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Cover of a newsletter printed in two columns with the headline “Mafia on the pot: Mafia Control of Gay Bars Comes to Public’s Attention”

The New York Hymnal

Black-and-white photograph taken at upward angle of a skyscraper at left, with curved, iron fire escapes of an older building framing the composition at right

Berenice Abbott’s photograph of the Murray Hill Hotel

Closed publication with cover printed in black and purple ink, with a photograph of Richard Hell and noted contents including “link wray/nuyoricans/fashion/papal visit” and “Slum journal by Richard Hell”

East Village Eye
October 1979
Manuscripts and Archives Division

East Village Eye

Founded by Leonard Abrams in 1979, this small, monthly magazine published out of a basement storefront on New York City’s Ludlow Street ultimately gathered subscribers from around the world. Abrams set out to “create a community in print” at a moment when New York City neared bankruptcy and, as Abrams remembers, “There wasn’t a night [in the East Village] when a building wasn’t going up in flames.” In its eight-year run, the publication commissioned artists to create centerfolds for each issue and documented developments large and small in fashion, music, politics, and the art scene—including the early careers of the artist Jean-Michel Basquiat and the hip hop pioneer Fab Five Freddy. The magazine covered the rise of HIV/AIDS, the stores and bars that shaped the culture of the neighborhood, and eventually, the gentrification of downtown Manhattan. The Library recently acquired the archive of the East Village Eye and is now the only public institution to have a complete run of all 72 issues.

: Manuscripts and Archives Division

Not currently on view

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Items in New York City

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  • Detail of small bronze model of a larger sculpture called Lift Every Voice and Sing (Harp), which features a line of people of various heights standing close together so they resemble a harp.

    New York City Introduction

  • Photograph of an open diary, with a two-page spread featuring lined paper with cursive script writing

    Diary kept by Helen Lansing Grinnell 

    Not currently on view

  • Cover of a newsletter printed in two columns with the headline “Mafia on the pot: Mafia Control of Gay Bars Comes to Public’s Attention”

    The New York Hymnal

    Not currently on view

  • Closed publication with cover printed in black and purple ink, with a photograph of Richard Hell and noted contents including “link wray/nuyoricans/fashion/papal visit” and “Slum journal by Richard Hell”

    East Village Eye

    Not currently on view

  • Black-and-white photograph taken at upward angle of a skyscraper at left, with curved, iron fire escapes of an older building framing the composition at right

    Berenice Abbott’s photograph of the Murray Hill Hotel

    Not currently on view

  • An illustration of a train car design, featuring a color scheme of blue, red, and white, and “New York World’s Fair 1939” written on the side of the train car

    World’s Fair Pullman railway car design

    Not currently on view

  • Four illustrations of costume designs for the Sharks, referencing the names of cast members in the original production

    Costume designs for the original Broadway production of West Side Story

    Not currently on view

  • Detail of small bronze model of a larger sculpture called Lift Every Voice and Sing (Harp), which features a line of people of various heights standing close together so they resemble a harp.

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