New Yorkers are spending more time at home
than likely ever before, as the novel coronavirus pandemic has led to
limits on how many people can gather in one place at any given time, and
the widespread closure of the city’s myriad cultural institutions.
But many of those institutions—museums, parks, performing
arts centers, libraries, and more—have risen to the challenge,
providing virtual access to their buildings and collections. In a
challenging time, these virtual experiences offer New Yorkers many ways
to stay entertained and connected to the city’s plethora of incredible
cultural offerings.
Below, find a list of what’s available from various online platforms, museums, and more.
Museums
Several New York City museums can be experienced via Google’s Arts & Culture platform, including the Met, the Museum of Modern Art, the Brooklyn Museum, and the Cooper Hewitt.
In addition to providing a glimpse at those museums’ collections, the
platform also lets you explore their buildings—so if you’ve never
visited Frank Lloyd Wright’s nautilus-inspired Guggenheim building, now’s the time to do so (virtually).
Some museums also have virtual tours or exhibitions on their websites, including the Frick, the Museum of the City of New York, the Whitney Museum, the New-York Historical Society, the New York Public Library, The New York Transit Museum, and the Tenement Museum.
In a partnership with the New York Latino Film Festival, each week El Museo del Barrio
will feature shorts, films, and documentaries from the fest on its
website. The American Museum of Natural History is sharing previously
recorded tours via its Facebook and Twitter accounts. History buffs can listen to more than 350 oral histories from New Yorkers on the Coney Island History Project’s website in addition to exploring their online collections.
Many city museums have also shared items from their collections using the hashtag #MuseumAtHome and #MuseumMomentofZen on Twitter—both are good to follow if you need a moment of levity in the middle of a stressful time.
Libraries
Though New York City’s library branches are closed, many
of the services that they provide—including access to e-books, research
materials, and more—are available digitally. See what’s available via
the New York Public Library, Brooklyn Public Library, and the Queens Public Library.
Parks
Many city parks remain open, but one of the most popular
outdoor spots—the High Line—has closed for now. But you can still go on a
virtual tour of the elevated park through Google Arts & Culture.
The New York City Parks Department offers virtual tours of some of its flagship green spaces, including Central Park and the Staten Island Greenbelt.
And the Natural Areas Conservancy has a nifty online map
that charts the more than 20,000 acres of the city’s natural
areas—forests, freshwater wetlands, salt marshes, and streams—if you’re
hankering for some outdoor exploration without actually going outdoors.
Bonuses
The New York Landmarks Conservancy has a video series called “Tourist In Your Own Town,”
which takes viewers on tours of historic landmarks (including President
Theodore Roosevelt’s birthplace and the Dyckman Farmhouse Museum).
The city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission has launched Seneca Village Unearthed, an online exhibit and collection
of artifacts from what was once New York City’s largest community of
free African-American landowners. The exhibit offers access to nearly
300 artifacts for a glimpse of what life was like for Seneca villagers
in the mid-19th century.
Urban Archive
is another resource chock full of digital resources to explore in
partnership with 40 museums, cultural organizations, and government
agencies. The archive offers a seemingly endless collection of curated
historic images and their histories. For instance, as part of the
#NewYorkfromHome campaign, the Municipal Arts Society and Urban Archive
create two digital tours: Epidemic, New York in 1918, and Hospitals through History.
The 92nd Street Y has also made videos from its archives available to watch at home, and will livestream some of its planned concerts.
In the first in a series of online shows created for the Pace Gallery, the digital exhibit Saul Steinberg: Imagined Interiors
brings together drawings, collages, and photographs by New York-based
cartoonist and illustrator Saul Steinberg. The show explores interior
spaces as sites for introspection and creativity, and will be on view
online until April 6.
https://ny.curbed.com/2020/3/17/21183837/virtual-museum-tours-home-new-york-moma-met
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