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Sept 2, 2010

NYC Arts: The Complete Guide to Art and Culture

Also Visit NY State Arts

Kid Fun in Grown-Up Museums

Art museums are smart. They know that in terms of creativity and imagination, kids have a lot in common with the artists featured on their walls. To acclimate kids to new ways of looking and discussing what they see, grown-up museums are tailoring programs to young people and their families. It's a great way to groom future museum-goers and artists. 

American Folk Art Museum

American Folk Art Museum

45 West 53rd Street
(between Fifth Avenue and Avenue of the Americas)
New York, NY  10019
Tel: (212) 265-1040
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Free for members, $8.00 seniors, students, $12.00 general.
Free for children under 12
Tues – Thurs, Sat, Sun: 10:30 am – 5:30 pm
Fri: 11 am – 7:30 pm

The American Folk Art Museum is one of the leading institutions dedicated to the preservation and exhibition of American folk art. Its permanent collection of 5,000 objects, many of them masterpieces, offers a telling glimpse of the social and historical settings in which they were created.

On view any given day at the museum are fine examples of portraits, landscapes, seascapes, trade signs, weather vanes, whirligigs, decorated tin, furniture, pottery, decoys, quilts and other objects dating from the late-1700s to the present. Several short-term shows are mounted annually. Exhibition-related lectures, gallery tours and workshops help visitors acquire a fuller understanding of the cultural, social and historical context of the works.

The Henry Darger Study Center, established by the museum in 2000 to foster open inquiry and multidisciplinary research into the life and work of the self-taught artist (1892-1973), houses all four of his manuscripts and more than two dozen double-sided paintings, as well as approximately 3,000 items from Darger’s archive of ephemera and source material. 

The museum, founded in 1963, is next to the Museum of Modern Art on West 53rd Street, and also has a branch location at Lincoln Square.

Free Admission Friday Evening
Free admission 5:30-7:30 pm on Friday evenings.
  • Directions: Subway: E, M to Fifth Avenue - 53rd Street; B, D, F to 47-50th Streets - Rockefeller Center
    Bus: M1, M2, M3, M4 to 53rd Street
  • Disability Access: Fully accessible. Two wheelchairs available for use; inquire at the admission desk.
  • Disability Assistance: Contact the education department, (212) 265-1040, x381, or grouptours@folkartmuseum.org, for more information and to reserve tours.
    Hearing: American Sign Language interpretation for gallery tours and auditorium programs is available by request with one-month advance notice. Auditorium has infrared assistive listening devices, inquire at the admission desk.
    Vision: Tours with verbal imaging and tours of touch objects are available by request with one-month advance notice. Large-print copies of labels and wall texts available at the admission desk.
  • Gift Shops: Handmade and one-of-a-kind objects, also books on folk and decorative arts; open all week, Mon 11 am-6 pm; Tues-Sun 11 am-7:30 pm
  • On-Site Food: Cafe serves hot and cold snacks and beverages; open Mon-Thurs 10:30 am-4:30 pm, Fri 10:30 am-7:30 pm, Sat-Sun 11:30 am-4:30 pm
  • On-Site Parking: On streets or in commercial lots nearby

See more at NYC ARTS

American Folk Art Museum Listings

  • 9/11 National Tribute Quilt

    Ongoing The quilt was conceived and constructed by the small quilt club, Steel Quilters of United States Steel Corporation. The quilt measures eight feet high by 30 feet wide, and is constructed of 3,466 blocks in six panels.

  • Folk Art

    Ongoing On view any given day at the museum are fine examples of portraits, landscapes, seascapes, trade signs, weather vanes, whirligigs, decorated tin, furniture, pottery, decoys, quilts and other objects dating from the late-1700s to the present.

  • Malcah Zeldis: New York Artist

    Fri, Jan 8, 2010 – Mon, Oct 18, 2010 Zeldis' scenes of everyday life and biblical and historical subjects are often laced with autobiographical elements. Audacious in her color palette, Zeldis’ hues vibrate with intensity in the 13 paintings on view.

  • All American Folk Art Museum Listings