I F YOU HAVEN’T GOT A LOT OF MONEY IN NEW YORK, THEN YOU’D BETTER HAVE A LOT OF TIME; AND IF YOU HAVEN’T GOT A LOT OF TIME, THEN YOU’D BETTER HAVE A LOT OF MONEY
From Niagara Falls we took the relaxing slow trip with Amtrak down to New York. A big comfortable train with nobody on it because everyone drives in the US. Emerged from deep underground at Penn Station onto the corner of 8th Avenue and 31st Street, to our long awaited first glimpse of Manhattan - litter, dirt, noise and chaos, but it was exciting. We needn’t have been concerned about finding our hotel, spotted it straight away on 8th and 30th.
We set off to explore and found ‘The Chelsea Hotel’ in Greenwich Village. It is still full of wacky art, but undergoing management changes to get rid of it‘s eccentric residents. After commenting on a Brett Whitely hanging behind the front desk, the manager, realising where we were from, took us into a back room and showed us another Brett Whitely. It was leaning ignominiously against the wall in a corner, behind various pieces of junk, awaiting a new space to be hung. Over half a million dollars just plonked there.
We had been advised that the wait to ascend The Empire State building was least during the evening, so we got in line. First there was a queue to get in the front door, more a melee, then up stairs to the queue for the security screening (20 mins), buying a ticket queue (20 mins), queue for the lift queue (20 mins) which only went to the 80th floor, another queue for the second lift to the 86th floor (20 mins). Then all we had left was the queue to get down queue! It took two hours to get up and back and no escape or seating once you started. We could have bought a ticket outside the front door at double the price (US$40 each) which by passed all the queues, hence the above quote.
It is debatable whether the view was worth the 2 hour ordeal, it was freezing on top, but it’s a view that can be found nowhere else.
New York is full of litter on the streets, dirt and grot in the underground (we were unfortunate to need the use of a lift in which someone had urgently defecated), and large piles of big plastic bags outside businesses waiting to be collected. Wendy was in turmoil and attempted to clean up the city.
Visited most or all of the must-sees, Wall Street, the Stock Exchange (with it‘s high security perimeter fence - and there‘s probably nothing inside anyway),
Ground Zero, Central Park, Battery Park, Bowling Green Park, walked over the Brooklyn Bridge, wandered around the shops in Soho and took a ferry to the Statue of Liberty.
We visited the Guggenheim Museum on 5th Avenue, a beautiful building but not much art on show as half was closed preparing for a Kandinsky exhibition. The Metropolitan Museum of Art could justify a week of visits, but we saw some amazing impressionist art in a few hours, including one of Van Gogh‘s ‘Self Portraits‘. Our last visit was the Museum of Modern Art, where we saw Van Gogh’s ’Starry Night’, Jackson Pollocks, Matisse, Miro, Picasso, Rothko and others.
Maybe the Chelsea hotel owner didn't know that the Brett Whitelys now have considerable value in Australia.
ReplyDeleteOh he knew alright! What a sacrilege.
ReplyDelete