Now's the Time To Visit New York

Two museums in New York City are perfect destinations for holiday day trips. And my favorite is on the way into the city on the Henry Hudson Parkway.

   The Cloisters is that wonderful building in northern-most Manhattan that houses a marvelous collection of European Medieval art (1100-1400 A.D.).  The museum, surrounding park and much of the art were gifts of John D. Rockefeller Jr., who also bought hundreds of acres along the New Jersey Palisades to preserve the museum’s spectacular Hudson River views. It is now part of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

    Jewelry, religious objects, illustrated manuscripts and whole medieval chapels — imported from Europe and reconstructed on-site — surround a lovely cloistered garden of herbs, flowers and medicinal plants.  Fountains play, the buildings stay church-cool inside, the view glitters in the sun.

   But visit during the holidays and there is extra magic. The historic chapels and altars are adorned with garlands and wreaths of evergreens, fresh fruit and spices.  The fragrance from gently rotting apples and pears, cinnamon and citrus is intoxicating.  You won’t forget it.

   Farther downtown is the Frick Collection, one of the country’s finest small museums and, I think, the most beautiful in New York City.  Housed in Henry Clay Frick’s own residence, showing his art collection — some pieces hung and placed where he put them — and a smaller trove acquired by his daughter, the 16 galleries contain many great paintings (including three Vermeers, Hans Holbein’s portraits of Thomas More and Thomas Cromwell (adversaries in life, neighbors on the wall), and El Greco’s St. Jerome.

   Frick loved things French, and Fragonard’s multi-panel masterpiece, “The Progress of Love,â€� hangs in a room of its own.  There is also a wonderful room of 18th-century boiserie and painted panels. And currently (through Jan. 10) the museum is showing a splendid collection of French drawings:  “From Watteau to Degas.â€�

   This is a personal museum of the pictures, furniture and decorations that Frick chose to live with.    If expensive and grand, it is also intimate.  Easy to visit and enjoy; easy to sense the man whose name is on the door.  

    

   The Cloisters  in Ft. Tryon Park.  

   It is also reachable by subway (A train) and bus. Open Tuesday through Sunday, 9:30 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. 212-923-3700.

   

The Frick Collection,

1 East 70th St.

   It is open Tuesday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Sun., 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. For information, 212-288-0700.

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