In an artistic manor: Review of the reopened Frick

In an artistic manor: Review of the reopened Frick


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 number, and most of these bear no resemblance to their original uses. The Frick Collection is different. The museum, overlooking Central Park on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, was steel and coal baron Henry Clay Frick’s home and has remained home to his art — and then some. There is a rare accord still at work between the collection and the structures housing them. Frick hired Thomas Hastings to provide suitably grand spaces for his collection, and his daughter, Helen Clay Frick, hired John Russell Pope to do more of the same for its expansion

Continue reading


 

Join the conversation!

Please share your thoughts about this article below. We value your opinions, and would love to see you add to the discussion!