The Frick Collection Visit The Frick Collection, your home for art from the Renaissance to the late nineteenth century Advance timed tickets are required Members visit free, with no reservations!
Visit Museum - Frick Collection Visit The Frick Collection at 1 East 70th Street Timed tickets are recommended Members visit free, with no reservations!
Art | The Frick Collection Support The Frick Collection Your generosity sustains our world-class public programs, research, and conservation efforts DONATE
About The Frick Collection Welcome to The Frick Collection Internationally recognized as a premier museum and research center, the Frick is known for its distinguished Old Master paintings and outstanding examples of European sculpture and decorative arts The Collection The collection originated with Henry Clay Frick (1849–1919), who bequeathed his home, paintings, sculptures, and decorative arts to the public for
Tickets | The Frick Collection The Frick offers a wide variety of engaging online and in-person educational programs, world-class concerts, and lectures by artists, art historians, and other cultural figures
Explore the Frick Collection Frick Publications Since 1968 Browse the Frick's celebrated Diptych series, exhibition catalogues, collection handbooks, and more EXPLORE
Exhibitions | The Frick Collection Explore current, upcoming, and past exhibitions of The Frick Collection, now reopened in its newly renovated Fifth Avenue buildings
Visitor Guide | The Frick Collection Support The Frick Collection Your generosity sustains our world-class public programs, research, and conservation efforts DONATE
Renovation and Enhancement Project - Frick Collection The Frick’s special exhibitions are acclaimed for their quality, originality, and intellectual rigor A suite of three new galleries on the museum's first floor provides dedicated space for special exhibitions, allowing—for the first time—works from the permanent collection to remain on view alongside loaned objects, instead of being
Finding Aid for the Art Collecting Files of Henry . . . - Frick Collection In the fall of 1953, Helen Clay Frick, Henry Clay Frick's daughter, split his art collection files, sending selected materials to The Frick Collection for curatorial use, while retaining approximately eight linear feet of files related to her father's art collecting activities