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The
mission of the National Arts Club is to stimulate, foster and
promote public interest in the arts and educate the American people
in the fine arts. |
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The
National Arts Club was founded
in 1898 by Charles de Kay.
Charles de Kay was the literary and art critic for The New York
Times for 18 years. He and a group of distinguished artists and
patrons conceived of agathering place for artists, patrons and audiences
in all the arts. American art at the turn of the century had begun
to look inward for inspiration, rather than to Europe, and the American
art world was alive with energy. As The National Arts Club moved into
its first home in a townhouse on 34th Street, American art had found
a new home. |
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The
National Arts Club is located
in the historic Tilden Mansion.
15 Gramercy Park was built in the 1840's and its original flat-front,
iron-grilled appearance matched the style of the houses still maintained
on the west side of Gramercy Park. Samuel Tilden acquired 15 Gramercy
Park in the 1860's, and in the 1870's gave the house a massive overhaul.
Tilden hired Calvert Vaux, a famed architect and one of the designers
of Central Park to "victorianize" the facade with sandstone,
bay windows and Gothic Ornamentation. John LaFarge created stained
glass ceilings for the inside of the mansion, and Italian wood carvers
made the fireplaces. Glass master Donald MacDonald wrought a unique
stained glass dome for the building. All of this prompted architect
Philip |
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Johnson to call the mansion, "among the most beautiful
in New York." Spencer Trask and the Board of Governors acquired
the Tilden Mansion in 1906 as the new home for the National Arts Club. |
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The
Tilden Mansion is both a designated New York Landmark
and
a National Historic Landmark.
In the 1960's, New York declared 15 Gramercy Park
South a New York Landmark, and in 1976, the Federal government
declared it a National Historic Landmark. The Tilden Mansion
continues to inspire artists from around the world. NAC
member Albinus Elskus undertook a restoration of the MacDonald
dome in the 1970's, and recently, in 2000, Danish sculptor
Tycho Flore created a piece inspired by and from the same
material as the Calvert Vaux facade. |
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The
National Arts Club admitted women
on a full and equal basis
from its inception.
The National Arts Club has
a long history of exclusivity through inclusivity. Charles
Spencer Trask, Charles Rollison Lamb, Charles de Kay and
the other co-founders recognized the importance of many
female artists and saw no reason to treat them differently
from male artists. The National Arts Club continues its
tradition of inclusivity by welcoming minority artists and
fighting for the rights of minority students. |
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The
Club's Membership has included three presidents,
and some
of the most important artists and arts patrons in America.
Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson and Dwight
D. Eisenhower were all Members of the National Arts Club.
Among the distinguished painters who have been Members are
Robert Henri, Frederic Remington, William |
Merritt Chase
and Cecilia Beaux. Sculptors have included Saint-Gaudens,
Daniel Chester French, Anna Hyatt Huntington and Paul Manship.
Many renowned literary figures have also been members. The
National Arts Club is proud of its early recognition of
new media artforms, like photography, film and digital media,
and counts Alfred Stieglitz as one of its early Members.
Musicians Victor Herbert and Walter Damrosch were Members,
as were architects Stanford White and George B. Post. The
Dramatic Arts are currently represented by Members Martin
Scorcese, Ethan Hawke, Dennis Hopper, Robert Redford and
Uma Thurman. |
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The
National Arts Club fosters young artists
with a number of
awards and scholarships.
Many of the committees
award scholarships to young artists, writers and singers. The National
Arts Club Opera Competition attracts international applications.
The Club is as committed to nurturing young talent as it
is to recognizing established artists.
The
National Arts Club is run by volunteers.
The
National Arts Club hosts some of the most exciting events
in New Yorkart unveilings, award dinners, film screenings,
lectures, dances and anything else you can think of. All
of these programs, as well as the scholarship competitions,
exhibitions and other activities are coordinated by the
Membership as volunteers who act out of their love for the
arts and the Club, and thus broaden the public's understanding
of our broad cultural community. |
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