Recreation and Places
of Interest
New York’s 250 museums cater to every
specialty and every taste. It has museums in
such fields as natural history, broadcasting,
fire-fighting, crafts, and ethnic cultures. As
the world’s greatest art center, New York
City has more than 400 galleries and is a mecca
for artists, art dealers, and collectors. Madison
Avenue between 57th and 86th Streets is the most
important locale for galleries, but dozens of
others are located in SoHo (south of Houston
Street) and adjoining neighborhoods.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, founded in 1870
and located in Central Park, contains nearly
3 million objects in every known artistic medium,
representing cultures from every part of the
world, from ancient times to the present. Its
permanent collections are so vast that its 300
galleries and 32 acres of floor space can display
only one-fifth of the museum’s total holdings
at any one time. It is the third largest art
museum in the world, after the British Museum
in London, England, and the Hermitage in Saint
Petersburg, Russia. The Cloisters, a branch of
the Metropolitan Museum, specializes in medieval
art and is located in Fort Tryon Park in northern
Manhattan.
New York’s special role in the history
of contemporary culture is in part a reflection
of the importance of the Museum of Modern Art
(MOMA), which is the greatest repository of 20th-century
art in the world. Founded in 1929, MOMA concentrates
on artists born after 1880 and has strong collections
of French impressionists, modern sculpture, photography,
and film. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum on
Fifth Avenue is as well known for its architecture
as for its contents. Founded by a wealthy copper
magnate, it was designed by U.S. architect Frank
Lloyd Wright. Because of its unusual combination
of oblong forms and its prominent spiral gallery,
the building has been called everything from
a “giant snail to the most beautiful
building in New York.”
The Whitney Museum of American Art, at 75th
Street and Madison Avenue, is the only major
museum in New York exclusively devoted to 20th-century
American art. Designed in the shape of an inverted
pyramid by Hungarian-American architect Marcel
Breuer, the building of rich gray granite is
itself a piece of modern art. The Frick Collection,
at 70th Street and Fifth Avenue, is the former
home of steel magnate Henry Clay Frick. The 40-room
mansion resembles a French chateau and the art
collection includes works by 16th-century Venetian
painter Titian and 17th-century Dutch painters
Rembrandt van Rijn and Jan Vermeer.
The American Museum of Natural History, on Central
Park West between 77th and 81st streets, is the
largest museum in the world devoted to the natural
sciences. Founded in 1869, it has outstanding
collections dealing with Native Americans, Inuits
(Eskimos), dinosaurs, reptiles, and birds. Its
popular Hayden Planetarium was being expanded
and renovated in the late 1990s.
The Brooklyn Museum contains one of North America’s
top collections of pre-Columbian, Egyptian, Near
Eastern, and Asian art, as well as the finest
collection of Russian garments and textiles outside
Russia. New York’s other unusual museums
include the New York Historical Society, which
has an outstanding research library; the Lower
East Side Tenement House Museum, the only institution
in America devoted to recreating the ghetto experience
of impoverished immigrants; the South Street
Seaport Museum, which celebrates a port which
ranked for a century as the busiest in the world;
and the Federal Hall National Memorial, located
on the spot where George Washington took the
oath of office as the first president of the
United States.
Performing Arts
New York has long been the music and dance capital
of the world and is the home of the largest number
of professional musicians and dancers anywhere.
Moreover, its theaters dominate the stage in
the United States, and their attendance, revenue,
and range of offerings are rivaled only by theaters
in London.
Built in 1891 by U.S. industrialist Andrew Carnegie
for the Oratorio Society, Carnegie Hall is neither
exceptionally large nor architecturally distinguished.
But it remains the pre-eminent concert hall in
the United States. Carnegie Hall’s superb
acoustics have delighted performers since Russian
composer Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky was the guest
conductor during opening week. Extensive renovations
on the hall were completed in 1986.
Located on Broadway at about 66th Street, Lincoln
Center is the largest performing arts center
in the world. Construction on the project began
in 1959. Avery Fisher Hall was the first structure
in Lincoln Center to be completed. The hall is
also the home of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra
and offers performances by other soloists and
orchestras throughout the year. The center’s
largest building, Metropolitan Opera House, is
the centerpiece of the entire complex. Completed
in 1966, it presents lavish operatic productions
with international casts and also serves as home
to the American Ballet Theatre. Finally, the
New York State Theater is the home of two institutions-the
New York City Ballet and the New York City Opera,
which alternate their seasons. Also in Lincoln
Center is the Juilliard School, which is widely
regarded as the most distinguished musical institution
in the nation.
The Brooklyn Academy of Music, just across the
East River from Manhattan, emphasizes new repertory
and is one of the oldest performing arts centers
in the United States. The present building was
completed in 1908. It includes the Opera House
and the BAM Rose Cinemas, a four-cinema motion-picture
complex that features first-run independent and
foreign films.
Parks and Recreation
Although New York is the most populous and densely
settled of all American cities, more than 1,000
individual parks with more than 37,000 acres
of parkland are available to the public. The
creation of Central Park between 1857 and 1875
affected the development of public open space
throughout the United States. Almost all subsequent
U.S. park designers imitated some or all of the
features found in Central Park. American landscape
architects Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert
Vaux designed the 341-hectare (843-acre) park,
located in the center of Manhattan. It has numerous
playgrounds, a children's zoo, 8 km (5 mi) of
bridle paths, bicycling and jogging lanes, a
large reservoir, a sailboat pond, two ice-skating
rinks, tennis courts, baseball diamonds, a swimming
pool, and a lake for row-boating. On summer evenings,
there are free band concerts, free dances, and
free nightly performances of plays in the Delacorte
Theatre, an amphitheater that seats 2,300. Of
the park's many monuments the most famous is
the 3,500-year-old Egyptian obelisk, known as
Cleopatra's Needle.
Two of the largest parks, Pelham Bay Park, with
862 hectares (2,130 acres), and Van Cortlandt
Park, with 464 hectares (1,146 acres), are in
the Bronx. The Bronx also has New York's largest
zoo and largest botanical garden, both located
in the 292-hectare (721-acre) Bronx Park. The
largest park in Queens is Flushing Meadows-Corona,
with 509 hectares (1,257 acres). It was the site
of two world's fairs. Brooklyn's Prospect Park
and Botanic Garden are two favorite retreats
in that borough. Beaches fringe many of the city's
parks and recreation areas, such as those in
Pelham Bay, Rockaway, Coney Island, and South
Beach.
Source: MSN
Encarta: Online Encyclopedia
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