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“Hoboken Talks”: Artist Liz Cohen Ndoye talks with Bill Curran

July 8, 2021 @ 12:00 am

The Hoboken Museum is now offering a weekly live-streamed program, “Hoboken Talks,” featuring interesting personalities, on Thursdays at 7 pm. Viewers are encouraged to chime in with comments on YouTube and Facebook.

On July 8, “Hoboken Talks” features two long-time Hoboken artists in conversation, as  Museum Associate Bill Curran interviews Liz Cohen Ndoye, artist, teacher and community activist. Liz is a popular teacher who provides art classes via the Hoboken Library, the Hoboken Shelter and St. Matthews lunch program, as well as many city-sponsored cultural events. Find her on Instagram, @ArtMakerLiz, or visit her website to learn about her work, and visit our Past Exhibitions page to read about the 2017 exhibit she organized for her students from the St. Matthews lunch program.

Use the buttons below to join in via your preferred channel, or look us up by our handle “HobokenMuseum.”

Click here for YouTube link

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Coming up next: Get ready for St. Ann’s Festival with Father Vincent “Vinny” Fortunato, in conversation with Museum Director Bob Foster.

Past episodes may be replayed any time on YouTube. Recent guests have included artist Lou Carbone; actor Douglas Taurel; restaurateur Dave Carney; NJ poets Joel Lewis and Danny ShotBob Drasheff, who served the City of Hoboken in various roles over 25 years under five separate administrations; The Little Grocery owner, Neamet Elsayed, who came to the U.S. from Egypt as a professional soccer player and became a sought-after chef and restaurateur; Todd Abramson, music DJ, talent booker and former co-owner of the legendary Maxwell’s nightclub at 11th and Washington; Bill “Mr. Ocean Liner” Miller, who shared his love of Hoboken, teaching at Hoboken High School, and his vast knowledge of the glory days of ocean liner travel; former Trustee, historic preservation activist and gardening enthusiast Terry Pranses; poet Roxanne Hoffman, who runs the literary press “Poets Wear Prada”; former Hoboken Museum educator Maria Lara; Lisa Rigoux-Hoppe, who just celebrated 20 years of working in the development office at Stevens Institute of Technology; and entrepreneur and fourth generation Hoboken businessman, Greg Dell’Aquila, owner of the Mission 50 coworking space.

Our first guest was Mark Singleton, realtor and active volunteer in local nonprofits such as the Hoboken Shelter, interviewed by Museum Collections Manager Rand Hoppe, who also serves on the Shelter’s board. Other guests have included 1970s Hoboken photographer John Conn; poet Danny Shot, who organizes cultural events across multiple art forms; often with another guest, artist and gallerist Issa Sow; photographer Chris Lopez, who spoke with Bob Foster about a project to document the arson waves that shook Hoboken in the 1980s; and Stevens Institute archivist Leah Loscutoff, who spoke about Hoboken’s founding family, the Stevens.

The variety of guests’ experience says a lot about Hoboken’s diversity: journalist and social media maven Victoria Moyeno is a fourth-generation Hobokenite who spoke about her vivid memories of growing up in a large family in Hoboken. Contemporary local rock ‘n’ roller Karyn Kuhl was interviewed by writer, bon vivant and volunteer extraordinaire, Jack Silbert; and Rand Hoppe interviewed Lois Dilivio about their  experience producing literary art zines about Hoboken’s thriving art scene in the 1980s-90s. 

Details

Date:
July 8, 2021
Time:
12:00 am
Event Category: