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Hot Chick Photograph

Charles Rosenberg

United States

Photography, Black & White on Paper

Size: 30 W x 20 H x 0.5 D in

This artwork is not for sale.
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About The Artwork

After almost five years in Richmond’s Shockoe Bottom, Hot Chick has officially closed, the restaurant’s website says. The self-proclaimed “Fried Chicken Joint” opened in January 2019, with an open kitchen-style interior and a menu catering to all of your fried chicken needs. From chicken tacos to chicken and waffles, buffalo chicken mac and cheese, and the tried and true fried chicken sandwich, Hot Chick seemed to have it all, yet, it silently shuttered its doors before the first day of the new year. The restaurant notified the public of the closing of the 17th Street brick-and-mortar on the front page of its website, where a message was posted quietly, and without fanfare after its closing. Remote work — and continued hybrid work — has kept Richmond's population centers close to home in the suburbs more often and stymied quicker recovery in the city. According to owner Chris Tsui, urban restaurants haven't recovered to pre-COVID sales like suburban ones.

Details & Dimensions

Photography:Black & White on Paper

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:30 W x 20 H x 0.5 D in

Shipping & Returns

Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

On my 13th birthday, I took my savings and birthday gifts and bought a used 35 mm film camera. My camera gave me a voice that I had never had before and transformed me into a story-teller. It became my constant companion at school and play and later, at work, in a fascinating world of blast furnaces, coke ovens, and auto assembly plants. Often taking pictures clandestinely, I brought home amazing views of expansive factory assembly lines and red hot steel slabs roaring down conveyors to share with friends. In my early twenties, I caught the travel bug and ventured beyond home in Louisville, Kentucky where I drove a cab and later worked as a mechanic at the General Electric assembly plant to Cuba, Mexico, and Nicaragua. As resources allowed, I expanded my travels to South and Northern Africa, Eastern Europe, Russia, Europe, and Asia concentrating my aim on the views of the old country nearly left behind by the rapid onslaught of development. After moving to Boston in 1989, I fell in love with the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of the city. I became active in the Jamaica Plain Historical Society and managed their web site and their collection of historic photographs and provided photographic illustration for a series of nine books that serve to document the history of Boston's neighborhoods.

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