers looking south.

February, 2023. Sunset from Hudson River Park.

June 9, 2023. Edward Hopper’s New York Corner, 1913, one of my favorites in Edward Hopper’s New York, my obsession at the time, at the Whitney Museum.

July 15, 2023. NighthawkNYC.com turns 8 years old!

August 28, 2023- Pondering Rod Penner’s 212/House with Snow, 1998. The 31st Banner I’ve run.

September 22nd, 2023. The view from the MoMA/PS1 Courtyard, LIC, NY, in 20022.

December 17, 2023. Looking north on 5th Avenue. Views of the Empire State Building from the south are disappearing due to new construction. Here, the building is partially hidden by a new tower going up just to the right of it in this view. Oh, and I was named a Finalist for the 2023 Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Award.

January 27, 2024. Slowly getting back on my feet after a bad illness, this harkens back to my late summer trips to the Guggenheim to see Sarah Sze: Timelapse.

March 8, 2024. Banner 51- Trees in Clement Moore Park, February, 2024. Finally back on my feet after a rough six-week illness, this picture captured how I was feeling.

April 9, 2024. Kobra’s Mural on 10th Avenue, his idea of a “Mount Rushmore” for the Chelsea Art District which it directly faces. I’m not sure who would be on my Art Mt. Rushmore. Who’s on yours?

July 15, 2024. Banner 60- NighthawkNYC.com is 9! Yes, this is influenced by Ed Ruscha’s Large Trademark with Eight Spotlights, 1962, which was on display at MoMA’s Ed Ruscha/Now Then, subject of my 3-part series on it.

September 4, 2024, the day I was diagnosed with ovid for the first time, a look at better times. Here I am living a dream, taking the place of my alter-ego in this fabulous recreation of Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks Diner, which I wrote about here. I named this site after that guy in the Painting that no one ever talks about (a “nighthawk.” The Painting is titled Nighthawks). My thanks to the iconic Lucas for the coffee and convo and Nilo for the priceless pic. By the way! The frame is the ACTUAL frame that housed Nighthawks when I saw it last at Hopper Drawing at the old Whitney in 2013!

September 27, 2024- Unable to find a way to survive financially from writing, I announced on Instagram that I was taking a break from Art writing. I left 3 pieces unfinished including my NoteWorthy Art & PhotoBooks of the 21st Century (thus far) pieces.

April 16, 2025- The “Golden Oof,” named for my Avatar, the statuette I’ve had made for my NoteWorthy Art & PhotoBook Lists perched on my picture of the Brooklyn Bridge shot from the Brooklyn side before the pandemic. This Oof is for my NoteWorthy Art & PhotoBooks of the 21st Century (thus far) pieces. After six months of hard work, this banner honors my Art Book piece FINALLY being published today.

June 15, 2025- Banner 64a marks the completion of two pieces that took 9 months of hard work built on 25 years of equally hard looking. The twin “Golden Oofs” fly over a fiery sunset Photo by my Muse, Lana Hattan, 2025.

July 15, 2025. Banner 65 marks 10 Years of NighthawkNYC.com! By the way, the frame is the actual frame of Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks!

That makes it 41 banners I’ve run- about 4 a year. It turns out to have been a bit of a circuitous journey, with my getting to live out my dream seen in Banner #1 ten years ago.

January 28, 2026. Banner 86. A new year brings the return of my original drawing in the actual Hopper Nighthawks frame this time.

Banner 87, June 8, 2026. If you blinked, you missed it! I went back to Banner 86  a few days later.

The site welcomed its 200,000th visitor on June 8th! Since the number quickly passed 210,000, I felt it had served its purpose in commemorating a moment in time, so I retired it.

Banner 89, July 15, 2026, NighthawkNYC.com turns 11! Over a background of Knicks Blue, I decided to leave in some of the lines from the “Ghost Images” I mentioned in the 3rd image way above. For me, they’re like scars on leather. Left over from images collaged onto prior Banners, they are, also, evidence & remnants of where I’ve been this past decade+, they are, literally, part of the landscape I’ve created here.

Until next July 15th, Universe willing, my Thanks to all those who’ve seen one of them, most of them, even all of them along the way!

*-Soundtrack for this Post is “I Contain Multitudes,” by Bob Dylan from Rough and Rowdy Ways, 2020.

NighthawkNYC.com has been entirely self-funded & ad-free for over 9 years, during which 300 full length pieces have been published! If you’ve found it worthwhile, PLEASE donate to allow me to continue below. Thank you, Kenn.

You can also support it by buying Art, Art & Photography books, and Music from my collection! Art & Books may be found here. Music here and here

Written & photographed by Kenn Sava for nighthawknyc.com unless otherwise credited. To send comments, thoughts, feedback or propositions click here. Click the white box on the upper right for the archives or to search them. Subscribe to be notified of new Posts below. Your information will be used for no other purpose.