Non-SCA links and events of interest to Østgarðrians

In the NYC area...

Upcoming Museum Events in the NYC Area
Our digest of exhibitions and talks that we think might interest SCA types (updated Sept 2, 2004)
Our digest of concerts that we think might interest SCA types
The Delacorte Theater
puts on free theatre productions in Central Park, often Shakespeare.
The Christmas Revels
a show every December at Symphony Space; often with a medieval or Renaissance theme. A number of Østgarðrians are usually involved, either on stage or in the costume shop.
Metropolitan Museum of Art
including the Cloisters, the medieval-art annex building which is itself built largely from pieces of medieval European buildings.
The Pierpont Morgan Library

J.P. Morgan, in addition to being a famous financier, also collected lots of antique books (including at least one Gutenberg Bible) and medieval and Renaissance works of art. The Morgan library, acting as both a museum and a center for scholarly research, displays these items as well as travelling exhibitions. See CORSAIR, the Library's on-line research resource.

Lincoln Center
which sometimes produces concerts of early music.
American Museum of Natural History
occasionally has something of particular interest to SCA types, e.g. the "Nature of Diamonds" exhibit and the recent showing of a Leonardo da Vinci scientific manuscript
The Frick Collection
which sometimes has exhibits of interest to medievalists; see Past Exhibitions at the Frick for some examples.
The New York Public Library, which is not only one of the top research libraries in the world (see Renier's article on the research collections), but also sometimes has museum-style exhibitions of interest to medievalists.
Metropolitan Transit Authority
how you're going to get to many of these things
Roads of Greater New York City
the other way you might get to many of these things (includes information on roads that were proposed but never built).

Not in the NYC area

The Higgins Armory Museum in Worcester, MA
specializes in the history of arms and armor.
The Philadelphia Museum of Art
has an impressive collection of medieval art and architectural details, displayed in a manner that'll remind you of the Cloisters. And check out the gargoyles on the outside of the building.
The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, DC
frequently has interesting exhibits about 16th-century life.
The Library of Congress
in Washington, DC. Sometimes has exhibits of interest to SCAdians, like one on Dance Instruction Manuals ca. 1490-1920.
The Walters Art Gallery
in Baltimore, MD. The Walters has an internationally renowned collection of medieval art and sculpture.

In cyberspace

The British Library: Treasures of the British Library
Some items, like the Beowulf ms, are available only on CD-ROM; others, like the Lindisfarne Gospels and the Luttrell Psalter, can be read page by page, with zoom and commentary, from touch-screens at the Library; and a few are available page by page on the Web (requires ShockWave).
Mechanical Marvels: Invention in the Age of Leonardo
Drawings, working models, and interactive computer animations of many of the inventions of Brunelleschi (including the winches and hoists he invented to build his famous Dome), Leonardo da Vinci, and their contemporaries.
Leonardo's Codex Leicester
A manuscript in Leonardo da Vinci's hand, largely on topics we would now call civil or mechanical engineering.
The Nature of Diamonds
Diamonds don't seem to have been used much in medieval Europe, but this exhibit included a few fine examples, as well as splendid artifacts from the Renaissance through the 20th century.
The Getty Museum in California
... has scanned in pictures of a number of their artifacts, paintings, manuscripts, etc.

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This page last modified at 11:26:52 AM EST on Mon, Jan 3, 2005.

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