Before the official start of the conference, my roommate and travel buddy, Judith Laik, and I took in the Frick Museum at 90th and Fifth Avenue.
Their pretty gardens were full of scaffolding, sad to say. But a few roses clung to the fence on Fifth.
After an afternoon of meetings, we went out to catch a breath of fresh (?) air, and saw the rays of the lowering sun gild the Chrysler Building a few blocks away.
Sunset over the Hudson River from our room on the 22nd floor.
I managed to fit in a quick trip to the New York Public Library where I never fail to find an engaging snippet of knowledge in a brief visit. Sometime I’ll spend an entire day there. How about a month?
The noble beasts always get my respect. Are they the guardians of all knowledge – or symbolic of the majesty of the contents behind them? In case it looks like I spent most of my time flitting about the city, let it be known that I worked two full mornings as a volunteer at the editor-agent appointments desk, attended several workshops and PAN (Published Author Network) sessions and many other activities. And I spent a bundle on taxis.
Before the RITA ceremonies on Friday night, Judith and I browsed through the Metropolitan Museum of Art. We could hardly do more than scratch the surface, but it was wonderful.
For example, this sideboard was made in New York City about 1812 by French emigre cabinet maker
Charles Honore Lannuier (1779-1819) of flame-grain mahogany veneers. Shown on top are decanters, flutes, and wineglasses, most of them made in Pennsylvania and New York.
This table was made in Philadelphia, c. 1830, of mahogany, marble and brass by another French emigre, Anthony Quervelle (1789-1856). He also made tables for the East Room of the White House. The side chairs are attributed to the Baltimore workshop of John and Hugh Findlay, c. 1815-25.
Elsewhere in the Met, we stumbled upon Napoleon, in the form of a tapestry in wool, silk and metal thread, in its original pine frame. It is based on a 1805 portrait by Francois Gerard (1770-1837) of the emperor in his coronation robes. Woven in the workshop of Michel Henri Cozette (1744-1822) in the Gobelins Manufactory, 1808-11.
At last we found the British paintings — works by Reynolds, Gainsborough, Raeburn, Hoppner, Lawrence, and many more of our favorites. Below, three examples.
The hustle and bustle was over for another year. Several thousand women — and some men too — had a lot of sleep to catch up on.
Wow. I should have hung out with you guys.
What a wonderful way of spending time in NYC!
I can recall the Metropolitan Museum of Art most fondly. In it, I felt swallowed whole by the art world.
What a pity you were unable to gain entrance to the one are which you most prized for its import to your research! All those lovely things, locked away from view–so close, and yet so far!
Rose