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After a five-year closure to make way for renovations and expansions, the Frick Collection is returning in glorious form this ...
How Ingres’s masterpiece Comtesse d’Haussonville took center stage in the Frick Collection’s newly unveiled galleries.
Vincent Tullo for The New York Times Supported by By Patricia Leigh Brown Welcome to the latest installment of “This Old House,” the Henry Clay Frick mansion edition. The sumptuous 1914 Beaux ...
Architect Annabelle Selldorf took a light touch to a $220 million renovation of the beloved New York art museum.
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The Frick Collection is back this month after a five-year, $220 million renovation that nearly doubled its gallery footprint — with restored home furnishings and added never-before-seen works of art.
The museum, based in Henry Clay Frick’s 1914 Fifth Avenue mansion, reopens with a deft expansion worthy of a New York treasure. The showstopper of the Frick Collection renovation is a new ...
New York, Photo by Joseph Coscia, Jr. The second-floor galleries focus on the special collecting interests of Frick family members and significant gifts that have been made to the museum.
More than five years, a modest handful of delays, and one high-profile temporary address later, New York’s Frick Collection will once again welcome visitors to its home within industrialist Henry Clay ...
Grand Staircase, the Frick Collection. Joseph Coscia Jr. The redoubtable New York Times found common cause with the conservative City Journal. At the former, the typically sanguine Michael Kimmelman ...
New York’s storied Frick Collection ... coal and steel magnate Henry Clay Frick. “The Frick is back!” proclaimed Axel Rueger, director of the museum – a 20th century mansion filled with ...
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