
 
        
         
		East Village shoe store’s photo gallery shines 
 BY GABE HERMAN 
 In  a  pre-Instagram  world,  Rainbow  
 Shoe Repair, a Lower East Side shop  
 on Delancey Street, was a popular place  
 for decades for local residents to get photos  
 taken, whether for passports, portraits or  
 to mark a special occasion like graduation,  
 communion or Easter. 
 A new LES exhibition  features many  
 photos taken at the shop from the 1980s to  
 early 2000s. The show is called “Rainbow  
 Shoe Repair: An Unexpected Theater of  
 Flyness,” and is at Abrons Arts Center, at  
 466 Grand St. 
 The staff at the shoe repair shop, still  
 open at 170 Delancey St., became known  
 for taking affordable photos, first under  
 Joseph Borukhov, who ran the store from  
 the mid-1908s to mid-90s, and then under  
 Ilya  Shaulov,  who  continued  the  photo  
 studio from the late 1990s to mid-2000s. 
 Nelson Hernandez. 
 The shop’s studio became known for its  
 backdrops of primary colors, with many  
 photos featuring a stark red background,  
 while a rainbow sky was another option. 
 An inspiration for the exhibition started  
 with one photo, noted co-curator Ali Rosa- 
 Salas. It was a portrait of a girl, Sammi  
 Gay, with her father Elroy, with the red  
 backdrop and taken in 1996. 
 “I was so struck by the composition and  
 intimacy of parent and child,” said Rosa- 
 Salas. “I was curious about why people  
 were coming back to this place and where  
 was this place?” 
 Along with photos on display in a space  
 inside  the  Abrons  Arts  Center,  some  
 are also posted outside on streets in the  
 neighborhood. That father-daughter photo  
 is one of several shown on the outside of  
 the Arts Center building. 
 “This  picture  was  taken  on  Halloween,” 
  Sammi Gay is quoted as saying in  
 the exhibition. “I was dressed as a black  
 Barbie and my dad picked the outfit out. I  
 see that the hat my dad is wearing is one  
 he designed. This picture makes me proud  
 Portraits  from  the  exhibition  posted  outside  the  Abrons  Arts  Center  
 on the Lower East Side.  
 Portrait  of  Sammi  and  Elroy  Gay,  
 posted  outside  the  Abrons  Arts  
 Center. 
 of him, his work ethic, and our evolving  
 father-daughter relationship.” 
 Other  photos  are  posted  at  Martin  
 Luther King Jr. Community Park, Boys &  
 Girls Republic, and Workforce Development  
 Center. 
 Photo themes were posted at the various  
 locations based on relevance, noted Rosa- 
 Salas, such as a portrait of local resident  
 Shawntel Dunbar, which is posted at the  
 Workforce  site  because  she  was  photographed  
 when she first started working at  
 Wall Street. 
 “Those anecdotes are really powerful,  
 the way you fashion yourself,” said Rosa- 
 Salas. “There’s an element of how you’re  
 perceived. Shawntel was concerned with  
 PHOTO BY GABE HERMAN 
 representing the neighborhood.” 
 The word  “flyness”  was  used  for  the  
 show’s title, said Rosa-Salas, to indicate  
 that people were self-aware in the photos  
 and knew they looked good and wanted to  
 show it. “We wanted to highlight that these  
 photos are intentional,” she said. 
 The show was also timed with New York  
 Fashion Week to show local New York  
 neighborhood fashion, particularly with the  
 LES struggling with issues of gentrification  
 and holding onto its identity, Rosa-Salas  
 said. 
 And while retro looks are coming back  
 to high fashion, Rosa-Salas noted, “None of  
 this is new. Folks have been doing this for  
 a long time.” She added, “It’s a cool way to  
 track the neighborhood in its transition.” 
 The photos were gathered from Rainbow  
 Shoe Repair’s archives and from an open  
 call for LES residents, who have a lot of  
 meaning in their photos from the shop,  
 Rosa-Salas  noted,  and  often  remember  
 the exact circumstances the photos were  
 taken in. 
 And now in the digital age, “folks are  
 excited to share these because they’re not  
 necessarily on display in their homes,” said  
 Rosa-Salas, “and they have the opportunity  
 to reflect on themselves and style, and  
 where they were at the time.” 
 More photos have been contributed to  
 the show since it opened and more people  
 have learned about it, Rosa-Salas added.  
 “That’s been something I was secretly  
 hoping for,” she said.  
 The show will run until March 29, and  
 more information can be found at abronsartscenter. 
 org. 
 Jessica LeBron. 
 Jasmine Lopez. 
 Schneps Media February 13, 2020     19