The Guggenheim Museum New York City Architectural Model - Howard Architectural ModelsPresented by Howard Models. Fabricated by City Models Ltd.
      
        - Frank Lloyd Wright's landmark museum  is visited as much for its famous   architecture as it is for its superlative art. Opened in 1959, shortly after   Wright died, the Guggenheim is an icon of modern architecture, designed   specifically to showcase  and complement modern art. Outside the curvaceous   building, Wright's attention to detail is  evident in the porthole-like windows on its south side, the circular pattern of the sidewalk,   and the smoothness of the hand-plastered concrete. Inside, under a 92 foot high   glass dome, a quarter-mi-long ramp spirals down past changing exhibitions.
 The museum   has strong holdings in Vasily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Marc Chagall, Pablo Picasso, and Robert Mapplethorpe. In its Tower galleries, double-high ceilings   accommodate extra large art pieces, and the Tower's fifth-floor   sculpture terrace has a extraordinary view overlooking Central Park. Always on display, the   museum's Thannhauser Collection is comprised primarily of works by French   impressionists and neo-impressionists including Matisse, van Gogh,   Toulouse-Lautrec, and Cézanne. Limited exhibitions focus on artists ranging from Norman Rockwell to Jeff Koons. 
            
              |