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April 4 until December 3 - Cecily Brown: Death and the Maid at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. [28] April 12 until May 26 - Bonnard: The Experience of Seeing at Acquavella Galleries in New York City. [29] April 13 until July 28 - Mark Bradford: You Don't Have to Tell Me Twice at Hauser & Wirth in New York City. [30] April 18 ...
New York City Fire Museum: SoHo: Manhattan: Firefighting: Historical and modern firefighting vehicles, equipment, uniforms New York City Police Museum: Financial District: Manhattan: Law enforcement: Closed in 2014, plans unclear Harbor Defense Museum: Bay Ridge: Brooklyn Military Located in Fort Hamilton, 19th-century fort with exhibits of NY ...
The Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art (LLMA), formerly the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art, is a visual art museum in SoHo, Lower Manhattan, New York City. It mainly collects, preserves and exhibits visual arts created by LGBTQ artists or art about LGBTQ+ themes, issues, and people. [ 2 ]
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Two galleries with free exhibitions from the collections Coney Island Museum: Coney Island: Brooklyn Amusement Amusements History of Coney Island's amusement park, beach, and neighborhood Conference House: Tottenville: Staten Island Historic house Only pre-Revolutionary manor house still surviving in New York City Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian ...
The National Arts Club is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit and members club on Gramercy Park, Manhattan, New York City. It was founded in 1898 by Charles DeKay, an art and literary critic of the New York Times, to "stimulate, foster, and promote public interest in the arts and to educate the American people in the fine arts". The National Arts Club has ...
The Shed (formerly known as Culture Shed and Hudson Yards Cultural Shed) is a cultural center in Hudson Yards, Manhattan, New York City.Opened on April 5, 2019, the Shed commissions, produces, and presents a wide range of activities in performing arts, visual arts, and pop culture.
The Queens Museum is located in the New York City Pavilion at Flushing Meadows–Corona Park, [4] designed by architect Aymar Embury II for the 1939 World's Fair. [4] [5] The fair was first announced in 1935, [6] and engineering consultant J. Franklin Bell drew up preliminary plans for the fairground the next year, including a structure for the New York City government. [7]