A New Gallery At The Frick, But What For? -- UPDATED
This post is about an internal expansion, though -- like the Metropolitan Museum has over the past several years, the Frick has expanded gallery space within its footprint. On Tuesday, it opened the new Portico Gallery, the first major addition to the museum's display spaces in nearly thirty-five years, achieved by enclosing the portico abutting Fifth Avenue, overlooking the gardens.
Lest you think that this is a new idea, the Frick was quick to point out that Henry Clay Frick himself wanted to do this -- World War I stopped him, and then he died before returning to the plan.
I'm more a sculpture person, but the Frick has found room for only two in the mix, both from the 18th century. Jean-Antoine Houdon's The Dead Thrush (above), a long-term loan from the Horvitz Collection, Boston, and Diana the Huntress, "a signature work of The Frick Collection."
That's the new gallery at right. Sculpture will look splendid there, don't you think?
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