Two public art displays are just a block away from each other in Lower Manhattan — both the work of renowned Japanese-American sculptor Isamu Noguchi.
They are the Red Cube at 140 Broadway and Liberty Street and the Sunken Garden at Chase Manhattan Bank Plaza in Lower Manhattan.
What You Need To Know
Noguchi’s New York is a new exhibition at the Noguchi Museum in Long Island City, Queens
It focuses on the relationship between the renowned Japanese-American sculptor Isamu Noguchi and NYC
The museum is celebrating its 40th anniversary
“People can be walking though it all the time and not realize it was Isamu Noguchi, so it’s wonderful just to remind people of the ideas that he had and the wonderful art that surrounds us,” said Amy Hau, director of the Noguchi Museum in Long Island City, Queens.
Hau was Noguchi’s longtime assistant and became director two years ago.
Noguchi’s relationship with the city is the focus of Noguchi’s New York, a new exhibit at the museum he established 40 years ago.
Noguchi first moved here in 1922 at the age of 17, and it would always be a place he considered home until his death in 1988.
“Isamu traveled a lot. I think most people who know of him think of him as an itinerant artist. He traveled everywhere, but New York was always his home base,” Hau said.
The exhibition includes sculptures and models for projects, including proposals for playgrounds that never came to fruition, with a series of animated videos showing how children may have used them.
Another possibility that never happened — designing play equipment for apes at the Bronx Zoo.
There are more than 50 works, including his early portrait busts of friends and colleagues, and a stage set for a Martha Graham dance production.
It’s all inside a museum that began as a way to provide more space for his studio, and wound up as what he called a gift to the city.
“We are just so proud here in Queens that he not only established the beginnings of a very wonderful collection, but giving it to the city in this way as a museum for all of us to enjoy,” Hau said.
As Noguchi once said, “I’m really a New Yorker. There’s no way out but to say that I’m just a New Yorker.”
The exhibition runs through Sept. 13. Head here to plan your visit.