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| You must remember this.... |
An American Studies take on New York City: exploring the city through its various forms, from images and novels to pop culture and social history.
Friday, August 14, 2015
August 14, 1945: Times Square and a Couple of Kisses
Tuesday, August 4, 2015
One Night at Sherry's: James Hazen Hyde Has a Ball (and Some Cake)
Hyde was the prototypical dandy of turn-of-the-20th-century New York. His clothes were made in Paris (a city that he loved and visited frequently). He was enormously fond of horses and coaches (and once raced, with Alfred Vanderbilt,--by coach!--from Philadelphia to New York City).
Labels:
celebrities,
equitable life building,
james hazen hyde,
jp morgan,
sherry's restaurant,
step and repeat,
the 400
Friday, July 10, 2015
Signs of the Time: Federal Art in NYC
Music Contest Poster, Estelle Levine, Artist, Federal Art Project, Library of Congress
Over the course of just a few golden years, from about 1935 to 1939, in New York City, the work of those artists was visible everywhere, from the theater marquees advertising a production to posters displayed on the streets.
Labels:
berneice abbott,
burt lancaster,
federal art project,
federal theatre project,
harlem,
john houseman,
lafayette theater,
orson welles,
studio 54,
WPA
Monday, April 13, 2015
Street Scenes: Cropping Into History
| On Fifth Avenue: A cropped image, c. 1900. (See Full Size Image Here.) |
I spend a lot of time looking through visual archives to find images to use in my research and my design work. One of my favorite archives to peruse is the Library of Congress (LOC). The LOC happens to hold one the best collections of American images: roughly 25,000 glass negatives and transparencies made by the Detroit Publishing Company (DPC).
Labels:
59th Street,
Broadway,
Brooklyn Bridge,
Canal Street,
Cropped Photographs,
Detroit Publishing Company,
fifth avenue,
Library of Congress,
Mott Street
Wednesday, April 8, 2015
The Washingtons in New York: The Nation, the Publick, and the Enslaved
| George: "Mary, Please come with me to New York!" (Illustration by Norman Rockwell, 1932) |
On
April 23, 1789, just one week before being sworn in as the first
president of the United States, George Washington and his staff settled
into the country's first executive mansion, located at 10 Cherry Street in New York City. For nearly two years, before being moved to Philadelphia, the
seat of the U.S. government would be located in New York City; and
Manhattan would be home to the President and First Lady. The new nation was just starting to recover
from the long years of war, and nowhere was this better in evidence than
in Manhattan.
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Labels:
american revolution,
edward savage,
federal hall,
first presidential house,
george washington,
mansion house,
martha washington,
oney judge,
slavery
Thursday, March 12, 2015
Owners of America, NYC
| "By their banks ye shall know them," Alfred Henry Lewis |
Accompanying the article were images of the Manhattan homes of the "owners."
Labels:
alfred henry lewis,
andrew carnegie,
cosmopolitan magazine,
j.p. morgan,
muckrakers,
new york mansions
Sunday, November 16, 2014
Jackie, A New Yorker
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| Jack and Jackie Greet New York, 1960 |
Labels:
Carlyle Hotel,
central park,
Clint Hill,
Edith Beale,
Gail Sheehy,
Gracie Square,
Grand Central Station,
Grey Gardens,
Jackie Bouvier,
Jackie Kennedy,
JFK,
Schrafts,
Theodore White
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
Take a Walk: Time Traveling Through the City Streets
| Time Traveling on the Upper West Side, 1971 (click text here to go to film) |
Take a Walk
New York is made for walking. And it's a city that lends itself to image making, from still photography to home movies. To see the city from a "common" or everyday point of view seems both literally and figuratively quite pedestrian. But with the passage of time, that point of view becomes magical, offering viewers the opportunity to time travel and walk through the streets of Manhattan in another era.
Labels:
amateur films,
fashion,
street photography,
the world the flesh and the devil,
upper west side,
walking in new york
Thursday, September 4, 2014
Bright Lights, Big City: Early 1980s New York
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| The Write Crowd: McInerney, Janowitz, Ellis, 1980s, NYC |
Labels:
bright lights big city,
east village,
ed koch,
gentrification,
hyper-gentrification,
jay mcinerney,
lower east side,
odeon,
yunnies,
yuppies
Friday, August 15, 2014
Coney Island on Their Mind
Wednesday, July 9, 2014
The Beauty of the Miniature: Helena Rubinstein in New York City
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| Madame Helena Rubinstein |
Helena Rubinstein (1870-1965) was a revolutionary force in the world of beauty. She was an entrepreneur, a businesswoman, and a marketing genius. During a long and successful career that spanned six decades and made
her one of the richest women in the world, Rubinstein operated salons
all over the world and launched scores of products that were sold globally. She was a magnificent purveyor of the idea that
all women can find personal satisfaction through the pursuit of beauty.
Labels:
beauty salon,
cosmetics,
fifth avenue,
helena rubenstein,
Park Avenue
Thursday, March 20, 2014
A Decisive Moment: Marilyn Monroe in New York
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| Marilyn Monroe: The City at Her Feet |
Labels:
actors studio,
ambassador hotel,
arthur miller,
billy wilder,
ed feingersh,
edward r murrow,
george barris,
joe dimaggio,
marilyn monroe,
sam shaw,
seven year itch,
sutton place
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
The Chrysler Building: A Symbol of the Times
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| 1931: A Dazzling New York Skyline of Architects |
Photo: L-R:
A. Stewart Walker (Fuller Building), Leonard Schultze
(Waldorf-Astoria), Ely Jacques Kahn (Squibb Building), William Van Alen
(Chrysler Building), Ralph Walker (1 Wall Street), D.E.Ward
(Metropolitan Tower), Joseph H. Freelander (Museum of New York).
At the Beaux-Arts Ball held in New York City on January 23, 1931, the party was not to be topped...but some of the attendees were!
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
Thanksgiving Day Menus & Traditions: New York City
Thanksgiving dinner at the Hotel New Yorker, at the height of the Great Depression, cost $2.25.
Guests could not only choose turkey as an entree, but also lamb, lobster, or beef. Sardines, baked grapefruit, and "whipped" potatoes also appeared on the hotel's holiday menu. The Art Deco hotel, located at 481 Eighth Avenue, had opened in 1930.
Labels:
benjamin franklin,
hotel manhattan,
hotel new yorker,
plaza hotel,
savoy-plaza hotel,
thanksgiving,
trinity church,
waldorf-astoria
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Dustin Hoffman's New York
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| Dustin Hoffman, New York City, 1969: An Actor's Actor. Photo by John Dominis |
Dustin Hoffman's New York - Jenny Thompson
In many ways, Dustin Hoffman can be seen as a quintessentially New York actor (despite having been born and raised in California). Many of the films Hoffman made through the late 1960s and 1970s not only captured the American zeitgeist, but also created a portrait of New York City. Hoffman, himself a resident of the city from roughly 1958 until 2002, lived through many changes New York underwent and his films capture those changes.
Monday, July 15, 2013
Mid-Century Modern: Inside the Mad Men's Living Room
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| Places! Don & Meagan Draper's NYC apartment, c. 1968 |
Labels:
1968,
9/11,
Best of Everything,
I Love Lucy,
Mad Men,
Park Avenue,
Rona Jaffe,
rosemary's baby,
the dakota
Thursday, June 6, 2013
Summer Retreats: New York Style
"By
the way, old chap, what do you people do in New York when
summer comes?"
"We get out," Miss De Peyster broke in . . . "New York is
simply deserted in summer. There is not a soul in town."
Rupert Hughes, The Real New York (1905).
Rupert Hughes, The Real New York (1905).
Labels:
annie hall,
brighton beach,
central park,
coney island,
dog day afternoon,
dreamland,
luna park,
manhattan beach,
niblo's garden
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Mary Lincoln in New York
“It is imperative that I should do
something for my relief, and I want you to meet me in New York, between the
30th of August and the 5th of September next, to assist me in disposing of a
portion of my wardrobe." Mrs. Lincoln to Mrs. Keckley
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
How the Other Half Lived ...and Lives
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| "Bandit's Roost," Richard Hoe Lawrence, c. 1890, Museum of the City of New York |
Labels:
affordable housing,
How the Other Half Lives,
Jacob Riis,
lower east side,
Manhattan cost of living,
Tenements
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
New York (on film): A View from a Window
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| Greenwich Village View: Rear Window was filmed on a set built at Paramount Studios in LA |
Labels:
12 angry men,
alfred hitchcock,
billy wilder,
cold war,
dear heart,
delbert mann,
girls,
HBO,
henry fonda,
jack lemmon,
organization man,
postwar,
rear window,
rope,
sidney lumet,
the apartment,
william h. whyte
Friday, December 21, 2012
A (New Yorker's) Christmas Poem
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| 1862 Illustration from Moore's "A Visit From Saint Nicholas" |
On July 15, 1779, Clement Clark Moore was born in New York City. He graduated from Columbia University in 1798 and went on to enjoy a successful career as a professor. But he is perhaps best known and remembered as the author of "A Visit from Saint Nicholas," commonly known as "'Twas the Night Before Christmas."
Moore was born and lived in the family home known as the "Chelsea House" at roughly 420 W. 23rd Street (the house later giving the name to the NYC neighborhood).
Monday, December 3, 2012
Crystal Palace
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| Crystal Palace, New York City, Illustrated News, July 30 1853 |
In July 1853
two prominent news weeklies, the Illustrated
News (July 23 and July 30, 1853) and Gleason’s Pictorial Drawing-Room Companion (July 23, 1853), published commissioned
engravings depicting events during the opening of the Crystal Palace.
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Food, NYC
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| The restaurant at Astor's swanky St. Regis Hotel, c. 1905 |
"God! The restaurants!
New York has become the
Florence of the Sixteenth Century.
Genius on
every corner."
-Six Degrees of Separation
"No city in the world is better supplied with restaurants and eating-houses of every kind than New York." This observation in the 1896 edition of Rand McNally and Co's Handy Guide to New York City, Brooklyn, Staten Island, and Other Suburbs is true today. The city's reputation as a food lover's paradise is well earned. From street food to fine dining, the available fare reflects the very city itself in its diversity and energy.
Labels:
appetite city,
chef's table at brooklyn fare,
delmonico's,
dinner rush,
elaine's,
le cirque,
new york public library,
rocco dispirito,
ruth reichl,
six degrees of separation,
thomas keller,
william grimes
Friday, November 2, 2012
Storm Clouds
Words are difficult to come by after witnessing the devastation brought on by Hurricane Sandy. In the wake of that storm, it is hard to imagine the losses, suffering, and tragedies endured by so many along the east coast. Looking down the long path to the days and weeks and years to come, and the tremendous efforts to rebuild--and perhaps reconfigure--New York, it is tempting to harness the power of the cliches: New York, New Jersey, and all the areas affected by the storm will rebuild and be stronger and better than ever; Americans are resilient and come together to help each other in the face of tragedy.
Labels:
hurricane sandy,
marjory collins,
new yorkers
Monday, September 24, 2012
Fashion on the Foot in Old Manhattan
"Only a shoe! How small a matter, and yet how important!
The Human Foot by William Beneke, 1888
Fashion chronicler extraordinaire, Bill Cunningham, highlighted the appearance of some dazzling shoes on the streets of Manhattan in a September 2012 "On the Street" column and accompanying slide show for the New York Times. The idea of the "shoe on the street"--the display of fashion on the foot in Manhattan--is something that traces its origins back to the earliest days of the city itself.
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
"The Clock"-a New York Story
Joe: "Where will I meet you?"
Alice: "Under the clock at the Astor at seven."
Released in May 1945, The Clock was filmed entirely in California, but set in New York City, with scenes taking place in sets standing in for Central Park, the Subway, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Astor Hotel, Pennsylvania Station, and various other locations.Alice: "Under the clock at the Astor at seven."
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
High Class Apartments
Things are looking up: From 1901 until 1929, New York City residents would become largely apartment dwellers. With a new law passed in 1901, residential buildings were allowed to grow up, to stretch up to the sky at a height that was more than twice the width of the street on which it stood.
Labels:
apartment houses,
million dollar listing new york,
plaza hotel,
selling new york,
tenement museum,
tommy hilfiger
Thursday, June 28, 2012
A Time To Be Born
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| Dawn Powell |
Writer Dawn Powell (1896-1965) was born in the Midwest
(Ohio) but lived the quintessential writer’s life in New York City. A prolific
writer, she published fifteen novels, several plays and
television scripts, earned a National Book Award nomination, and even saw a
musical produced based on her 1942 novel, A
Time to Be Born.
Labels:
columbia university,
dawn powell,
diaries,
tim page
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
"I ♥ New York"
In 1977, while working for the NY advertising agency, Wells Rich Greene, Milton Glaser created New York's most iconic image: the "I ♥ New York" graphic. Glaser, a graphic designer who was born in New York City in 1929, provided his design services pro bono to the state's campaign to boost tourism. The campaign included not only use of the logo, but also a song and television spots.
Monday, May 7, 2012
Touring Greenwich Village
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| Born in Canada, Beals was devoted to documenting New York City |
In the first two decades of the 20th century, Greenwich Village became
known as a rather eccentric enclave. Artists and writers, Arnarchists and liberated women, inhabited the neighborhood. "Greenwich Village is the American parallel of the
Latin Quarter," The Dial observed in 1914, pointing out that "a member of Greenwich Village is a person of a sort and not too
closely of a place: he is a Bohemian."
Curiosity about the neighborhood filled with restaurants, theater, art, radical politics, and nightlife was high; and the Bohemian crowd itself was willing to instruct the outsider. Anna Alice Chapin's 1920 Greenwich Village was a perfect guide to all things Greenwich Village.
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
manhatta/manhattan
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| Still from "Manhatta" a 1920 modernist look at the city. |
Labels:
charles sheeler,
george gershwin,
manhatta,
manhattan,
paul strand,
rhapsody in blue,
walt whitman,
woody allen
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
New York Seen/Taught from a Distance
In 1980 I
was offered a rare opportunity and a pedagogical challenge: the department I had recently joined at San
Francisco State University asked me to prepare to teach a semester-long (15
weeks) course “on” New York City. It
would become part of a group of courses
constructed around this unifying theme:
a city is a specific, cultural artifact,
and the study of a selected city (in a humanities context) helps serve
one of the educational missions of a large state university, namely to
introduce
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