The Gilded City: Beaux Arts New York,
November 21st, starting 6:30PM at the Museum of the City of New York, 1220 Fifth Avenue at 103rd Street. Between the 1880s and World War I, New York was transformed from a provincial brownstone town into a glittering metropolis of dazzling mansions, magnificent hotels, imposing railway stations, and world-class museums. The Americans who designed these landmarks were influenced by the Ecole de Beaux Arts in Paris, which taught that the best design should be based on the classical architecture of ancient Rome and the incomparable edifices of the Renaissance.
Join distinguished cultural historian and author David Garrard Lowe for an illustrated lecture about this golden age in the city’s public built environment and the work of Beaux-Arts architects like Charles McKim, Stanford White, and Richard Morris Hunt, who gave New York its supreme Gilded Age monuments: Pennsylvania Station, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the New York Public Library. Co-sponsored by The Beaux Arts Alliance and presented in conjunction with Gilded New York. Reservations required. $6 for Museum members; $8 for students and senior; $12 general public: LINK
Join distinguished cultural historian and author David Garrard Lowe for an illustrated lecture about this golden age in the city’s public built environment and the work of Beaux-Arts architects like Charles McKim, Stanford White, and Richard Morris Hunt, who gave New York its supreme Gilded Age monuments: Pennsylvania Station, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the New York Public Library. Co-sponsored by The Beaux Arts Alliance and presented in conjunction with Gilded New York. Reservations required. $6 for Museum members; $8 for students and senior; $12 general public: LINK
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