Marc Chagall (1887โ€“1985).ย View of Central Park from the Window (Vue de la fenรชtre sur Central Park), 1958. Pastel, colored pencils, and black crayon over graphite on Japanese paper. Promised gift of Elie and Sarah Hirschfeld, Scenes of New York City. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation / Art Resource, NY, ยฉ 2021 Artists Rights Society (ARS) New York / ADAGP, Paris

On View October 22, 2021 โ€“ February 27, 2022

Exhibition Celebrates Major Gift that Expands and Advances Museumโ€™s Holdings with works by Chagall, Hockney, Lawrence, Oโ€™Keeffe, and Rockwell

This fall, the New-York Historical Society presents Scenes of New York City: The Elie and Sarah Hirschfeld Collection, an exhibition of 130 paintings, works on paper in various media, and sculpture from an extraordinary promised gift by philanthropists and art collectors Elie and Sarah Hirschfeld. On view October 22, 2021 โ€“ February 27, 2022, the exhibition features many artists new to New-York Historicalโ€™s collection, including Marc Chagall, David Hockney, Edward Hopper, Jacob Lawrence, Louise Nevelson, George Oโ€™Keeffe, Norman Rockwell, and Andy Warhol.

โ€œOur gratitude to Elie and Sarah Hirschfeld for the generous gift of their collection is profound,โ€ said Dr. Louise Mirrer, president and CEO of New-York Historical. โ€œWith works depicting the cityโ€™s bustling harbor, local eateries, tranquil parks, and sleek skyscrapers, our visitors will have the opportunity to see New York City with new eyes and, we hope, new appreciation.โ€

โ€œSeeing the collection on display like this is a unique thrill, and one that Iโ€™m delighted to share with my fellow New Yorkers,โ€ said Elie Hirschfeld. โ€œSarah and I are so pleased that New-York Historical is now the repository for Scenes of New York City and that generations to come will be able to better understand their city through these works.โ€

Curated by Wendy N.E. Ikemoto, curator of American art, with a catalogue edited and co-authored by Roberta J.M. Olson, curator of drawings emerita, the exhibition celebrates New York City: its buildings, bridges, parks, landmarks, and people. Many of the works on view feature New York City icons. For instance, Georgia Oโ€™Keeffeโ€™s Study for โ€œBrooklyn Bridgeโ€, 1949, immerses the viewer amid the suspension cables and gothic arches of the celebrated bridge. Created around the time the artist left New York to live in New Mexico, the drawing may serve as her ode to the city. Likewise, Armanโ€™s Statue of Liberty, ca. 1986, and Peter Maxโ€™s Liberty and Justice for All, 2001, reimagine the renowned monument in New York Harbor.

Additional highlights include depictions of city life. In The Lunch Counter at S. Kleinโ€™s in Union Square in the 1930s, ca. 1930โ€“39, Polish-born artist Theresa Bernstein depicts the racially integrated lunch counter at a popular department store. Her work often explored the major issues of her day, from racial discrimination to unemployment and suffrageโ€”often through the lens of womenโ€™s daily lives. Jacob Lawrenceโ€™s Harlem Diner, 1938, pictures struggle during the Great Depression and prefigures a composition from the artistโ€™s watershed Migration Series. An early painting by Mark Rothko, Untitled (The Subway), 1937, uses the New York City subway as grounds for pictorial experimentation, presaging the abstract color fields of the artistโ€™s mature career.

New York landscapes offer another perspective on the city. Ben Shahnโ€™s 1930 Picnic, Prospect Park applies a modernist style inspired by Paul Cรฉzanne and Henri Matisse to the Brooklyn greenspace. Franรงoise Gilotโ€™s Gingko Trees in Central Park, 2002-04, is a vision of autumnal yellows, while Marc Chagallโ€™s View of Central Park from the Window, 1958 opens from the Stanhope Hotel on Fifth Avenue onto a summer scene of the famous urban grounds and Central Park West skyline.

Also included are works from movements specifically associated with New York City, such as the Ashcan School, Abstract Expressionism, and Pop Art. In Central Park, 1902, Robert Henri, founder of the Ashcan School, rejects the parkโ€™s famous landmarks to portray instead a nondescript slope, rendered in slashing brushwork and a stark urban realist style. In Untitled (New York Times), ca. 1976, Abstract Expressionist William de Kooning breaks the strict format of the iconic newspaper with exuberant gestural strokes. And in Radiant Baby with AIDS Alligator, ca. 1984, Pop artist Keith Haring suggests a primal chase between life and death. His graffiti, applied to a Bowery subway sign, exemplifies the way he used his publicly accessible art to advance awareness of the AIDS epidemic.

Accompanying many of the works on display is commentary from a variety of New Yorkers sharing their memories and impressions of the places depicted. Local residents, writers, artists, hotel staff, baseball fans, professors, and tree enthusiasts all reflect on the ever-evolving nature of the city and its landmarks. A Stuyvesant High School student describes the view of the city skyline from her school, for example, while a New York Public Library librarian recounts being welcomed to work each day by the buildingโ€™s sculpted lions, Patience and Fortitude.

An exhibition catalogue,ย edited by Roberta J.M. Olson, featuring 200 color illustrations, will be available for purchase from theย NYHistory Storeย beginning in December 2021. On Monday, November 1, exhibition curator Wendy Ikemoto will lead a special tour ofย Scenes of New York City,ย highlighting the new artists to join New-York Historicalโ€™s collection.

Sponsors
Exhibitions at New-York Historical are made possible by Dr. Agnes Hsu-Tang and Oscar Tang, the Saunders Trust for American History, the Evelyn & Seymour Neuman Fund, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, and the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature. WNET is the media sponsor.

The catalogue for Scenes of New York City: The Elie and Sarah Hirschfeld Collection is supported by the Arthur F. and Alice E. Adams Charitable Foundation.

About New-York Historical Society
New York Cityโ€™s oldest museum, the New-York Historical Society Museum & Library was founded in 1804. The Patricia D. Klingenstein Libraryโ€”one of the most distinguished in the nationโ€”fosters research through its outstanding collections, which include more than 10 million items. The Museum presents groundbreaking history and art exhibitions as well as public programs that convey the stories of New York and the nationโ€™s diverse populations to the broadest possible public.

The New-York Historical Society is located at 170 Central Park West at Richard Gilder Way (77th Street), New York, NY 10024. Information: (212) 873-3400. Website:ย nyhistory.org. Follow the museum on social media at @nyhistory onย Facebook,ย Twitter,ย Instagram,ย YouTube, andย Tumblr.


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