While growing up in New Jersey, I often visited
historic landmarks, museums, galleries, and other sites of interest in New York
City during school field trips. One of the places most often visited by my school
groups was the Metropolitan Museum of Art, a gorgeous quarter-mile long
building of nearly two million square feet.
Celebrating its centennial this year, the Met (as it’s
known) contains collections of Egyptian, Babylonian, Assyrian, East Asian,
Middle Eastern, Greek, Roman, European, pre-Columbian, New Guinean, Islamic,
and American art including sculpture, paintings, drawings, calligraphy, prints,
photographs, glass, bronzes, ceramics, textiles, metalwork, lacquerwork,
furniture, period rooms, arms and armor, and musical instruments. (Whew!)
Founded by businessmen, financiers, and artists, The
Met received its articles of incorporation on April 13, 1870, with the museum
opening on February 20, 1872 in the Dodworth Building on Fifth Avenue. Railroad
executive John Taylor Johnston was the first president, perhaps prompted by the
fact that his personal art collection seeded the museum. Eight years later, the
museum had outgrown its location twice and moved to the current location. By
the early 20th Century, The Met was considered one of the greatest
art centers in the world.
Every organization needs a mascot, and The Met proudly
hosts “William” a 4,000+ year old statute of a hippopotamus as theirs. The
piece was gifted to the museum in 1917 by Edward S. Harkness, an American
philanthropist, whose father Stephen V. Harkness made his wealthy by an early
investment in Standard Oil. Discovered during the Khashaba excavations in Egypt
in 1910, the statue is nearly eight inches long, three inches wide, and four
and one-half inches tall.
The fourth most visited museum in the world, The Met
hosted 7.3 million visitors in 2019. In addition to its main facility on Fifth
Avenue, The Cloisters is located in Fort Tryon Park and built using salvaged structures from five medieval French cloisters. Dedicated only to medieval art, the facility was completed in 1938 and filled with a collection originally assembled by George Gray Barnard and purchased in full by John D. Rockefeller, Jr. in 1925 as a gift to the Met.
A popular location with movie directors, The Met has
been featured in dozens of films including When
Harry Met Sally, Hello Again, The Nanny Diaries, Hitch, and Keeping the Faith.
Have you ever visited The Met? What is your favorite
art gallery?
Linda Shenton Matchett writes about ordinary people who did
extraordinary things in days gone by. A volunteer docent and archivist for the
Wright Museum of WWII, Linda is also a trustee for her local public library. She
was born a stone’s throw from Fort McHenry and has lived in historic places all
her life. Now located in central New Hampshire, Linda’s favorite activities
include exploring historic sites and immersing herself in the imaginary worlds
created by other authors. Visit her website where she blogs about history,
mystery, and faith.
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