Also Visit NY State Arts
Museum of the Moving Image is a one-of-a-kind family destination. Spanning two floors and 15,000 square feet, Behind the Screen, the museum’s core exhibition, is an innovative blend of more than 1,400 historical artifacts, commissioned art works, video clips and interactive exhibits that show how moving images are made, marketed and exhibited. Visitors are able to make animations, experiment with sound effects and create flipbooks of themselves, among other activities.
Family matinees and workshops are offered every weekend. Classic movie serials are screened daily in Tut’s Fever Movie Palace, a neo-Egyptian temple to Hollywood created by artists Red Grooms and Lysiane Luong. More than 32,000 students visit the museum each year in class trips.
The museum completed a major expansion and renovation, reopening its doors on January 15, 2011. Designed by architect Thomas Leeser, the project doubles the size of the building. It includes a complete redesign of the first floor and a new theater, screening room, new galleries and an education center.
See more at NYC-Arts
Ongoing This core exhibition reveals the skills, material resources and artistic decisions that go into making moving images. It also introduces visitors to the history of the moving image, from 19th-century optical toys to present-day film editing and post-production.
Paramount in the 1970s: A Celebration of Paramount's Centennial
Sat, June 2, 2012 – Sun, July 1, 2012 As part of the series Paramount in the 1970s, in honor of Paramount Studios' centennial, Museum of the Moving Image is screening "Grease" and "Paper Moon."