Showing posts with label NYC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NYC. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

More NYC…

After going to bed early and getting up early we returned to the city via train…There were a few things I still wanted to see.   First we went to the Metropolitan Museum to see the summer roof installation The Big Bambu.

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We even stood in line for awhile to sign up for the tour which takes you climbing up into it…

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…but Mr O and I aren’t good at waiting in lines and you weren’t allowed to take a camera with you…

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…so we just enjoyed the bamboo patterns above… .

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and the shadow patterns below…

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as well as the view…right from the rooftop.

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We went directly from bamboo garden to a replica of a Chinese garden court…

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..to an exhibit of Leon Levinstein photography.  Although I liked his quote, his photos were not my favorites…

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…especially when compared to those of Henri Cartier Bresson which we later viewed at MOMA.

“To me, photography is the simultaneous recognition, in a fraction of a second, of the significance of an event.”
Henri Cartier-Bresson

This exhibit was exquisite, crowded, and HUGE…room after room after room…and was really more than should be seen in one day…but when you rarely get to NYC and it is the last few days of the exhibit…you carry on… We also took in the exhibit Pictures by Women: A History of Modern Photography which deserved an entire day to itself. Thankfully MOMA also has a wonderful cafe that serves wine…

Museum hopping is one of my favorite things to do and I am fortunate to have family and friends who are patient and kind enough to go with me.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

A Whirlwind Trip to NYC…

Last weekend Mr O and I visited family in Westchester Co and took the train into NYC two days in a r0w.  We fit more into those two days than I would have thought possible…and everyone kindly let me see everything that I wanted to…

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The Chelsea Market was our first stop.    Originally the National Biscuit Company complex it is now a foodie paradise just lined with shops and restaurants and lots and lots of people.  The photographer in me also enjoyed all the photos by Dave Mead of Magnificent Specimens of mustached men throughout the building.  Incredible…and fun. 

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A walk on the High Line Park from end to end was next…

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I had read a lot about this park that opened one year ago and I just love the idea of the community action which made this park possible. 

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Originally an elevated train track it is now an elevated garden…

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Views from the park include buildings by Frank Gehry and Jean Nouvel …

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…and balconies overlooking the walk.

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It really was too hot to sit and relax for long.

CLAUDE MONET
Nymphéas, 1906
Oil on canvas
32 x 36 1/4 inches  (81 x 92 cm)

CLAUDE MONET
Nymphéas, 1906
Oil on canvas

Next we went gallery hopping in Chelsea.   There was a Monet show at the Gagosian gallery which was free and fabulous…rooms full of variations of the lily pond and the bridge in his garden…

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We bopped in and out of several galleries in the same area of Chelsea…I don’t remember all the gallery names but I do remember one photography exhibit at the Tanya Bonakdar Gallery that I particularly loved.

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“…to walk without destination and to see only to see” is the title of Uta Barth’s exhibit of diptychs and triptychs.

“My primary project has always been in finding ways to make the viewer aware of their own activity of looking at something (or in some instances, someone.) ...” Uta Barth

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On the way to our last stop of the day my sister in law was sharp eyed enough to notice two of the statues included in Event Horizon.  Thirty one of these life size statues can be found around Madison Square Park but we only spotted these two.

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By the time we finished a visit to the Morgan Library and Museum to see a show on the architect Palladio I was running out of steam and camera batteries….and slept most of the train ride back.