Showing posts with label Metropolitan Museum of Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Metropolitan Museum of Art. Show all posts

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Loafin' Around The Upper East Side



TR and I and his parents headed uptown to the Met to get our art on.

Just a couple of swells, hanging around a Lichtenstein.
Just a couple of swells, hanging out in front of a Lichtenstein

Arty


Squinty


Two attractive people.
Two attractive people

Manahatta


Poor lighting in the Vermeers.


Just feeding the boy among some antiquities.
Just feeding the boy around some antiquities

After lunch we were lured over to 84th Street by the melodious sounds of an old German band.


Oom, pah, pah...oom, pah, pah.
Oom pah pah...oom pah pah

I want this guy to move in with us, but only if he wears this outfit everyday.


Get a haircut, hippie.
Get a haircut, hippie.

Sunday, December 23, 2007

An Afternoon Uptown And At The Met



I spent most of the day uptown, beginning at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. I saw that the Costume Institute had a new exhibit , so I hopped the 6 train up to 80th Street.

As expected, it was packed with tourists at noon, but the families who use strollers as torpedoes to push through crowds weren't as annoying as I thought they would be. I think that I can stomach out-of-towners after all.


The Costume Institute exhibit was my first stop. A bunch of very old dresses were on display, including gowns from Marie Antoinette-era France. There were also some classic pieces, such as one of the first boots Karl Lagerfeld designed for Chanel when he took over in the 1980s. If you like big, sweeping ballgowns, there were plenty of those as well. One of the more amazing pieces was an original CoCo Chanel shift dress from the 1920s. Apparently none were thought to still exist, but of course The Met found one.

Everyone loves Arms And Armour
Everyone Loves Arms And Armour

I also checked out the musical instruments wing, which for some reason has never been open all the other times I have come to the Met. Notably missing from the section was the first Steinway piano ever built, which the museum had for years. Where did it go?

Also: the special exhibit about The Age Of Rembrandt is fascinating. It's basically an ode to assorted Old Dutch Masters and the many millionaires at the turn of the century who collected their works and then gave said works to the museum, including J. Pierpont Morgan and Benjamin Altman. There's even a Vermeer tossed in there, but if you blink you could miss it.

On the way home I stopped for a manicure and got my nails painted Scarlett O'Hara, for all you Essie fans out there. It's basically a sparkly red, and one of my favorites. Around 3:30 I had the novel idea to walk all he way home from East 73rd Street and Second Avenue. By the time I hit 51st, I was tired and decided to hop the subway.

And good thing I did, because at 14th Street there was this awesome band playing original jazz. I've seen these guys before and they're awesome and sell their CDs.


And now I'm home. Peppe is stretched out, catnapping and hogging the bed. All seems right in the world.