Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The building currently houses the offices of the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation, City Parks Foundation, Historic House Trust, and the nearby Central Park Zoo as well as an art gallery known as the Arsenal Gallery, but it has also served as a zoo, a police precinct and a weather bureau and housed the American Museum of Natural ...
The 10th Street galleries was a collective term for the co-operative galleries that operated mainly in the East Village on the east side of Manhattan, in New York City in the 1950s and 1960s. The galleries were artist run and generally operated on very low budgets, often without any staff.
They met in 1967, just before Sabarsky opened his Serge Sabarsky Gallery at 987 Madison Avenue. The gallery quickly earned a reputation as New York’s leading gallery for Austrian and German Expressionist art, and Lauder was a frequent visitor and client. Over the years, the two men discussed opening a museum to showcase the very best work ...
In the mid-1980s, the store received a new name, 32 Mott Street General Store, and in 2003, it closed in the aftermath of September 11, 2001, The New York Times reported.
Four years later, The New York Times wrote that Jin brought "the era of (forced) Communist propaganda art to a virtual end," and called her "one of [the Galleries'] most successful artists." [53] December 13, 1988: "New York: Empire City in an Age of Urbanism, 1875-1945," an exhibition to benefit the Soviet-American Cultural Exchange Program.
A.I.R. Gallery, 155 Plymouth St, Brooklyn. A.I.R. Gallery (Artists in Residence) is the first all female artists cooperative gallery in the United States. [1] It was founded in 1972 with the objective of providing a professional and permanent exhibition space for women artists during a time in which the works shown at commercial galleries in New York City were almost exclusively by male artists.
The William A. Clark House, nicknamed "Clark's Folly", [2] was a mansion located at 962 Fifth Avenue on the northeast corner of its intersection with East 77th Street on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, New York City. It was demolished in 1927 and replaced with a luxury apartment building (960 Fifth Avenue).
Fort Gansevoort is an American art gallery that takes its name from the former fort in the New York City borough of Manhattan, called Fort Gansevoort.. While the fort, which was abandoned in the mid-19th century, was located on the Hudson River at the end of Gansevoort Street, [1] the gallery was created by curator Adam Shopkorn in a building at the other end of the street, in a 19th-century ...