The
Frick Collection is an anthology of the some of the most
distinguished works of Western art from the early Renaissance
through the late nineteenth century, including masterpieces by
Bellini, El Greco, Rembrandt, Titian, Turner, Vermeer, Whistler,
and many others housed in one of the great mansions remaining
from the Gilded Age.
These
paintings are complemented by one of the world's finest
collections of Renaissance bronzes and by great French sculpture
of the eighteenth century. These treasures are surrounded by
outstanding furniture and decorative art works from the ateliers
of Riesener, Lacroix, Boulle, Carlin, Gouthiere, and Sevres.
Each year more than 275,000 visitors from New York, across
America, and around the world come to the Collection at 1 East
70th Street, once the residence of Henry Clay Frick (1849-1919).
Designed by Thomas Hastings of
Carrere and Hastings and constructed in 1913-1914, the building
was changed after Mrs. Frick's death in 1931, with alterations
and additions made by the architect John Russell Pope. In 1935
the Collection opened to the public. A new Reception Hall, built
in 1977, was designed by John Barrington Bayley, Harry van Dyke,
and G. Frederick Poehler, in addition to two additional
temporary exhibition galleries.
The
Frick Collection also operates the Frick Art Reference Library
at 10 East 71st Street, both a research library and a photo
archive. The Library is one of the world's great repositories
for the documentation and study of Western art and has served
the international art world for more than seventy-five years.
Because few ropes or cases are used
to guard fragile objects, children under ten are not admitted
to the Collection, and those under sixteen must be
accompanied by an adult. The Collection attempts to preserve the
ambiance of Mr. Frick's private house, and visitors are
therefore asked to observe several regulations necessary for
protecting the works of art and their domestic setting.