Category: museums
Killer Heels: The Art of the High-Heeled Shoe 9/10 – 2/15
Walking in high heels takes practice – some could say it literally is an art form. So it is no wonder the Brooklyn Museum opened the long awaited exhibit on the history of the high heel.
Killer Heels: the Art of the High-Heeled Shoes explores the symbolism of the shoe and features shoes from sixteenth century Italy to present day. This exhibit will be on display from September 10th, 2014 to February 15th, 2015. Check out shoes designed by Christian Louboutin, Manolo Blahnik, Alexander McQueen, and Vivienne Westwood.
Killer Heels: The Art of the High-Heeled Shoes
September 10th, 2014 – February 15th, 2015
Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway
Brooklyn, New York 11238-6052
PUNK: From Chaos to Couture at the Met 5/9 – 8/14
After the Alexander McQueen restropective, the Met is taking more alternative and fashionable approaches to art. With it’s latest exhibit on Impressionism and now the upcoming exhibit that everyone has been waiting for: PUNK: Chaos to Couture.
This exhibit examines the roots of punk fashion and how it has effected today’s high fashion. From DIY to the runway and London to New York, punk is the rebellious influence that refuses to go away.
Definitely an exhibit where you can totally look but definitely should not touch.
Punk: Chaos to Couture
May 9 – August 14, 2013
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
1000 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10028
Front Row: Chinese American Designers/Shanghai Glamour: New Women 1910s-40s 4/26 – 9/29
![]() |
Anna Sui S/S 2013 |
Richard Chai. Prabal Gurung. Peter Som. Anna Sui. Vivienne Tam. Alexander Wang. Vera Wang. All familiar names in the fashion industry – but did you know they are all Asian-American? The Museum of Chinese in America presents two exhibits that examines Chinese-American influence on the industry in both history and present day.
Front Row: Chinese American Designers looks at fashion designers today and interconnection between the garment district, Chinatown, and outsourcing to China. The exhibit will examine those who broke into the industry during the 1980s, like Anna Sui, and how it’s grown tremendously with Michelle Obama wearing designer dresses by Prabal Gurung.
“Front Row: Chinese American Designers” and “Shanghai Glamour: New Women 1910s-40s”
The Museum of Chinese in America
215 Centre Street
(212) 619-4785
“Good Taste/Bad Taste” at the Met 6/17
![]() |
image via MTV Style |
The Met’s Costume Institute is one of the highlights of going to the Metropolitan Museum if you a fashion fanatic. While the Met Gala is out of reach to most, the Costume’s symposiums are more approachable. This year’s exhibit is “Schiaparelli and Prada: Impossible Conversations” – a comparison exhibition of the works of Elsa Schiaparelli and Miuccia Prada.
On Sunday June 17th at 2PM the Met will host a discussion of a similar nature between Iris Apfel, quirky fashion icon, and Tavi Gevinson, editor-in-chief of Rookiemag. “Good Taste/Bad Taste” will be about what style and chic means today. Panel will be moderated by the Judith Thurman, New Yorker writer.
Panel is free with museum and admission.
Unlike Schiaparelli and Prada, Gevinson and Apfel have met before but this symposium will certainly be a meeting of the eccentrically styled minds.
Good Taste/Bad Taste
June 17th, 2012
2PM
Metropolitan Museum
1000 Fifth Avenue (at 82nd Street)
New York, NY 10028
212-535-7710
Creatures of the Light: Bioluminesence 3/29/12 – 1/6/13
![]() |
Jellyfish at the Monterey Bay Aquarium – 2010 |
When I was younger I was really fascinated by the deep ocean and the sea life you couldn’t see with the naked eye. My favorite was the angler fish with it’s glowing fishing rod. For those who aren’t familiar with this fish perhaps you remember the scene in Finding Nemo when Dory and Marlin chase after the scuba mask. The fish with the terrifying jaws and the glowing antenna was the angler fish.
On Saturday, March 31st, the American Museum of Natural History presents an exhibit about all the organisms who have glowing personalities. It will explore why they glow and for what purposes – if it’s to lure food, scare predators, attract a mate, or simply just for show.
This exhibit is going to be around until early 2013, but if you are eager like I am see it early before the crowds turn into mobs. “Creatures of the Light” is an ongoing exhibit, so all you need pay is general admission.
Princess Jellyfish outfits not required.
Creatures of the Light: Nature’s Bioluminesence
March 31, 2012 – January 6, 2013
American Museum of Natural History
Central Park West at 79th Street
New York, NY, 10024
212-769-5100
The Little Museum That Could – South Street Seaport Museum
![]() |
Signs in the window in case you forgot where you were. |
If you’re not familiar with the Seaport Museum, you should be familiar with the drama about it’s tragic story and eventual rescue by the Museum of the City of New York (MCNY). To sum it up, the Seaport Museum is one of the many museums in NYC, but the only one that explores its nautical trade history.
Friday I decided to check it out and I was blown away. First of all, I had heard about the museum being shut down due to money issues and lack of funds. Not to mention the rumors about it being sold for prime realty. And I was ecstatic as the rest of New York when the Museum of the City of New York took over.
![]() |
Metal baits hanging like artwork. |
For model boat lovers they have plenty of ships in bottles and larger replicas on display.
![]() |
It wouldn’t be a Seaport Museum without ships in bottles. |
![]() |
Close-up of one of them |
What impressed me the most was how MCNY treated the museum. As far as my knowledge and pre-MCNY, the museum could not afford renovations much less upkeep. Post-MCNY they decided to take its Miss Havisham’s appearance and make it part of the museum itself. You go and notice the walls, the doors, the windows, and the glass paneling (to preserve the old construction), in addition to the exhibits on display.
![]() |
Graffiti protected behind glass. |
![]() |
One of many doors that no longer serve function. |
![]() |
Local designers work |
![]() |
This is selection is out of 2500 in the Seaport’s collection. |
![]() |
Photography by local artists. |
![]() |
They even include designers’ work on display. |
![]() |
Reminds me alot like h. Naoto Gramm |
![]() |
Original building work intact with a ghostly mannequin. |
The museum itself is made of 3 floors where each one feels like a maze, zigzagging in rooms like a kid exploring the attic with a flashlight. The exhibits were a mix of the Seaport’s relics and collections, there artifacts from the Fulton Fish Market, a room with a “small” selection of tools used by workers when the port was bustling with ships.
![]() |
Some of the many tools used in shipbuilding. |
![]() |
Old-fashioned dryer. |
![]() |
Antiques of the tea trade. |
![]() |
Relics from the Fulton Fish Market. |
There is also a photo gallery on the 5th floor of a selection of photos taken during Occupy Wall Street when it was at Zucotti Park.
I could just be fangirl over the organic curation of the museum or it was really just that cool to know it was originally a hotel built in 1850. The best part? Admission is only $5 and can be used at the Museum of the City of New York (within 7 days of course).
The Seaport Museum
12 Fulton Street
New York, NY 10038
Artsy Fanart – New York Museum of Conan Art 10/31 – 11/3
![]() |
Pencillism – Get it? |
![]() |
Typography |
![]() |
Color by Numbers |
![]() |
Conan Amigurumi |
![]() |
These are not your mother’s acrylics. |
![]() |
Conan Barbera |
![]() |
Sleep tight with this night light |
![]() |
A how-to guide to Conan’s intro. |
Did you go? What was your favorite piece? Did you get a poster (if so, I’m jealous).
New York Museum of Conan
October 31 – November 3, 2011
Time Warner Center
10 Columbus Circle
2nd Floor
New York, NY 10019
Fashion in the Middle Ages 5/20 – 9/4
Lolitas are in general fascinated by fashion. That’s a given. But while the majority of the community is enamored by Rococo periods, there’s no harm in studying further into the past.
Starting on May 20, the Morgan Library and Museum presents “Illuminating Fashion: Dress in the Art of Medieval France and the Netherlands.” The exhibit covers over 200 years of fashion before the French Renaissance, and features full-size replicas of clothing illustrated in the manuscripts.
The exhibit aims at those interested in the fashion aspect of medival dress — how it was worn, by whom, what was used for everyday, what was worn for special occasions, etc.
The Morgan has a whole line up of events in honor of the exhibit.
- The Morgan’s Spring Family Fair
. Sing and dance like the French and English did 500 years ago. Workshops include making your own chaperons and hats, fabric dying using traditional methods, and even try on costumes inspired by the exhibit’s own manuscripts. Or if you prefer, come in your own costume.
Saturday, May 21, 2-5PM - Becket (1964). Watch the famous friendship of King Henry II and Thomas Becket on screen.
Friday, June 10, 7PM - From the Set to the Runway. Deborah Nadoolman Landis and Valerie Steele discuss the difference between costume and fashion. Very good opportunity to those to who want to learn the best way to explain Lolita fashion to others.
Wednesday, June 15, 6:30PM - Gallery Talk Illuminating Fashion: Dress in the Art of Medieval France and the Netherlands
. Roger S. Wieck, the curator behind the exhibit, takes museum goers through the exhibit.
Friday, June 24, 7PM - Restoration (1995). A biopic on Robert Merivel, King Charles II’s favored physician from his journey serving the king to tending the sick during the Great Plague of London.
Friday, July 8, 7PM - The Leopard (1963). Based on the Italian bestseller by Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa, The Prince of Salina deals with Italian unification and family issues during the 1860s.
Friday, July 22, 7PM
Illuminating Fashion: Dress in the Art of Medieval France and the Netherlands
.
May 20 – September 9, 2011
The Morgan Library and Museum
225 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10016
212-685-0008
Savage Beauty Opens Today at the Met
Amazing artists always leave the world too soon. But like all great artist that cut their lives short, the legacy of work they leave behind becomes ever more precious.
Alexander McQueen was one of those great innovators of fashion.
Today marks the opening of “Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty” exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The exhibit features pieces from his post graduate collection to his more recent additions — including his final collection.
There are around 100 pieces will be on display, all illustrating his evolution from his student beginnings to signature designs he’s most known for (i.e. bumster trousers, origami frock coat).
Long live McQueen!
Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty
May 4 – July 31, 2011
Metropolitan Museum of Art
1000 Fifth Avenue