Catalogue for part 1 of the 1928 annual exhibition of painting and sculpture by members of the Whitney Studio Club, held March 6-29, [1928] at the 10 West 8th Street. Title taken from cover. For part 2, see: Thirteenth annual painting exhibition.
An image of Park Avenue looking north from 33rd Street, depicting Park Avenue Tunnel that passes under Park Avenue and leads uptown towards Grand Central Terminal. MetLife Building, originally called the Pan Am Building, in background.
Bronze statue of Minerva and the Bell Ringers that is part of the James Gordon Bennett Memorial in Herald Square. The statue was sculpted by Antonin Jean Carles and was once part of the New York Herald Building.
Building designed by the architectural firm Warren & Wetmore in 1913; converted to an apartment building in 1965. The Empire State Building is featured in the background.
Commemorative plaque with the inscription: Here the motion picture began on the night of April 23, 1896 on this site in Koster & Bial’s Music Hall Thomas A. Edison with the Vitascope first projected a moving picture.
Detail of a lion water spout on façade of building. In 1922 the Manhattan Opera House was purchased by the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite of Free Masonry. The Masons built a new building façade with the inscription "Ancient Accepted Scottish...
Exterior view of Keens Steakhouse, which was formerly the Lambs Club, the oldest social club for professionals in the performing arts in the United States.
Exterior view of Port Authority Trans-Hudson (PATH) station at 32nd Street with the Manhattan Mall in the background, formerly the Gimbels flagship store.
Exterior view of the Manhattan Center. First built as the Manhattan Opera House by Oscar Hammerstein I in 1906. In 1922 the Manhattan Opera House was purchased by the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite of Free Masonry. The Masons built a new building...