“Gowanus Current” Makes World Premier at Cobble Hill Cinemas

The title scene of of the new documentary “Gowanus Current,” which debuted at Cobble Hill Cinemas last week.

By JACK DELANEYjdelaney@queensledger.com

It was 2013 — the word “selfie” was freshly added to the dictionary, a new pope was being named, and gay marriage had yet to be legalized — when Jamie Courville and Chris Reynolds first realized something unsettling. 

“We lived in Gowanus, and we were both film people by profession,” Courville recalled. “We [were] at Douglas and Third, and there was a residential building at the end of the block that was demolished, and we couldn’t remember what it was. And then you notice that you can’t remember a lot.”

So that year, the couple began capturing footage of a neighborhood in flux. The force driving many of the changes — evidenced by the constant clang of construction — was the proposed rezoning of Gowanus, which spawned a frenzy of real estate speculation while pitching residents into a heated battle over plans to add roughly 9,000 units of housing across an unprecedented 82 blocks, 20 more than at Hudson Yards. They were there, cameras in hand, when remediation began on the notoriously polluted Gowanus Canal, and watched as the industrial wasteland, once billed as a scrappy haven for artists, gradually transformed. 

A decade later, Courville and Reynolds were ready to release the product of those observations: a documentary called “Gowanus Current,” which premiered at Cobble Hill Cinemas on April 2 to a sold-out crowd. 

Sitting down for coffee two weeks before the grand debut, the duo said they were excited yet also anxious about the screening — in part because the seats would largely be filled by the movie’s own characters, locals with strong opinions about the rezoning and how events unfolded. In making the film, they had chosen to eschew interviews, letting the footage speak for itself rather than advancing an overarching argument. How would that choice go over?

In short: very well. For this reporter, who grew up two blocks from the canal, part of the movie’s draw was the opportunity to revisit the contentious history of the 2021 rezoning, at a time when similar dynamics are shaping the proposed redevelopment of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal in Red Hook. 

But as the lights dimmed and the screen filled with long, slow shots of places now gone or unrecognizable, the power of simply bearing witness became clear. Based on post-screening conversations with fellow theatergoers, many Carroll Gardens and Gowanus locals felt similarly: the opening scenes —  a clump of people protesting to save the now-dismantled Kentile Floors sign, or construction workers going about their jobs — could potentially seem mundane to residents of other neighborhoods. For this crowd, however, they were magical.

After the screening, Xochitl Gonzalez led a Q&A with “Gowanus Current” co-creators Jamie Courville and Chris Reynolds.

“I lived at Evans and Wyckoff for about four years while all this was happening,” one attendee said later. “I’d completely forgotten that entire stretch of Nevins between Butler and Union, basically. I didn’t realize how emotionally it would affect me just to see all that again. It was like I’d gone into a memory box.” 

After the credits rolled, Courville and Reynolds were joined by Xochitl Gonzalez, a staff writer at the Atlantic, for a Q&A. In answering one of Gonzalez’s questions, Reynolds also highlighted the subjective aspect of rezonings. “One thing that’s left out of the discussion, whether you’re in favor of building more or you’re opposed to it, is the emotional effect of seeing your neighborhood go away,” he said. “You can be in favor of all this building and still be sorry at what has to go away to make room for it.”

Accordingly, while “Gowanus Current” does serve as a good primer for viewers who aren’t familiar with the neighborhood’s political history, the filmmakers prioritized immersion. “It’s not important to know the title of this person, or what this meeting is exactly about,” argued Reynolds. “The important thing is, where’s the power? What are the community’s options, and how does it feel to participate?”

After Gonzalez delved into the techniques employed by Courville and Reynolds in filming the documentary, she broached the broader context of the Gowanus rezoning. “Which of the promises that were given to the neighborhood have come to pass?” she asked. “And what are people still waiting on?”

At that point, Pandora’s Box flew open. “Public Place is, I hear, behind schedule,” started Reynolds, referring to the only fully affordable housing development that was included in the rezoning, before a voice from the back of the theater rang out: “Not happening!” That prompted a response from Andrea Parker, executive director of the Gowanus Canal Conservancy and one of the key brokers of the plan, who said that remediation of the site — which sits atop a 150-foot-deep pocket of coal tar — is underway. 

One woman spoke about the continuing pollution in the canal, and lamented the size of the nearby condos: “Last night, there was a reflection in the 24-story building across the street of the moon,” she said. “It was the first time in two years that I had seen the moon over the canal, and it was just a reflection.” 

“Every day we look out and see cranes for the development that’s going up,” a man echoed. “That’s the second new [building] that’s going to block out all of the sunlight, kill all my plants completely.”

Tensions flared when Parker then defended the decision-making that led to market-rate residential towers being green-lit in exchange for systemic repairs of NYCHA’s Gowanus Houses. “When filming started, the neighborhood was not yet gentrified,” she said. “Gentrification happened along the way. It was not a result of the rezoning. It was a result of being sandwiched between Carroll Gardens and Park Slope, well connected with transit.”

A view of the Gowanus Canal from the Third Street Bridge, circa 2025.

“There was never a right answer to what should happen in Gowanus,” continued Parker. “There are very strong feelings and opinions and different ways of living, and we try to work together to figure out compromises.”

Parker’s assurances triggered a rebuttal from poet and Gowanus Dredgers veteran Brad Vogel, in turn, who shot back that the repairs should never have been tied to the rezoning, but should have been carried out by the city years ago. “You forced people to think that if they were against the rezoning, they were against public housing,” he said, to a smattering of applause.

Michael Higgins Jr., a former member of Gowanus Neighborhood Coalition for Justice (GNCJ), backed Parker. “On the one hand, you could say that it wasn’t bad to connect funding for public housing to this rezoning,” he replied. But he noted that “there wasn’t much effort to do that before this process.”

“It’s fine to be cynical and unhappy with the way this [rezoning] is,” he added. “I don’t think it’s okay to fight for the perfect, push away the good, and get nothing, because that’s what happened in Gowanus for many years.”

Ultimately, these debates may be forgotten, as locals age or move away. In its own way — through languid shots of the churning water, brief glimpses of community meeting skirmishes, and a visual record of the built environment — “Gowanus Current” is an attempt to resist that entropy, stirring memories and fostering discussions. For Gonzalez, that effect was especially potent in a good, old-fashioned movie theater. 

“It’s not just the scale. It’s being with people, and feeling what people are feeling around you,” Gonzalez said. “I found it beautiful at home, but what I felt in the theater was [that] I was given contemplative space.” 

If you missed the last screening, you can watch “Gowanus Current” when it shows again at Cobble Hill Cinemas at 7:30 pm on Wednesday, April 23rd. 

Alicia Eggert’s New Show at Urban Glass is (Literally) Powered by Connection

BY ALICE MORENO | news@queensledger.com

It is often said that “it takes a village to raise a child” — however, the quote transcends taking care of children. Community is what drives the world; It is not possible to tackle the world’s issues on our own. More than ever, humans long for connection, and Alicia Eggert provides that with her art, bringing people together to illuminate a darkly-lit room with flashing lights and colorful lighting. 

At UrbanGlass — a nonprofit organization working with Glass-centric artists located in Downtown Brooklyn — Eggert’s work is displayed. The exhibition, titled “At a Time Like This,” features two of her works: a giant neon sign with the words “You Are Magic” displayed, and a mirror displaying the words “All the Light You See is From the Past.”

The main event of the exhibition is “You Are Magic,” a giant sign that takes over most of the exhibition hall. It is filled with over 200 neon and LED light bulbs, 

The catch is, the sign is completely turned off. To turn it on, two humans must touch each other while pressing on the sensor in the provided platform for the sign to turn on. Whether it’d be hand-holding, or even placing two fingers together, the sign illuminates into a magical light show, where the sign changes into different colors while a soothing and angelic voice plays in the background. The lights flash faster and faster as each minute passes, and reach a climax towards the end, displaying the colors brightly, reminding guests that they too, are magical.

Eggert’s reasoning for this tactic is a scientific fact: humans are conductive, containing electrical charges flowing through their bodies. They function as circuits, and as humans come in physical contact with one another, it functions similarly to a light switch. 

“I thought, ‘Wow, how cool is that?’ That one person can touch one surface that has a small electrical current coming out of it, and another person can touch another surface that’s the ground,” said Eggert. “And then, if we touch hands in the middle, we are like a switch, [and] that electricity actually flows through our bodies.”

The Texas-based conceptual artist had previously displayed this piece, except as an inflatable instead of using lights. Using a similar concept of touch being used as a circuit, as two (or more) people join together, the piece would inflate, showing the same words currently displayed at UrbanGlass. It was first exhibited in Arlington, Virginia in 2018. 

Across from the signage is another one of Eggert’s work — a small yet mighty piece that reflects on the passage of time, urging the audience to take in the present. Titled “All the Light You See is From the Past,” the piece uses an infinity mirror — two parallel mirrors placed together — that gives the illusion of a never-ending, infinite loop. 

The lights flash three times in two-second intervals, each time with a different meaning. At first, it says “All the Light You See is From the Past.” It then diverges into the sentence “All You See is Past,” and at the end, it turns off completely. 

Eggert’s work is never static; it is three-dimensional, always present, and constantly moving—much like the passage of time. Each time the wording changes, the message shifts as well, illustrating that in a brief moment, anyone’s life can change drastically. 

“I read an article once that was in the New York Times, it was titled, ‘Don’t let them tell you you’re not at the center of the universe,’ and it was all about the way that light travels across space [and] time and the way that we receive it in our eyes,” said Eggert. “How light takes time to travel, like everything we’re looking at with our eyes is technically an image of the past, and it could be like from across the room. It’s just a split second in the past.”

With an interest in philosophy and growing up in an Evangelical household, Eggert is constantly thinking about the human experience and mortality. She notes that life feels linear — humans live a specific timeline, growing from a child, to an adult, to an elder, and at some point, will reach to an inevitable end.  

In a world in which anything can change in the blink of an eye, Eggert notes that it is important to live life to the fullest. As her work will live on to future generations, she hopes to continue creating art that leads viewers to accept the timeline of their lives, reminding them to enjoy every second of it

“Ultimately, these [art pieces] that I’m making are a part of the world, and they are changing and breaking down over time. So I think [that] part of my goal as an artist is to like, make work that allows us to like accept that,” said Eggert.

“Alica Eggert: At a Time Like This” will be exhibiting at UrbanGlass, 647 Fulton Street, through May 4. 

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