ABSTRACT

Fueled by a flourishing capitalist economy, undergirded by advancements in architectural design and urban infrastructure, and patronized by growing bourgeois and elite classes, New York’s built environment was dramatically transformed in the 1870s and 1880s. This book argues that this constituted the formative period of New York’s modernization and cosmopolitanism—the product of a vital self-consciousness and a deliberate intent on the part of its elite citizenry to create a world-class cultural metropolis reflecting the city’s economic and political preeminence. The interdisciplinary essays in this book examine New York’s late nineteenth-century evolution not simply as a question of its physical layout but also in terms of its radically new social composition, comprising the individuals, institutions, and organizations that played determining roles in the city’s cultural ascendancy.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

part I|56 pages

Creating the Art and Cultural Capital

chapter 1|24 pages

Looking West From the Empire City

National Landscape and Visual Culture in Gilded Age New York

chapter 2|15 pages

The François Premier Style in New York

The William K. and Alva Vanderbilt House

part II|89 pages

Institutionalizing Art and Culture in the Capital

chapter 4|17 pages

The Lenox Library

New York’s Lost Treasure House

chapter 5|15 pages

Publishing and Promoting a New York City Art World

Scribner’s Illustrated Monthly, 1870–1881

chapter 6|17 pages

An Unsung Hero

Henry Gurdon Marquand and His 1889 Gift to The Metropolitan Museum of Art

chapter 7|17 pages

Metropolitan, Inc.

Public Subsidy and Private Gain at the Genesis of the American Art Museum

chapter 8|21 pages

Un-Domesticating the Ideal

William Wetmore Story and The Metropolitan Museum of Art

part III|51 pages

Depicting the Capital in Art and Culture

chapter 9|16 pages

Before the Farragut

Who Was Augustus Saint-Gaudens?

chapter 10|13 pages

Crossing Broadway

New York and the Culture of Capital in the Late Nineteenth Century

chapter 11|16 pages

Bulls, Bears, and Buildings

William Holbrook Beard’s Wall Street

chapter |4 pages

Afterword