free things to do in New York City
Free events for Tuesday, 02/21/23
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Free Events, Free Things to Do in New York City!  Read More

Are you looking for free things to do in New York City (NYC) on February 21, 2023?

32 free events take place on Tuesday, February 21 in New York City. Don't miss the opportunities that only New York provides! Exciting, high quality, unique and off the beaten path free events and free things to do take place in New York today, tonight, tomorrow and each day of the year, any time of the day: whether it's a weekday or a weekend, day or night, morning or evening or afternoon, December or July, April or November! These events will take your breath away!

New York City (NYC) never ceases to amaze you with quantity and quality of its free culture and free entertainment. Check out February 21 and see for yourself. Summer or Winter, Spring or Fall! Just click on any day of the calendar above and you'll find most inspiring and entertaining free events to go to and free things to do on each day of February . Don't miss the opportunities that only New York provides!

Some events take place all year long: same day of the week, same time there are there for you to take advantage of. One of the oldest free weekly events in Manhattan is Dixieland Jazz with the Gotham Jazzmen, which happen at noon every Tuesday. Another example of an event that you can attend all year round on weekdays is Federal Reserve Bank Tour, which takes place every week day at 1 pm (but advanced reservations are required). You can take at least 13 free tours every day of the year, except the New Year Day, July 4th, and the Christmas Day. If you are classical music afficionado, you can spend whole day in New York going from one free classical concert to another. If you love theater, then New York gives you an option to attend plays and musicals free of charge, or at deep discount. You just need to have information about it. And we are here to make that information available to you.
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The quality and quantity of
free events,
free things to do
that happen in New York City
every day of the year
is truly amazing.

So don't miss the opportunities
that only New York provides:
stop wondering what to do;
start taking advantage of
free events to go to,
free things to do in NYC
today!

32 free things to do in New York City (NYC) on Tuesday, February 21, 2023

All events are free unless otherwise noted.

Editor's Picks

free events nyc How is the Metaverse Shaping the Ways We Interact with the City? (online)
free events nyc Mack & Rita (2022) with Diane Keaton
free events nyc Emmy Award-Winning Actor Presents Screening
free events nyc The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright in NYC (Online)
More Editor's Picks for 02/21/23
        

Performance | Cold-Blooded: Skating, Music and Poetry


Watch mezzo-soprano and multi-dimensional artist Alicia Hall Moran's on-ice residency at The Rink. Alicia Hall Moran's project Cold-Blooded explores skating, music, and poetry with different special guests each Tuesday morning throughout the month of February. Every week Alicia Hall Moran and the artists take the ice at 6am to develop in-the-moment, multidisciplinary collaborations. Then from 7am-7:45am, the public is welcome to experience the works in process from around the Rink deck. Featuring: Taiko, fue player and composer Kaoru Watanabe Soprano and director of Lyric Opera of the North, Sarah Lawrence Electronic music by percussionist Lafrae Sci Guitarist Thomas Flippin performing exerpts from Suite Sompostelana by Frederic Mompou "Blessings the Boats," poem by Lucille Clifton and live vocals by Alicia Hall Moran, musician and skater
   New York City, NY; NYC
7:00 am
Free

Tour | 13 Tours, All City Neighborhoods, Any Time Of The Day, Choose One Tour Or Many


These free tours take place at various times during the day, all day long. You can make reservations for as many tours as your schedule allows. SoHo, Little Italy and Chinatown Brooklyn Bridge, Brooklyn Heights + DUMBO 3 Hour Lower Manhattan Harlem Chelsea and the High Line 6 Hour Downtown Combined Greenwich Village Central Park Lower Manhattan Midtown Manhattan Grand Central Terminal Graffiti and Street Art Tours World Trade Center
   New York City, NY; NYC
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10:00 am
Free

Workshop | Adult Zumba


Exercise in disguise! Get in on the fun featuring easy-to-follow Latin dance choreography while working on your balance, coordination and range of motion. Bring your friends and come prepared for enthusiastic instruction, a little strength training and a lot of fun.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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10:30 am
Free

Discussion | How is the Metaverse Shaping the Ways We Interact with the City? (online)


Have you stepped into the Metaverse yet? You may not need to, as the Metaverse is coming to you. Emerging technologies such as augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR) promise to untether the internet from our phones and computers and virtually layer it over the city itself. This offers us opportunities to access New York, and what it can be, in innovative--and more inclusive--ways. From virtually experiencing New Year's Eve in Times Square to visualizing possibilities for a relocated Madison Square Garden, augmented reality provides new tools to help New Yorkers "see" and engage with a constantly changing urban landscape. This is an engaging dialogue with leaders at HOK, inCitu, and SHoP Architects focusing on the ways that AR and VR can be harnessed for good. Speakers: Dana Chermesh-Reshef (Founder and CEO, inCitu) Christopher Sharples, AIA (Foundng Principal, SHoP) Greg Schleusner (Director of Design Technology, Innovation at HOK) Greg Lindsay (Moderator, 2022 Urban Tech Fellow at the Jacobs Urban Tech Hub at Cornell Tech)
   New York City, NY; NYC
11:00 am
$5

Lecture | "Warming of the Arctic" in the 1920s-1940s: Influence on Marine Environment and Resources, and on the Soviet Understanding of Climate Change (in-person and online)


The arctic climate is currently changing faster than the climate of the planet; this phenomenon is known as 'Arctic amplification.' However, even before the beginning of the anthropogenic global climate change, the Arctic climate was quite changeable. The observations of the rapid warming of the Arctic caused by natural factors in the 1920s-1940s led scientists to acknowledge the possibility of short-term changes of the climate in general. Warming of the Arctic in that period was mostly pronounced in its part adjacent to the North Atlantic Ocean, including the Barents and the White Seas in Russia. Russian scientists along with Scandinavian ones played a crucial role in the observation and analysis of this process. This talk, on the one hand, illustrates climate as a driver for changes in abundance and migrations patterns of fish species important for the ecosystems of these seas and for the economy. On the other hand, the talk focuses on Russian scientists and their international networks, through which new knowledge on the changes of Arctic climate circulated. In addition, the legacy of this period for the Soviet / Russian climate science is discussed. Speaker Julia Lajus received her degree in the history of science (the Russian equivalent of Ph.D. degree) from the Institute for the History of Science and Technology in Moscow in 2004 with a dissertation devoted to the history of relations between fisheries science and fisheries in the European North of Russia/Soviet Union.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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12:00 pm
Free

Classical Music | Bach at Noon (In Person and Online)


Take a momentary respite from a busy day to enjoy a selection of organ works by Johann Sebastian Bach in an intimate venue.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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12:20 pm
Free

Book Discussion | Arthur Miller: American Witness (online)


In the new book, distinguished theater critic John Lahr brings a unique perspective to the life of Arthur Miller, the playwright who almost singlehandedly brought twentieth-century American theater to a new level of cultural sophistication. Organized around the fault lines of Miller's life and concentrating largely on his most prolific decades of the 1940s through the 1960s, Lahr provides an original interpretation of Miller's work, personality, and legacy. Lahr will be in conversation with award-winning playwright John Guare.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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12:30 pm
Free

Film | Jordan Peele's Nope (2022): horror


Named one of the top ten films of 2022 by the American Film Institute. Strange things are afoot at the family ranch, in this cautionary tale of attempting to tame the wild. With Daniel Kaluuya, Keke Palmer, Steven Yeun. 130 Min. Jordan Peele is an American actor, comedian, and filmmaker best known for his film and television work in the comedy and horror genres. His 2017 directorial debut, the horror film Get Out, was a critical and box office success, for which he received numerous accolades, including the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay, along with nominations for Best Picture and Best Director. He received another Academy Award nomination for Best Picture for producing Spike Lee's BlacKkKlansman.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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1:00 pm
Free

Poetry Reading | Poetry and Discussion


Cornelius Eady, renowned poet, musician, co-founder of Cave Canem, and former Interim Director of Poets House, for a reading and talk. Recently he launched Poets House’s Open House, a weekly radio program on WBAI, with co-host Patricia Spears Jones. He is the author of several celebrated collections of poetry, including The Gathering of My Name. Eady is currently John C. Hodges Chair at the University of Tennessee/Knoxville.  
   New York City, NY; NYC
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1:00 pm
Free

Discussion | Poetry About Contemporary Issues


Join fellow poetry enthusiasts in unpacking the layered meanings of poetry through an informal group discussion, focusing on contemporary poems that embody the spirit of political and social resistance. Reading selections for this event are: Danez Smith, Tonight in Oakland Laura Da', Passive Voice Donika Kelly, Dear ---- Please note that contemporary poetry deals frankly with contemporary issues and all works discussed are artistic expressions selected for an adult audience.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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2:30 pm
Free

Film | Mack & Rita (2022) with Diane Keaton


Mackenzie is a thirty-something woman who's already tired of the busy rush of youth and wishes she could fast forward her life so she can enjoy her golden years. When she's struck by lightning at Coachella, she wakes up as the seventy-year-old Rita. She soon realizes old age is not as whimsical as she thought. Director: Katie Aselton. With Wendie Malick, Elizabeth Lail, Taylour Paige, Loretta Devine. 95 minutes. Diane Keaton is an American actress and director who has received various accolades throughout her career spanning over six decades, including an Academy Award, a British Academy Film Award, two Golden Globe Awards, and the AFI Life Achievement Award. She then made her big screen debut in a small role in Lovers and Other Strangers (1970), before rising to prominence with her first major film role as Kay Adams-Corleone in Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather (1972), a role she reprised in its sequels Part II (1974) and Part III (1990). She frequently collaborated with Woody Allen, beginning with the film adaptation of Play It Again, Sam (1972). Her next two films with him, Sleeper (1973) and Love and Death (1975), established her as a comic actor, while her fourth, Annie Hall (1977), won her the Academy Award for Best Actress.
   New York City, NY; NYC
3:00 pm
Free

Lecture | "With Love and Best Wishes for Peace": Soviet-American Pen-Friends Confront the Cold War (in-person and online)


The late 1940s are generally considered a time of notorious Soviet isolationism and anti-western hysteria, fomenting by Kremlin. Likewise, the Truman administration’s anxieties about containing communism touched off a series of laws designed to limit contact with the Soviet Union and verify Americans’ loyalties. Yet, throughout this tumultuous time, American and Soviet women were in regular, intimate contact. Between 1943 and 1950, they exchanged over 500 letters, writing to establish peace and mutual understanding between their countries. This talk delves into their conversations. It investigates how individual women confronted the complexities of ideology and policy in a deeply personal way. As they shared the details of their lives, the letter-writers critically reflected upon their own societies and discovered how deeply their life choices and habits of mind were embedded in the political. They also discovered the power that the personal–that raw human vulnerability and emotion–held as a tool for shaping geopolitics. Speaker Alexis Peri is an Associate Professor of History at Boston University.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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4:00 pm
Free

Film | The Banshees of Inisherin (2022) with Colin Farrell


Two lifelong friends find themselves at an impasse when one decides abruptly to end the relationship. Director: Martin McDonagh Cast: Colin Farrell, Brendan Gleeson, and Kerry Condon Colin Farrell is an Irish actor who has played a leading man in blockbusters and independent films since the 2000s. He has received numerous accolades, including two Golden Globe Awards and a nomination for an Academy Award.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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5:00 pm
Free

Talk | Long Exposure Photography: Between Concept and Technique


Photography has the power to freeze time, to capture the world and reality. In most people’s mind photography has to be truthful to reality. It has to depict a scene, and atmosphere, and event accurately. But photography is so much more than a simple tool to document our lives. It is also a way to express ourselves, our point of view, to share our messages. Photography is art. Photography can be abstract and minimalistic. It allows us to change what we see based on our emotions and intent. Long exposure is a technique that embraces this approach: it transforms reality into something else, into a dialogue between the artist, the subject and viewer. By stretching the time used to capture a single image, the photographer includes movement in their art: water becomes smooth, clouds create long silky streaks, trees blur out in the wind... the effects are endless. Long exposure is a different mindset. One that comes from within and uses what is out there in order to produce unique and breathtaking images. Images that go beyond documenting and bridge into the Fine Arts. In this technical lecture, Sony's Thibault Roland will introduce long exposure and will discuss the equipment needed to shoot with this technique. At the end of the presentation, you will have a checklist of the different steps to follow as well as tips and tricks that will help you take breathtaking images using this unique approach.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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5:00 pm
Free

Workshop | Midweek Meditation (online)


A midweek meditation for relaxing body and mind. Larry Hurst and Sonda Stein moderate.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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5:00 pm
Free

Screening | Emmy Award-Winning Actor Presents Screening


Emmy Award winner Eugene Levy (Schitt's Creek) joins SiriusXM's Jessica Shaw for a screening and chat about his new T.V. series, The Reluctant Traveler, which follows his travels to some of the world's most beautiful and intriguing destinations in an attempt to overcome his fear of new experiences.
   New York City, NY; NYC
6:00 pm
Free

Screening | Haiti - Dreams Deferred But Not Forgotten


This program looks at how the historic challenges of Haiti informs their modern economy. But the program also looks at humanity, spirit and activism in Haiti that keeps them fighting towards social justice and economic equity. Films: An Excavation of Us (Le Deterrement de Nous) (2017), dir. Shirley Bruno: The shadows of Napoleon's army fall upon a boat traveling through the mysterious cave named after her legend Marie Jeanne, a female soldier who fought in the Haitian Revolution. It is this battle inside her cave that will become the most successful slave revolution in history. Agwe, dir. Samuel Suffren: Francois leaves Haiti by sailboat for the USA, leaving behind Mirlande, his six months pregnant wife. Ten years later, without any news, the woman who still hopes and waits offers a sacrifice to Agwe, the divinity of the oceans. Elena, dir. Michele Stephenson: In 2013, the Dominican Republic's government stripped the citizenship of anyone with Haitian parents, rendering more than 200,000 people stateless. Elena and her family stand to lose their legal residency there if they don't get their documents in time. Negotiating a mountain of bureaucracy in a racist, hostile society, Elena becomes the face of the struggle to remain in a country built on the labor of her forefathers. Exile, dir. Richard Senecal: While in Paris, Haitian director Richard Senecal speaks with Gessica Geneus, an actress he worked with on many of his films. Gessica shares her testimonial of Haiti's 2010 earthquake and how it is to be away from Haiti. Panelists: Dr. Regine O. Jackson - Dean of the Humanities, Social Sciences, Media, and Arts Division and Professor of Sociology at Morehouse College Dr. Vanessa L. Deane - Assistant Clinical Professor of Urban Planning and Public Service; Director of Urban Planning Shirley Bruno - Director, An Excavation of Us Samuel Suffren - Director, Agwe Michele Stephenson - Director, Elena Moderated by Sabrina Schmidt Gordon - Producer, Director and Editor
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Workshop | Play bridge in a stress-free environment


One of the most popular card games of the last century, bridge is still enjoyed by professional and amateur players alike today - and now you can stop by and enjoy it too! Bring your bridge partner, or you will be matched up with someone to play as a pair. There will be instructions and the chance to observe players, making this a perfect event for beginners looking to learn how to play bridge.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Lecture | Reading Tragedy in Pandemic Time


Seizing on the anachronism inherent in every act of reading while refusing the dichotomy between ancient text and modern reception, Mario Telo (University of California Berkeley) shows how Greek tragedy can speak to us about the pandemic as well as the crises it has aggravated and come to epitomize. Re-reading Antigone in light of Saidiya Hartman's Litany for Grieving Sisters and W. E. B. Du Bois's The Comet helps us conceptualize the relationship between tragedy and the end of the world, or the end of the human, a prospect that the pandemic and climate change have made palpable. More importantly, this affective and interpretive re-engagement with Sophocles' play might allow us to locate imaginative forms of being beyond extraction and beyond human extinction.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Screening | War Short Films: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the Russian Aggression Against Ukraine


The Ukrainian Film Club will commemorate the first anniversary of the all-out Russian aggression against Ukraine by a program of war shorts: Dispatches from the Front Lines of Russian Aggression Against Ukraine. Introduced and moderated by Yuri Shevchuk. The program includes five documentary and one feature short made on the frontlines of the current Russian-Ukrainian war: Peace and Tranquility, 2022, director Myro Klochko, Follow Me, 2022, director Lubomyr Levitsky, Liturgy of Anti-Tank Obstacles, 2022, director Dmytro Sukholytky-Sobchuk, It's Quiet Here, 2022, directors Olena Podolianko and Novruz Khikmet, I Did Not Want to Make a War Film, 2022, director Nadiia Parfan, Fortress Mariupol. Orest, 2022, director Yulia Hontaruk, and feature short Mother, 2022, director Yuri Leuta. These films paint the picture of the Russian aggression and how it brutalizes peaceful Ukrainian citizens, how it destroys their country as well as how, contrary to the aggressor's designs, the war solidifies Ukraine's resolve to fight back and win. Each short offers a unique personal perspective of its maker or protagonist on the war, each tells a real-life story of perseverance, courage in the face of mortal danger, and even heroism. All films are either dubbed or subtitled into English
   New York City, NY; NYC
6:00 pm
Free

Talk | What Makes It Italian?: Quattrocento: Italian and Flemish (online)


When Flemish influence flowed into Italy, the Italians made lyricism of musical and painterly line their trademark. Italian pairing: Composer Franchino Gaffurio (1451 - 1522) and painter Sandro Botticelli (c. 1445 - 1510) Flemish pairing: Composer Josquin des Prez (c. 1450-1455 - 1521) and painter Hans Memling (1430 - 1494) "What Makes It Italian?" is a music listening and discussion group that meets online. The group is led by Gina Crusco, who has also guided listening at Bard LLI and Riverdale Y; acted as maestro del coro for opera in Italy; instructed music at The New School; and directed Underworld Productions.
   New York City, NY; NYC
6:00 pm
Free

Book Discussion | Concrete Utopianism: The Politics of Temporality and Solidarity


In this book, Gary Wilder insists that we place solidarity and temporality at the center of our political thinking. He develops a critique of Left realism, Left culturalism, and Left pessimism from the standpoint of heterodox Marxism and Black radicalism. These traditions offer precious resources to relate cultural singularity and translocal solidarity, political autonomy and worldwide interdependence. They develop modes of immanent critique and forms of poetic knowledge to envision alternative futures that may already dwell within our world: traces of past ways of being, knowing, and relating that persist within an untimely present; or charged residues of unrealized possibilities that were the focus of an earlier generation’s dreams and struggles; or opportunities for dialectical reversals embedded in the contradictory tendencies of the given order.  
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:15 pm
Free

Lecture | Newspaper Ads Documenting the Search for Families During the Slave Trade


In the years after emancipation (1865), formerly enslaved Americans took out newspaper ads by the thousands, looking for family members and other loved ones separated during the domestic slave trade. Each ad tells the story of a family formed in slavery and torn apart by sale. Since 2017, Judith Giesberg, Professor of History at Villanova University, has directed Last Seen: Finding Family After Slavery, a project with a team of scholars working to identify, digitize, transcribe, and publish these ads from Black newspapers across America. The ads began appearing in the 1830s, proliferated after emancipation, and continued well into the 20th century. While documenting separation of Black families through the domestic slave trade, they also attest to the persistent efforts thousands of people made to reunite with loved ones. Parents, siblings and children searched for each other, and men and women looked for partners and spouses, providing names, describing events, and recalling last seen locations. All this information, crucial to genealogists and scholars alike, is published in an open-access form on the Last Seen website. The team initially aimed to publish 1,000 postbellum ads from a few newspapers, to help document the transition from slavery to freedom. The project now includes over 4,500 ads, spanning eight decades, from 275 newspapers. Its goal is to publish 5,000 ads, making them freely available to the descendants of enslaved people. Last Seen also offers lesson plans and other classroom resources for teachers (at all grade levels) to help teach the hard history of slavery.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Book Discussion | Edible Economics: A Hungry Economist Explains the World


For decades, a single, free-market philosophy has dominated global economics. But this intellectual monoculture is bland and unhealthy. Author and economist Ha-Joon Chang makes challenging economic ideas delicious by plating them alongside stories about food from around the world, using the diverse histories behind familiar food items to explore economic theory. For Chang, chocolate is a lifelong addiction, but more exciting are the insights it offers into postindustrial knowledge economies; and while okra makes Southern gumbo heart-meltingly smooth, it also speaks of capitalism's entangled relationship with freedom.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Book Discussion | I Have Some Questions for You: Murder at Boarding School (online)


Rebecca Makkai's novel has been named one of the Most Anticipated Books of 2023 by Time, NPR, USA Today, Elle, Newsweek, Salon, Bustle, and more. In this unforgettable novel, film professor and podcaster Bodie Kane is content to forget her tragic past—including the murder of her former roommate, Thalia Keith—until she is invited back to her old boarding school to teach a class. There, she is inexorably drawn back to the allegedly solved murder case and its increasingly apparent flaws, and falls down the very rabbit hole she was so determined to avoid.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
$5 suggested donation...

Book Discussion | The Night Travelers: Four Generations of Women in an Epic Novel


Four generations of women experience love, loss, war, and hope from the rise of Nazism to the Cuban Revolution and finally, the fall of the Berlin Wall in this sweeping novel from the bestselling author of The German Girl. Writer Armando Lucas Correa is an award-winning journalist, editor, author, and the recipient of several awards from the National Association of Hispanic Publications and the Society of Professional Journalism.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Talk | Photo Lecture: Telling Authentic Stories


A talk with Brooklyn-born fashion and portrait photographer Timothy Smith. Smith has worked with top international agencies featuring global brands such as Casio, ESPN x New York Marathon, Espy’s, Gucci x Far Fetch and UGG. In addition to his editorial work, Smith is passionate about curating personal photography projects that creatively embody rich culture and tell authentic stories of style and triumph. His aesthetic is described as timeless with a “polished grit vibe.”
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Discussion | The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright in NYC (Online)


Join architect, artist, art historian, writer, and professor, Anthony Alofsin for a presentation on Frank Lloyd Wright and early twentieth-century New York, revealing the city's role in establishing the career of America's most famous architect. With unprecedented access to the recently opened Wright archives held by Columbia University and the Museum of Modern Art, Alofsin's foundational research provides a crucial and innovative understanding of Wright's life, his career, and the conditions that enabled his success. The result is Alofsin's new book, Wright and New York: The Making of America's Architect, an intimate dual portrait of Frank Lloyd Wright and early twentieth-century Manhattan. Anthony Alofsin is internationally recognized as one of the world's leading authorities on the architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright and as an expert on modern architecture. He was also the consulting curator for the major retrospective Frank Lloyd Wright, Architect at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
   New York City, NY; NYC
7:00 pm
Free

Talk | The Life and Legacy of Artist Richard Bernstein


Explore the life and legacy of Richard Bernstein with his nephew Rory Trifon who now leads the estate. The artist's iconic vision as the creator of the legendary portraits for Warhol’s Interview magazine continues to impact visual culture with a myriad of exhibitions and creative collaborations. Beginning in the mid-60s Bernstein’s bold and innovative techniques captured the zeitgeist of the Pop Art movement. As one of the first artists to blur the line between commercial and fine art, his technicolor compositions inspired Warhol to dub him “my favorite artist.”
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Concert | Treasures from the Exilarte Center | Composers Forbidden and Suppressed by the Nazi Regime


A concert evening by the Exilarte Center with mezzo-soprano Josipa Bainac, flutist Ulrike Anton and pianist David Hausknecht, interpreting works by composers forced into exile by the Nazis. The program offers works by Walter Bricht, Julius Burger, Robert Furstenthal, and Wilhelm Grosz, the musical estates of whom are all located in the archive of the Exilarte Center. The performance will also include works by the Austrian-American composer Vally Weigl. Gerold Gruber, founder of exil.arte and chairman of the Exilarte Center will be the evening's moderator.
   New York City, NY; NYC
7:00 pm
Free

Classical Music | Piano Works by Bach and More


Peter Vinograde, piano. Featuring works by J.S. Bach, Ruth Crawford Seeger, and George Walker.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:30 pm
Free
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