Current:Home > ContactOur 5 favorite exhibits from 'This Is New York' — a gritty, stylish city celebration -Excel Wealth Summit
Our 5 favorite exhibits from 'This Is New York' — a gritty, stylish city celebration
View
Date:2025-04-11 22:31:58
Visiting New York City this summer? A fun, family-friendly exhibit celebrating movies, TV shows, music, books, fashion and art inspired by the city is now open at the Museum of the City of New York.
This Is New York is in celebration of the museum's own centennial. It turns out that the past 100 years have been rich ones for depicting the city.
"1923 is really at the beginning of mass American culture ... Radio, film, it's at the beginning of a whole cultural explosion," said Lilly Tuttle, one of the curators. She said the exhibit is meant to capture New York as artists have experienced it during that time. It's not a love letter.
"It's a crowded, dirty, smelly, rude, cacophonous place. And also glamorous and wonderful and glitzy and fabulous and elegant and cool. And artists across time and across media have captured that," she said. "It's all in here, all at once."
But there's so much to see — in this corner, Jake LaMotta's boxing gloves from Raging Bull! In that corner, a video mocking the meme Pizza Rat! — that it can be overwhelming. To help you know where to start, here are our top five picks.
1. Step on a song
Step on an illuminated icon of one of the five boroughs, and a song about New York by musicians from that borough pours out of speakers. There are 112 songs in almost every style — from standards to salsa to punk to rap to reggae.
Step on the Bronx — maybe you'll hear "Jenny from the Block" by Jennifer Lopez. Hop over to Queens — hey that's "Rockaway Beach" from The Ramones. And though many, many songs have been written about Manhattan, you may be lucky enough to hear a famous one — like Frank Sinatra's version of "New York, New York."
2. Be immersed in the city
Sixteen screens. Four hundred movies, TV shows and documentaries, including scenes you'll recognize from Ghostbusters, Do the Right Thing, The Muppets Take Manhattan, Working Girl and In The Heights. Thousands of clips flicker by in the dark, illuminating the ways New York has been portrayed — crowded and dirty and dangerous, sure, but also glamorous and ambitious and liberating. A place to be yourself ... even if that self lives in an apartment with four other people and hundreds of cockroaches.
3. Salivate over the skyline cape
This floor-length, white silk cape is hand-beaded with an image of the New York skyline, the beads sparkling like the city's lights. The silhouettes of the Empire State Building and the Chrysler Building call to mind the elegance of all the 1930s black-and-white movies set in Manhattan, with their top hats and late night supper clubs.
But it's just one of the items celebrating the city's love affair with fashion — and fashion's love affair with the city. Sharp eyes will also spy the ballet dress Sarah Jessica Parker wore in the original pilot episode of Sex and the City. And next to the stunning cape is a painted denim graffiti jacket from the artist PART ONE (Enrique Torres), who pioneered this kind of vibrant street writing in the 1970s and 1980s. In New York, you could imagine people standing next to each other, one wearing the cape, the other the jacket, waiting for a cab.
"It's the idea that New York fabulous dresses up - or doesn't," Tuttle said.
4. Hear Lea DeLaria and Matthew Broderick read favorite books
In a long, narrow, room of its own is a library of books and DVD cases. Take a book off the shelf, drop it on a scanner, and hear Matthew Broderick read from John Cheever's short story The Enormous Radio or Lea DeLaria read an excerpt from the children's classic Harriet the Spy by Louise Fitzhugh. Or try a DVD case instead and see a clip from The Jeffersons, Seinfeld or I Love Lucy. Each work on the shelf portrays a New Yorker's view of home, which often is a crowded apartment with views of the neighbors.
Tuttle said it reminds people that people may think of the city as a public place of spectacle and performance, but those who live here are often working out private dramas.
"Sometimes maybe you're catching a murderer out your window and other times you're just yelling at each other," Tuttle said, laughing. She's a lifelong New Yorker herself. "But it's basically the idea of cramped quarters, bickering and spying on your neighbors."
5. Salsa at Orchard Beach
For about 50 years, Latinos in the Bronx have been meeting to salsa on Sundays at Orchard Beach in the Bronx. Cheyenne Julien's painting may not literally take you there, but looking at it, you can feel the heat of the hazy sun and hear the beat of the music.
The rest of the art scattered throughout the galleries will likewise sweep you away. It's like a treasure hunt. There's a quilt from Faith Ringgold, with a family enjoying a quiet dinner on a rooftop; a lonely look into a movie theater with Edward Hopper; a drawing of a ferocious knockout punch from George Bellows. There's joy, too, in a life-size plaster casts of girls playing double Dutch on the street in the Bronx, and a lamppost from Sesame Street.
All of it captures the people parade that is everyday life in New York City.
Tuttle noted that every few years, like during the middle of the pandemic, someone declares that the city is over.
But art like this proves it's not, she said. "Once you move away from the hot dogs and the pizza and the dirty apartments and the subway, it's like, no, the city will always rise again, because of the creativity that we're celebrating in this exhibition."
veryGood! (89574)
Related
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- Capitol rioter who carried zip-tie handcuffs in viral photo is sentenced to nearly 5 years in prison
- Shenae Grimes Claps Back at Haters Saying Her Terrible Haircut Is Aging Her
- Stock market today: Asian shares weaken while Japan reports economy grew less than expected
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- After reckoning over Smithsonian's 'racial brain collection,' woman's brain returned
- Maui slowly trudges toward rebuilding 1 month after the deadly wildfire devastation
- Rain pouring onto Hong Kong and southern China floods city streets and subway stations
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Police have cell phone video of Julio Urías' altercation from domestic violence arrest
Ranking
- Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
- UK police call in bomb squad to check ‘suspicious vehicle’ near Channel Tunnel
- Biden, Modi look to continue tightening US-India relations amid shared concerns about China
- Amid stall in contract talks with UAW, GM, Stellantis investigated for bad faith by NLRB
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- Removal of Rio Grande floating barriers paused by appeals court
- Flooding in Greece and neighboring nations leaves 14 dead, but 800 rescued from the torrents
- Coco Gauff navigates delay created by environmental protestors, reaches US Open final
Recommendation
'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
Customs and Border Protection reveals secret ground zero in its fight against fentanyl
Private Equity Giant KKR Is Funding Environmental Racism, New Report Finds
Man gets 110 years for killing ex-girlfriend, her grandmother outside Indiana auto seating plant
Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
The Surprising Ways the Royal Family Has Changed Since Queen Elizabeth II's Death
Cuba arrests 17 for allegedly helping recruit some of its citizens to fight for Russia in Ukraine
The FAA is considering mandating technology to warn pilots before they land on the wrong runway