This Is New York: 100 Years of the City in Art and Pop Culture

The Museum of the City of New York is celebrating its centennial this year with the exhibition This Is New York: 100 Years of the City in Art and Pop Culture, on view now through July 21, 2024. Explore the many ways that the city has inspired storytelling in film and television, song and poetry, literature, visual and performing arts, and fashion. The full-floor exhibition is organized around the types of urban spaces where the stories of New York are told, showcasing more than 400 objects spanning the last 100 years.

See how the city has captured the world’s imagination and interact with the exhibition through digital experiences. “Songs of New York” allows visitors to explore the richness and diversity of each borough through music it has inspired, from “Take the ‘A’ Train” to “Jenny from the Block”. “Inside New York”, a digital bookshelf, revisits scenes from iconic TV shows and excerpts from literature that animate the unique challenges and opportunities of making a home in a city of eight million people.

Listen beautiful relax classics on our Youtube channel.

Berenice Abbott, “Tempo of the City I” (1938) (Museum of the City of New York purchase with funds from the Mrs. Elon Hooker Acquisition Fund, 1940; 40.140.249)

A special gallery dedicated to New York on film features “You Are Here”, a 16-screen immersive film featuring clips from hundreds of movies about the city. It also includes the introductory installation “Scenes from the City”, which explores how New York has been used as a movie set over the past century. 

Visit the Museum of the City of New York at 1220 Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. Open Thursdays, 10am–9pm; Mondays–Fridays, 10am–5pm.

To learn more, visit mcny.org.

Máximo Colón, “Easter Sunday Parade (Norman Rockwell Moment)” (2001) (©️ Máximo Rafael Cólon)
Zun Lee, “At Home in Harlem, New York with James Reynolds and Son Jerome Williams” from the series Father Figure: Exploring Alternate Notions of Black Fatherhood (2011) (©️ Zun Lee, all rights reserved)
Arnold Eagle, “Boy on a Crumbling Stoop” (1935) (Museum of the City of New York gift of Federal Works Agency, Work Projects Administration, Federal Art Project, 1943; 43.131.11.154)

Source: Hyperallergic.com

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