A tourist in New York City with photo camera. MoMa spectators.
Los
museos permiten, cada vez más, el uso de la cámara de fotos dentro de
sus instalaciones. Es por tanto un buen lugar para fotografiar.
No
solo las obras de arte o espacios del museo se pueden fotografiar, el
público forma parte de la foto en algunos casos, en otros, como en estas
fotos, es el público, anónimo, el protagonista de la imagen.
Las fotos se realizaron en el gran hall de entrada de uno a otro lado.
In the late 1920s, three progressive and influential patrons of the
arts, Miss Lillie P. Bliss, Mrs. Cornelius J. Sullivan, and Mrs. John D.
Rockefeller, Jr., perceived a need to challenge the conservative
policies of traditional museums and to establish an institution devoted
exclusively to modern art.
In 2006, MoMA completed the largest and most ambitious building project
in its history to that point. This project nearly doubled the space for
MoMA's exhibitions and programs. Designed by Yoshio Taniguchi, the new
MoMA features 630,000 square feet of new and redesigned space. The Peggy
and David Rockefeller Building on the western portion of the site
houses the main exhibition galleries, and The Lewis B. and Dorothy
Cullman Education and Research Building—the Museum's first building
devoted solely to these activities—on the eastern portion of the site
provides over five times more space for classrooms, auditoriums, teacher
training workshops, and the Museum's expanded Library and Archives.
These two buildings frame the enlarged Abby Aldrich Rockefeller
Sculpture Garden
R201506Recuerde que haciendo click en la foto se ve a mayor tamaño