Gallagher’s: A Brief History Of Now

by Thomas Beller

06/04/2006

126 E 12th St, NY, NY 10003

Neighborhood: East Village

There are few retail establishments in New York that try as hard not to be noticed as Gallagher's Magazine Archive and Gallery at 126 East 12th Street. A sign the size of a Post-it announces the store's presence and directs one down a flight of stairs to the basement entrance. Stepping inside reveals a dim labyrinth of hallways and tiny rooms, all crammed with shelves sagging from the weight of old magazines. Any available wall space is covered with framed magazine covers of years gone by. Particularly striking is a Harper's Bazaar from the sixties with Steve McQueen on the cover.

              

At last, in the deep recesses of a back room, I heard grunts and noises. Humans resided back there; they were stacking and arranging magazines. I was confused by the lengths these people had gone to hide their establishment from the bright, acquisitive eyes of the public. And I was confused by how magnificent and charming and weird the images strewn around the place were. Glaring out at me like a madman was Peter Sellers on the cover of a People magazine from 1975. How strange to see the journalistic incubus that was to grow into the monster that ate the medium. Sellers looks certifiably insane. I can't imagine someone so over-the-top being so famous now. There is, it turns out, a method to Gallagher's madness, which I suspected the moment I came across a framed letter from Carmel Snow (famed Harper's Bazaar editor of days long gone) to one of her photographers. It was just a pithy note of congratulation, but you could smell the gin martini and picture the white gloves.»

Here is a store that memorializes the perfect nows of the past, and it should come as no surprise then that the people responsible for the nows of the future should be Gallagher's most faithful customers. Photographers, designers and art directors all peruse the dark aisles, looking for ideas. The store's website features snaps of such fashion luminaries as Steven Meisel and Anna Sui. The prices are reasonable. Here in the dark musty aisles of Gallagher's, that which is disposable has been elevated to the realm of the rare, the precious and the timeless.

Comments
Rate Story
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

§ Leave a Reply

Other Stories You May Like

Nearby East Village Stories

Art History

by

Budget surveillance in the East Village when Betsy tries to learn how a famous neighbor is different (and better?) than Betsy is

A Brief History of Tragedy

by

I was in Sister Mary Evangelista’s fourth grade class when Mother John entered the room during our math lesson. We [...]

My Place in Women’s Tennis History

by

The author encounters a trailblazing tennis luminary while working at the Vertical Club.

From Kobe, Japan to New York City (and Back Again)

by

As the young son of the American Consul-General to Japan industrial centers, Meakin Armstrong endured many things.

The Whiffle Ball Kid

by Thomas Beller

Young man seeks self.

The Circle Be Unbroken

by

Mr. Purple smiled and answered: “I’m not interested in fighting anybody. I’m interested in enlightening them

Todd of The Sidewalks

by

Middlemarch was a bitch: all lace and wayside chapels and conversations hissed behind gloved hands. Eliot's prose was denser [...]

Wild Style and The Politics Of Space

by

The more drastic any act of suppression is, the more extreme will be the reactions to it.

If Prozac Fails, Try Orbitz

by

You know what appeared the last time I leapt? MasterCard debt and an empty bottle of vodka.

Revising the Footlicker Story

by

10 years ago, Daniel was told a story so freakish that he told all the people about it he could. Now he wants to do it again