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A Graffitist Takes On a Corporate Space

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Since uprooting from Puerto Rico six years ago, Edwin David Sepulveda, 32, has tagged, tattooed and painted in locales from his new home of Bushwick, Brooklyn, to Barcelona, Spain, under the name Don Rimx.

But last month, raised 20 feet off the ground by a scissor lift, wearing a blotched sweater and respirator mask, Mr. Sepulveda methodically shaded his latest mural on the vacant ground floor of a 34-story high-rise where space leases for upward of $325 per square foot.

Under normal circumstances, Mr. Sepulveda would trade the institutional structures of Midtown Manhattan for a more artistic enclave, like East Harlem, where a mural he painted last summer made headlines after drawing scorn from the former City Council candidate Gwen Goodwin.

“Midtown isn’t used to this type of art. It’s straight corporate,” Mr. Sepulveda said. “My work is very out of place.”

In an attempt to re-brand itself while promoting local artists, Equity Office Properties Trust, which owns 5 Bryant Park and a few other buildings in the area, commissioned Mr. Sepulveda’s “3/4 of life = water” in February: A kaleidoscopic woman kneeling by an ocean, the mural symbolizes water’s abundance and scarcity.

Patrick Smith, a real estate agent charged with leasing the retail space, said a temporary store, perhaps one selling sweaters, might normally take up interim residence in the 15,000 square feet of raw, gutted concrete that was a Staples store for more than 10 years, with the address 1065 Avenue of the Americas.

Last January, the Staples moved. Drop-down ceilings and heating and ventilation systems were discarded. Glass facades were installed to create “art gallery space that really didn’t get discovered until someone started swinging a hammer,” Mr. Smith said.

Mr. Sepulveda, who works marathon painting shifts stretching as late as 2 a.m., became an art spectacle, stopping work multiple times, he said, at the sounds of banging on glass from curious passers-by.

“You wouldn’t normally see this out here so it catches your attention,” said Justin Huebener, 30, a marketer overseeing the project. “It leverages the juxtaposition of the unexpected and what is normally considered a corporate environment.”

Not to mention clients love it.

Recently, Mr. Smith began a tour for one prospective tenant in front of Mr. Sepulveda’s first mural in the space, a 24-foot-high, 100-foot-wide medley of color he collaborated on with three artists in November. It’s a selling point Mr. Smith now uses routinely.

A gym, Blink Fitness, and a juice bar, Organic Avenue, have already taken up residence there and, according to Mr. Smith, a number of deals are pending for the remaining space. And although he and Mr. Huebener are optimistic that whoever takes over will incorporate Mr. Sepulveda’s work, business does come first.

“Ultimately there is still a mortgage on the building and we still have to lease space,” Mr. Smith said.

Mr. Sepulveda is unfazed at the prospect of his hard work disappearing overnight.

He is also content with the pay, the amount of which he wouldn’t reveal, and thrilled with the free rein that Equity Offices has given him to create indoors on a large scale.

Besides, Mr. Sepulveda started as a graffiti artist. He knows nothing is permanent.

“Maybe people love it and it’s here forever, or maybe they sell it and the new guy doesn’t care about it,” he said. “It’s an ephemeral thing; as an artist you’re clear about that.”

This post has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: March 20, 2014

An earlier version of this post misidentified a former City Council candidate who complained about a mural. Her name is Gwen Goodwin, not Glen.



New York Today: Dawn of Spring

Michael Nagle for The New York Times

Updated 5:56 a.m.

Good Thursday morning to you.

Today, at 12:57 p.m., you may rejoice.

Up in the heavens, the sun will cross the celestial equator.

Here in winter-weary New York City, spring will begin.

In Bowling Green, the city’s oldest park, celebrants will stand eggs on end â€" a feat supposedly easier during the equinox.

In Central Park, the Neo Pagans of New York will “worship, give thanks, send Energies, etc.” within a circle of wooden gnarled benches.

None of this will stop it from getting cold again.

The best we can offer in the way of a weather forecast is three straight days of 50 degrees or above.

On Monday, though, the wind chill will be back in the teens.

Snow is a possibility on Wednesday.

But the signs are unmistakable.

The eastern phoebe, a nondescript brown bird known as one of the season’s first harbingers, is flitting in the trees, said Harry Maas, president of New York City Audubon.

Flocks of blackbirds and grackle are moving through.

The sap is rising. Even in the concrete city, you can smell the living earth.

Here’s what else you need to know.

WEATHER

The mist clears, the sun shines by late morning, the mercury hits 52.

Tomorrow will be sunny, too.

COMMUTE

Subways: Southbound 1 skips some local stops uptown. Check latest status.

Rails: Scattered delays on N.J. Transit Northeast Corridor. Check L.I.R.R., Metro-North or N.J. Transit status.

Roads: No major delays. Check traffic map or radio report on the 1s or the 8s.

Alternate-side parking is in effect all week.

COMING UP TODAY

- Two scoops for paid sick leave. Mayor de Blasio signs a bill that expands it at Steve’s Ice Cream headquarters in Bed-Stuy. 12:30 p.m.

- Students and faculty shave their heads at St. John’s University to raise funds for pediatric cancer research. 1:45 p.m.

- Free food abounds. A dozen bakeries give out macarons for Macaron Day NYC. Consult the Macaron Map…

- …While Rita’s gives away ices on the Upper West Side starting at noon.

- Parsons graduate students open their studios to the public. 6 p.m.

- Raquel Cepeda reads from her book, “Bird of Paradise: How I Became Latina,” at Word Up Books uptown. 7 p.m. [Free]

- The sanitation department’s resident anthropologist, Robin Nagle, talks trash in Williamsburg. 8:30 p.m. [$20]

- Five short films about Chinatown, at MOCA. 7 p.m. [Free]

- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.

IN THE NEWS

- An inmate died in a cell at Rikers Island that had “unusually high temperatures.” [New York Times]

- Services were held for three victims of the explosion in East Harlem. [Daily News]

- The ashes of an eighth victim were taken home â€" to Japan. [New York Times]

- The city courts are getting more efficient: an arrested person now typically appears before a judge in under 24 hours. [New York Times]

- A driver who crash-landed an S.U.V. onto a Q train Tuesday morning turned herself in. [DNAinfo]

- The M.T.A. will install cameras and audio recorders in Metro-North and L.I.R.R. trains. [CBS]

- Hobbies of the elderly â€" from crocheting to shuffleboard â€" have been co-opted by Brooklyn hipsters. Could these be next? [The Brooklyn Paper]

- New Yorkers who refuse to own cellphones do not seem any worse off for it. [Daily News]

- Scoreboard: Knicks pass Pacers, 92-86. Nets bag Bobcats, 104-99. Yankees bury Braves, 7-0.

AND FINALLY …

This week in 1831, Edward Smith broke into the City Bank of Wall Street at night and made off with a hefty sum.

A whopping $245,000 â€" worth more than $6 million today.

Since then, all manner of thieves have called upon the city’s financial institutions - including a 9-year-old boy, and the Vietnam veteran in “Dog Day Afternoon.”

But no one can rob Mr. Smith of his title.

He is remembered as the city’s first bank robber.

Sandra E. Garcia contributed reporting.

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