Artists
Related: About this forumWhere can you still find bohemia in America?
In my area, all the hipster bohemian free thinkers seem to work for banks and earn high five figures. (They can afford to drive Priuses!) Where in America is there still authentic Bohemia? If I wanted to emerge myself in it, where would I go?
I used to live in New York and the new hotspot was DUMBO, which is in Brooklyn. However it seems that condos are going up like mad.
Never been to Seattle but I'm wondering if it's all condos and Starbucks.
Wilms
(26,795 posts)Sorry. The yuppies have taken that neighborhood over, too.
Thing is, if you want to live in bohemia, you need to travel light. Because after not long, it's ruined.
Melissa G
(10,170 posts)Pockets of Austin and parts of Seattle still hanging on. I hear tell about Asheville, NC but have never been there.
Hi wilms.
Wilms
(26,795 posts)GulleyJimson
(107 posts)Lived there from 1985 until 2002. Bohemians passed away as early as the mid 90's when Asheville was taken over by trustafarians and bobos along with influx of big moneys which drove most of us out of town. There are a few people left but new blood can't afford the rents/real estate.
I remember renting 1000 sq. ft. studio space downtown for $100. No heat and the electrical was dodgy. They've since turned those into condos.
There's always Cleveland.
Tsiyu
(18,186 posts)When I went last, it was more like the most anti-social misfits from Atlanta on a Majick Kamping Trip in some places; other parts were interesting if repetitive; some people were great. But not a place I'd find inspiring.
Don't know what's up in FLoyd, Virginia, but a google search for "Intentional Community" should pull up some places for the OP to consider.
And Vermont has a lot of towns full of artists and unique personalities, if you can handle the snow.
zbdent
(35,392 posts)OriginalGeek
(12,132 posts)I lived on a pallet in my friends' room in Garland, Texas. His mom called us bohemians. She was an art teacher at the high school and we were into drawing and photography. We worked at restaurants for free food and enough money to buy weed and go to concerts. We mostly filched her art supplies but she didn't mind. She liked us creating.
I didn't have shit but what I could pile in the corner of his room but those were some of the best years of my life. Simple and fun. I occasionally miss it.
However, I do not recommend Garland, TX as a bohemian mecca. We were the only two I knew there and neither of us are still there.
Besides, if you do it right, bohemia is wherever you are.
Give New Orleans a try. It isn't all Bourbon Street and beignets.
Javaman
(63,106 posts)Nay
(12,051 posts)etc.
toby jo
(1,269 posts)and a real nice arts scene. Check it out - there's the 3 Rivers Artfest - right by the 3 rivers, and the downtown crowd and the , hmmm, forget what they call it, but there are blocks and blocks of old riverfront buildings where there is a lot going on. Like a wharf.
I was in Savannah and absolutely fell in love with it, again, the river walk and old buildings turned into shops, etc.
I heard the same thing about Asheville - that it was an east coast Boulder. But then I met some fellas at a draft horse auction here in Ohio from that area, and they said what the above poster said - that all the good land, etc., was taken over by money. And you know how creative that crowd is.
But I'd bet down in that neck of Appalachia there's pockets of artists. I know there's an artist's 'drive', whereby everybody is on the path. There's also an Appalachian Arts community. It stretches from down in NC up to PA & parts of southern OH. There are some of the most talented and coolest people you'd want to meet. I'd google that and see what all comes up. This might sound bad, but alot of those people are so poor, it's probably going to be bohemian for some time.
Good luck.
womanofthehills
(9,269 posts)Lots of bohemians but the real estate is very high.
https://www.google.com/search?q=madrid,+new+mexico&hl=en&client=firefox-a&hs=9nd&tbo=u&rls=org.mozilla:en-US fficial&tbm=isch&source=univ&sa=X&ei=gRH8UIGXNYGU2AWht4CgDg&ved=0CEkQsAQ&biw=1683&bih=788
randr
(12,480 posts)Small towns dot the country with lots of progressive hipsters doing their own thing. Search for small community radio stations for a start.
KG
(28,766 posts)votesparks
(1,288 posts)You can buy a house for a thousand bucks, and maybe have a beer with Bob Pollard. Lots of artists.
But going to where a lot of artists are isn't going to make you an artist, or bohemian. It's a mind state.
Lefty Nast
(61 posts)The state pols are still crazy, but the folks in Austin are cool.
Stevenmarc
(4,483 posts)earcandle
(3,622 posts)http://www.sfgirlbybay.com/
http://www.yelp.com/biz/bohemian-club-san-francisco
http://www.sanfrancisco.travel/arts-culture/Bohemian.html
http://www.bohemiancarnival.net/
http://www.city-data.com/forum/san-francisco-oakland/925088-bohemian-sensibility-sf.html
http://sanfrancisco.menupages.com/restaurants/frankies-bohemian-cafe/
http://www.angelfire.com/nm/guineapigs/bohemian.pdf
something for everyone!
ChazInAz
(2,778 posts)One hundred miles southish from Tucson. It's an old copper-mining city, once the richest town in the state. The copper mines dried up, the people left, and we hippies snatched up the cheap houses. There are huge old stone and brick buildings in styles from Late Victorian/Civil War to Art Deco to 1940's industrial. The whole town is one huge gallery, restaurant/pub crawl.
I love the place.