Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres’s 1845 portrait of Louise de Broglie, Comtesse d’Haussonville, has always been a crowd favorite at the Frick Collection in New York City, but now, after the museum’s four ...
All of New York, and the arts community in particular, was agog recently with the re-opening of the Henry Clay Frick Art Museum. After a closure of five years, and at a cost of $220 million, the ...
A peek inside the revamped Frick Collection — opening this month after a five-year, $220M renovation
The Frick Collection is back this month after a five-year, $220 million renovation that nearly doubled its gallery footprint — with restored home furnishings and added never-before-seen works of art. ...
Like everything in New York, the fabulous Frick Collection at Fifth Ave. and 70th St., closed down due to COVID in mid-March 2020. But unlike everything else, the Frick art museum is only now ...
The Frick Pittsburgh's Clayton mansion is now on the National Register of Historic Places. Clayton, the Point Breeze mansion industrialist Henry Clay Frick once called home, was first built in 1870.
NEW YORK — For decades, visitors to the Frick Collection passed a magnificent staircase with an ornamental railing and giant candelabras on the landing, flanking an elaborate screen hiding the ...
On a recent morning, sketchbooks in hand, we entered the Frick Collection on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. Industrialist Henry Clay Frick (1849-1919) left his family home and art collection to the ...
America has fewer grand homes-turned-museums than Europe, for the perfectly simple reason that there have been Americans living grandly for so much less time. New York City has an unusually small ...
A visitor admires Giovanni Bellini's painting "St. Francis in the Desert" (c. 1475–80) at the Frick Collection. (all photos Hrag Vartanian/Hyperallergic) In 2021, when the Frick Collection temporarily ...
Square foot for square foot, the Frick has the densest concentration of masterpieces in America, installed alongside decorative objects in gloriously stuffy interiors. The art historian Bernard ...
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