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Newburgh Shows Up: Chronogram’s Pop-Up Portrait Shoot at The Ellis
At a March 7 portrait pop-up at The Ellis, Newburgh residents stepped into the frame—alone, in pairs, and in packs—to represent their city with style, humor, and presence.
Instructors at Newburgh Yogashala. Credit: David McIntyre
On March 7, Chronogram set up shop at The Ellis and invited Newburgh to step into the frame. As it tends to go in this city, people showed up—not tentatively, not half-in, but fully themselves. The result is less a collection of portraits than a cross-section of civic energy: neighbors, families, artists, business owners, and first-timers, all claiming a moment of visibility.
There’s a particular Newburgh confidence that comes through in these images. It’s in the directness of the gaze, the willingness to play, the ease with which people bring their whole lives into the shot—dogs, partners, kids, inside jokes, a bit of swagger. Some subjects lean into performance; others keep it stripped down. Either way, the throughline is presence.
Al Mizrahi of The Ellis
Amanda K. Rue, founder, Alaya Rose
Amy Shell Voroneanu, architect, Razvan Voroneanu, architect with Casper
Andrew Kruep, wholesale manager for Upstate & Chill
Angela Paul-Gaito, Pilates instructor and studio owner with Joseph Gaito and Stella Gaito
Anya Bodykova and John Grande of John Grande Studio
Bella Cruz, owner and artist at Hudson Valley Inkology and Jeff Garrison, head artist and master piercer
Bibi Lorenzetti, owner of Newburgh Yoga Shala and yoga teacher with Izzie Roth, Ellie Zeitlin, Amy Feather, Carlywill Sloan, and Lerika Hargrove
Bill Fetter, Newburgh Waterways Center
Brian Wolfe, artist and Lesle Wolfe, artist
Carol Flitz, artist
Carolina Wheat and Liz Nielsen, Elijah Wheat Showroom
Cesar Castro and Nadia Tahoun, artists, Flower Shop Collective with Laika
Christine Coco Murray, manager at Gotham Props with Millicent
Naomi Hersson-Ringskog, Taylor Billotte, and Anoushae Eirabie
Natasha Paukovits, executive director and Tiffany McPhail CEO, Happy Tree Dispensary
Newburgh Clean Water Project crew: Jennifer Rawlison, Gabrielle Hill, Marta Vazquez, Nicole Vazquez, and Tamsin Hollo
Newburgh Waterways Center crew: Jacob Jordan, Carlotta Shearson, Steven Hoagland, Jessica Shay, Marian Gravel, Cate Hickey, Marianne Marichal, Tristan Welling, Kathy Lawrence, Larry King, and Margaret E. Welling
Paige Tooker, New York Art Foundry
Patrice Butler, art teacher, Tim Butler, marketing executive, Annabelle Butler, student
Paul Ellis
Paulien Lethen, artist
Jules Ridgeway, chair of City of Newburgh Democratic Committee and Ramona Monteverde, councilmember
Raymond Aponte II, firefighter
Rhea Marmentini, stone sculptor
Holly Moyseenko Wright, Hudson Valley Kitchen Design Center with Marley
Ronald Zorrilla, founder of Outdoor Promise and Newburgh Council Member
Dina’s Italian Cafeteria and Bivona’s Simply Pasta crew: Chuck Bivona, Rosa Wallace, Sean Moul, Dan Schiavone, Avril Bivona, Jeanette Patrick, Isaiah Sanabria, and Marilyn Garcia
Spirit Beast, member of the Real-Life Superhero Organization
Sue Sullivan, entrepreneur and iSER consultant.
Taylor Billotte, children’s book illustrator and author
The Betty crew: Doria Paci, Ryan Padgett, Amber Niklewski, Skip LaRussa, Matan Zev, and Choco
Yves Samuel Bouzaglo, real estate agent at La Vie Upstate
Mike Neppl, deputy city manager, City of Newburgh; chair, City of Newburgh Industrial Development Agency
Held at The Ellis, a space that’s quickly becoming a cultural anchor on DuBois Street, the shoot doubled as a kind of open call for participation: step up, be seen, be part of the record. Over the course of the day, the backdrop became a meeting point, a stage, a mirror.
Taken together, these portraits form a living snapshot of Newburgh right now—diverse, expressive, and very much in motion.