The 2017 Bergdorf Goodman holiday windows celebrate the American
Museum of Natural History, New-York Historical Society, New York Botanical Garden,
Brooklyn Academy of Music, and other local cultural institutions.
Allison Meier
The American Museum of Natural History window at Bergdorf Goodman
(all photos by the author for Hyperallergic)
Rhinestone-adorned dinosaur skeletons, a neon symphony, and a fiber
art herbarium are among the decadent holiday window displays at Bergdorf
Goodman. The Manhattan shopping hub is always a visual bacchanal this time of
year, and for 2017, it’s celebrating seven New York cultural institutions in a
series of exuberant installations. Titled “To New York with Love,” the windows
include tributes to the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH), Brooklyn
Academy of Music (BAM), Museum of the Moving Image (MoMI), the New York
Botanical Garden (NYBG), New York Philharmonic (NYPO), New-York Historical
Society (N-YHS), and UrbanGlass.
The windows, unveiled on November 14 and overseen by David Hoey,
Bergdorf Goodman’s senior director for visual presentation, have flashy fashion
at their center, whether the Zac Posen-gowned conductor of the layered neon
instruments in the NYPO window, or the glitzy Halpern dress surrounded by
gleaming AMNH dinosaurs. Yet it’s fun to see some of the city’s influential
cultural institutions being given such a glamorous treatment, especially as several
are perhaps lesser known to the holiday tourists. UrbanGlass has sculptures in
a smaller window made in their Brooklyn glass art studio by Keith Sonnier,
Lynda Benglis, Rob Wynne, and Rob Pruitt, and MoMI’s window has a midcentury
cinematic feel, with selections from black-and-white films cycling beneath faux
icicles.
The N-YHS window has a huge assembly of papier-mâché takes on
objects from their collections, all crafted by artist Mark Gagnon, and presided
over by a sharply dressed anthropomorphic bull and bear. There’s a small label
in one corner, so you can connect the colorful interpretations to the real
objects at N-YHS, whether the 1899 “Diana of the Tower” by Augustus Saint-Gaudens,
or the 1900-06 dragonfly table lamp by Tiffany. The NYBG window is similarly
dynamic, with soft sculptures, embroidery, felting, and other fiber art by
Burke & Pryde, all representing different flora specimens. All the flowers,
trees, and other plants are identified by their Latin names, and some are
lodged in fiber books, a reference to the NYBG’s incredible herbarium……………….
https://hyperallergic.com/413748/bergdorf-windows-celebrate-cultural-institutions/
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