New York

Brooklyn Bridge in Blue Night Poster – New York City Art Prints

Blue New York City Poster Print print
Blue New York City Poster Print by made_in_atlantis

New York City and Brooklyn Bridge

Up through Brooklyn and along the great bridges there is continuous travel by trolley, motor, and foot, from early in the morning. Before nine o’clock the tide is at its flood. Around the New York exit of the Brooklyn Bridge the currents from many directions meet and mingle to make a veritable whirlpool of humanity that circles and eddies, foams and dashes, gets mixed up in a roaring swirl, then collapses in froth, dissipates, and finally trickles away in small streams to various points of the compass. Of course there is a blocking of traffic, and occasionally an accident, due to the rush off or on the cars, that produces confusion, excitement, loud protest, or angry denunciation. But this, though a not unusual occurrence, always leaves the pushed and hustled crowd more or less indifferent. Everyone knows that the thoroughfares are insufficient during “rush” hours; but they do not know how matters can be helped.

There is less of a crowd at the Williamsburgh Bridge because it is not the most direct route to the lower part of the city. It is one of the ways by which those who do business in the middle Broadway region travel, and it contributes its sum to the mass that each morning moves into the city; but it lends not directly to the congestion of the lower town. Still, though it is not a direct way, it adds something, like the ferries beneath it that keep coming and going from shore to shore. Time was when the ferries at South and Wall and Fulton streets were the only means of getting into the lower town from Brooklyn, and they were then, in the morning hours, often loaded with people to the gunwales; but since the building of the new bridges and the opening of the Battery tube, they have been used but little. Eventually their occupation will be gone completely.

Thousands upon thousands swarm into the city from Long Island. Bridges creak and ferries strain and tunnels roar with the weight of them; and the rasp and shuffle of their feet along the decks, along the bridge approaches, and along the flagged streets help make that deep undertone of the city to which the electric cars add the high note.

Yet Brooklyn and beyond is only one source of intake. The shores of the Upper Bay, Staten Island, Coney Island, send up their quota by steamer and ferry-boat; while from the Hudson, reaching far into the state, steamboats and railways are bringing down and disembarking more thousands to swell the throng. But the body of commuters that comes in from New Jersey is, perhaps, the greatest of them all.

Probably four hundred thousand people is a moderate estimate for those who daily travel into New York from across the Hudson. It is nearer, no doubt, to a million. The local trains on all the railways through New Jersey are crowded from seven to ten in the morning, and the double-decked ferries that push and snort and whistle their various ways from shore to shore look black with massed humanity. Again, as on the East River side, there are long tunnels under the Hudson, carrying passengers in swift electric cars; and these are lessening the crush on the ferries for the time being, but it will not be long before both tunnels and ferries are once more inadequate. The population in New Jersey that comes and goes daily to New York is increasing by thousands each year, and the greater the ease in getting to town, the better the traveling facilities, the more people there are willing enough to live in the country in preference to the crowded quarters of the upper city.

Blue New York City Poster Print, New York City Skyscrapers Brooklyn Bridge Posters, New York City Skyscrapers at Night, Blue Night Moonlight Effect NYC Skscrapers Photo Picture, Manhattan Financial District at Blue Night Pop Art Style Digital Photo Image

Statue of Liberty Pop Art Poster – American Pop Art Movement

Statue of Liberty Pop Art Poster print
Statue of Liberty Pop Art Poster by made_in_atlantis
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A glance at the map will show the peculiar disposition of the land. And it will also show hundreds of streets running east and west from river to river; but, at its widest part (Fourteenth Street), only seventeen avenues running north and south, and the majority of these not available for through traffic. The map, when taken in connection with the accepted idea of most New Yorkers that business must be transacted within a stone’s throw of Wall Street and living must be carried on in the neighborhood of the Central Park, will explain, readily enough, why there is so much friction during the “rush” hours.

Hundreds of thousands of human ants want to pass along the fence rail at the same time. The transportation of a million or more people a day from one point to another along the high ridge of crowded Manhattan is no easy task. They say in London or Paris or Berlin, with a little air of superior experience, that they do things differently over there. True enough, but the chances are they could not do this kind of thing at all.

The movement of these large bodies of people along the ridge begins early in the morning. From seven until ten o’clock one may notice the drift of people in the side streets toward the main thoroughfares. Men hurry along for a block or so and then disappear down a subway entrance, or up the steps of an elevated station, or they turn down an avenue to wait for a surface car.

The surface lines along Third, Fourth, Sixth, and Seventh Avenues are always crowded with passengers from Harlem down as far as Union Square; but they are not usually taken by people who are moving toward the lower part of the city. They are not fast enough and are subject to being held up at every street crossing. The crowd in them is “getting to business” in the up-town stores and offices, or else is coming down from the region of the park to shop or travel or keep some form of engagement.

New York City at Night Artwork Poster Print

New York Skyscrapers Poster Print print
New York Skyscrapers Poster Print by made_in_atlantis

The Battery, Central Park, the Empire State Building, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Natural History, Museum of the City of New York, New York Public Library, Radio City, Wall St., and many others.

If those who originally planned the streets of New York had possessed enough imagination to foresee the down-town habit of the present day, no doubt they would have arranged matters differently. They fancied that the city would be a great shipping center, a seaport; and that people would need many streets running toward the water on either side. Moreover, the long backbone of Manhattan, being high ground from which there was a general slope away toward the rivers, must have suggested that the natural drainage and sewerage of the city would be along the many ribs or streets running east and west. No one thought then that in a comparatively few years half the population would, morning and evening, be moving along the ridge of the island, crowding, clutching, struggling with one another, like so many ants traveling along the narrow top of a fence rail.

Poster of Japanese Great Wave Painting – Metropolitan Museum

The Great Wave at Kanagawa , c.1829

The Great Wave at Kanagawa , c.1829
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Painting from the series of thirty-six views of Mount Fuji by Katsushika Hokusai – Asian modern art collections – World famous Japanese artists – Japanese woodblock prints – Edo Period in Japan art masterpieces

In its palatial building on Fifth Avenue at 82nd Street The Metropolitan Museum of Art displays famous collections of architecture, sculpture, paintings, prints, arms and armor, and decorative arts in 325,811 square feet of exhibition floor space. The paintings fill thirty-two galleries and represent the chief national schools of art; special attention is given to paintings by American artists. Well known among the many works shown are a diptych with “The Crucifixion” and “The Last Judgment,” “The Horse Fair,” and “Washington Crossing the Delaware.” The decorative arts include woodwork, metalwork, ceramics, enamels, glass and textiles. The Pierpont Morgan collection of European decorative arts occupies a wing by itself; another entire wing, the gift of Robert W. de Forest, is devoted to early American art. In the latter, The American Wing, is a popular collection, which emphasizes the domestic architecture and decorative arts of the United States from the 17th century to the first quarter of the 19th century. Other collections represent ancient art, comprising Egyptian, Greek and Roman, Assyrian, and other antiquities, and the art of the Middle Ages and the Near and the Far East. The Bishop collection of jade is the finest outside the Orient.

New York City Skyscrapers Brooklyn Bridge Poster

New York is fast becoming the art center of the world. In addition to the museums there are always exhibits in privately owned art galleriesand other events of special interest. These are usually described in the art and music sections of the daily newspapers, particularly the ‘N. Y. Times’ and the ‘N. Y. Herald Tribune,’ and in such magazines as ‘Cue’ and ‘The New Yorker.’ The principal private art galleries are in the vicinity of East 57th St.; visitors are welcome.

Blue New York City Poster Print print
Blue New York City Poster Print by made_in_atlantis
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Blue New York City Poster Print – New York City Skyscrapers Brooklyn Bridge Posters
New York City Skyscrapers at Night – Blue Night Moonlight Effect NYC Skscrapers Photo Picture – Brooklyn Bridge, Manhattan Financial District at Blue Night Pop Art Style Digital Photo Image

Bronx – Concourse Plaza, 161st St. & Grand Concourse, Moderate sized; near Yankee Stadium; reasonable.

Brooklyn – St. George, 51 Clark St. Extremely large, commercial, residental and transient; swimming pool, all facilities; reasonable.

Broadway Manhattan New York City Photographic Print

Broadway Looking Towards Times Square, Manhattan, New York City, USA

Broadway Looking Towards Times Square, Manhattan, New York City, USA
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Broadway, the longest and most fantastic street in the world, starts its 16-mile journey from the tip of Manhattan as a shipping lane, moves a few blocks north to the Wall Street financial center, passes by the civic buildings of the city, and takes a diagonal course from Union Square through the needle-trades area between 34th and 39th Streets. Between 42d and 53d Streets, Broadway is the Great White Way —renowned as an amusement and theatrical center. From 53rd Street to Columbus Circle it cuts through Automobile Row, center of the auto retail trade. It changes its diagonal course at 79th Street to parallel the island’s high escarpment facing the Hudson River. Here it is lined with hotels, apartment houses, cafeterias, beauty salons, movie houses, and churches. At 114th Street it strikes a new note in the buildings of Columbia University, and another at 155th Street in a group of museums. From this point on it is a nondescript thoroughfare, ending as a semisuburban road as it approaches the city’s limits.

New York – New York City – Manhattan

Black & White New York City Skyscrapers & Cityscape Poster

New York City Poster Print print
New York City Poster Print by made_in_atlantis

For most visitors to New York City, the points of interest are the Brooklyn Bridge and Borough of Manhattan. The bridge is the subject of more paintings, etchings, photographs, writings, and conversations than any other famous bridge in the USA. Brooklyn Bridge was opened to traffic in 1883. The bridge affords a magnificent view of the East River, the harbor, and downtown Manhattan – the buildings of the financial district changing their hues during the different hours of the day.

Manhattan is he most explosive center of New York City. The borough is an island, shaped like an index finger pointing to the south. Manhattan streets are laid out on the gridiron plan, with avenues running north and south, and cross-town streets running east and west, from river to river.

Pennsylvania Station District New York Railroad Print

New York Pennsylvania Railroad

New York Pennsylvania Railroad
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Conveniently located near Pennsylvania Station and the popular 34th St. shopping region. Close to the wholesale garment district. Governor Clinton, 31st St. & Seventh Ave. Spanish speaking personnel; very large, commercial; reasonable. Sheraton McAlpin, 34th St. & Sixth Ave. Large, centrally located; moderate. New Yorker, 34th St. & Eight Ave. Enormous commercial hotel, always busy, a center of activity; moderate. Statler Hilton, 33rd St. & Seventh Ave. Extremely large, important commercially, a convention center; moderate.

New York Railroad Central System Ad Poster Giclee Print

New York, Central Railroad

New York, Central Railroad
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Atlantic Avenue Terminal (Long Island Railroad); Erie Railroad (serves western N.Y. State); Grand Central Terminal (New York Central, and N.Y. New Haven and Hartford P.R.) serving N.Y. State and points west; Hudson Terminal (service to New Jersey); Jersey Central (ferry service from Manhattan to terminal in New Jersey); Lackawanna Railroad (ferry service to New Jersey terminal); Pennsylvania Station Atlantic Coast Line (southern points) Lehigh Valley (Pennsylvania), Long Island RR., N.Y. and Long Branch, Pennsylvania RR., Seaboard Airline RR. (southern points) Southern RR.; Putnam Division (of the New York Central RR.) serving N.Y. State.

Modern Art New York Skyscrapers Abstract Painting Stretched Canvas Print

Flatiron Skyline

Flatiron Skyline
Vassileva, Silvia
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New York City Hotels: Although the city is well supplied with hotels, rooms are often scarce. Always write or wire for a reservation and have it confirmed by the hotel, if at all possible. Checkout time in most hotels is during the afternoon, and occasionally a room will not be ready if you arrive early in the day. Rooms with twin beds are more expensive than rooms with a double bed.