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A Trio of Museum Gems: An Artful Weekend in New York

Overnight Tour

Multi-Day Tour

Saturday, January 11, 2020 - 8:30 a.m., to Sunday, January 12, 2020 - 10:30 p.m. ET
Code: 1NNTMG
Location:
Detailed information for overnight tours
is mailed approximately FOUR WEEKS
prior to departure.
Select your Tickets
$565
Double Room Member
$720
Double Room Non-Member
$670
Single Room Member
$825
Single Room Non-Member
$110
Special

Courtyard in the Frick Collection (Photo: David McSpadden)

Treat yourself to an art-filled weekend escape to Manhattan that gives you plenty of time to take in guided visits of three distinctive and stunning smaller museums—and a night on the town to enjoy as you like.

Art historian Ursula Rehn Wolfman leads the tour, which offers the rare opportunity to visit the famed Neue Gallery before it opens to the public for the day. Housed in a beautiful 1914 mansion on Museum Mile, the gallery focuses on German and Austrian art and design from 1890 to 1950. The wide-ranging permanent collection includes works by Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele, Josef Hoffmann, Max Beckmann, and artists of the expressionist movement and the Bauhaus.

The Morgan Library and Museum’s architectural history is as rich as its collections of illuminated manuscripts, rare books, literary and historical manuscripts, music manuscripts, and drawings. The opulent Renaissance-inspired private library designed for banker and collector Pierpont Morgan in 1904 by a partner in McKim, Mead, and White was enhanced by a 2006 expansion and renovation by architect Renzo Piano.

The former residence of another Gilded Age figure, Henry Clay Frick, is now the Frick Collection, a museum and research center whose holdings grew from the Old Master paintings and European sculpture and decorative arts acquired by its namesake. The museum includes several gardens designed by Frederick Law Olmstead Jr., as well as an interior garden court by John Russell Pope, who echoed some of its element in his later designs in a court for the original National Gallery of Art building.

The tour’s hotel can also be considered a work of art: the historic Roosevelt Hotel, opened in 1924, known as the “Grande Dame of Madison Avenue.” A restoration has brought back its Jazz-Age glamour, and the Roosevelt’s midtown location makes it an ideal base for your Manhattan weekend. Saturday evening is yours to fill, and an early three-course supper at the Brass Rail is included before you set off on Sunday.

GENERAL DETAILS

  • Cost includes bus transportation, lodging, all activities, and the following meals: Saturday boxed lunch en route and Sunday breakfast and supper.
  • Overnight accommodations are at the historic Roosevelt Hotel.
  • Tour departs by bus from the Mayflower Hotel, Connecticut Ave. and DeSales St., NW, with a pickup at the DoubleTree Hilton, 15101 Sweitzer Lane, Laurel, Maryland, at about 9:10 a.m.
  • Single-room supplement $105 (factored into the Single Room Member and Single Room Non-Member pricing).
  • Singles registering at the double-room rate are paired (on a nonsmoking basis) if possible, but must pay the single-room supplement otherwise.
  • Detailed information is mailed to registrants about four weeks prior to departure.
  • Registrants may want to consider purchasing trip insurance.

World Art History Certificate elective: Earn 1/2 credit*

*Enrolled participants in the World Art History Certificate Program receive 1/2 elective credit. Not yet enrolled? Learn about the program, its benefits, and how to register here.