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New York Architecture
Images-Greenwich Village Salmagundi
Club Landmark |
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architect
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location
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47
Fifth Ave., bet. East 11th and East 12th Streets. |
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date
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1853 |
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style
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Renaissance Revival
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construction
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Brownstone |
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type
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House |
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images
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notes
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Following a tradition of over 130 years,
Salmagundi Club continues to serve as a center for fine artists from New
York and around the country - providing exhibitions of paintings,
sculpture and photography, conducting art classes and painting
demonstrations and art auctions throughout the year.
All this is done in an atmosphere of
conviviality that encourages discussions on art and other topics and leads
to lasting friendships among both lay and artists members. While members
are mainly residents of new York, Salmagundians are to be found throughout
the United States and Canada, as well as such faraway places as London,
Amsterdam and Lisbon.
Originally formed as the New York Sketch
Club in 1871, the Club adopted its present name a hundred years ago after
Washington Irving published his potpourri of wit and wisdom called
"The Salmagundi Papers." The name also serves as the club dining
room's famous "Salmagundi Stew".
Through the years the Club has been the
singular gathering place for such great artists as Childe Hassam, William
merrit Chase, Howard Pyle, N.C. Weyth, Carles Dana Gibson, Ogden Pleisner
and many others. Honorary members have included such luminaries as Sir
Winston Churchill, Buckminister Fuller, Paul Cadmus, Al Hirschfeld, Thomas
Hoving and Schuyler Chapin.
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SALMAGUNDI CLUB
47 Fifth Avenue between East 11th and 12th Streets
NOVEMBER 24, 1937. ABBOTT FILE 266
The Salmagundi Club, which was established
in 1871 for "the promotion of social intercourse among artists and
the advancement of art," moved in 1917 from 14
West 12th Street to a brownstone mansion at 47 Fifth Avenue, which had
been built in 1853 for Irad Hawley, president of the Pennsylvania Coal
Company. Originally called the Salmagundi Sketch Club, their members in
the early years would meet at the studio of well-known sculptor J. Scott
Hartley. In its heyday at the turn of the century, the club included such
socially prominent artists as Louis Comfort Tiffany, Stanford White, and
John La Farge.
Shortly after Abbott photographed the club,
it underwent renovation: the facade was refaced, and the first-floor
brownstone balconies and cast-iron sidewalk balustrade were replaced with
wrought iron railings. Today, the club continues to meet at the Fifth
Avenue building.
Special
thanks to the Museum of New York, www.mcny.org
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contact
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nyc-architecture.com
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links
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http://www.salmagundi.org/index.html
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