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Tag: Architecture

  • My visit to Lyndhurst, an American castle

    My visit to Lyndhurst, an American castle

    Lyndhurst is an huge house in Tarrytown, New York. It was home to politician William Paulding, businessman George Merritt, and finally Gilded Age industrialist Jay Gould and his family. Lyndhurst has incredible Gothic Revival architecture, stained glass windows by Louis Comfort Tiffany and John LaFarge, and great furniture.

  • How to Have a Great Historic Site Visit

    How to Have a Great Historic Site Visit

    Planning to visit a historic place? Learn what to expect and how to plan for the best visit ever.

  • Historic Places Photo Gallery

    I love old places, and I try to visit them wherever I go. This gallery shows some of the historic places I’ve visited recently. If you like my photos, you might also be interested in my other posts on the subject. What beautiful old places are there where you live? Send me some pictures so…

  • Kip’s Castle – My Visit to a New Jersey Mansion

    Kip’s Castle – My Visit to a New Jersey Mansion

    Updated with news photos from my Christmas 2017 visit to Kip’s Castle. Click on the photo gallery below!   I recently took some time to visit a local landmark – Kip’s Castle in Verona, New Jersey. The former home of textile industrialist Frederic Ellsworth Kip and his family, Kip’s Castle is a sprawling stone mansion at the very top…

  • Hudson River School Day

    Hudson River School Day

    Thomas Cole and Frederick Edwin Church, the two most prominent Hudson River School painters, both had homes and studios in the Catskill area of New York. One summer day, I went up there to visit the two houses, which are now museums open to the public for tours. This was my experience.

  • Writing Prompt #17: Basilique Royale de Saint-Denis

     Today’s prompt didn’t particularly interest me or feel like a good fit for this blog, but the additional challenge was to write in a style different from my usual one, which I liked a lot. I like my writing to flow and include lots of description; I never skimp on the words. Therefore, I decided…

  • Writing Prompt #3 – thoughts on art

    Today’s prompt told me to write stream of conscious for at least 15 minutes in order to develop a habit of writing every day. The topic I was given was to write about three songs that affect me and how they make me feel. I did the assignment and was pleased with what I wrote,…

  • Why I’m a fan of preservation and “Preservation” magazine

    In one of the first philanthropic acts of my grown-up life, I recently joined the National Trust for Historic Preservation, a non-profit organization that provides funding and support for the protection and restoration of historical landmarks throughout the United States. As a membership benefit, I just received my first issue (Winter 2015) of Preservation magazine in the…

  • Where in the world is this place? Not where you might think.

    Where in the world is this place? Not where you might think.

    The house pictured above might look like an English manor house or a French chateau, but it is actually a country estate near where I live in the United States. I went to visit this turn-of-the-century Beaux Arts mansion one day this past week. The home is now privately-owned and no longer decorated according to the…

  • Epic Bookstores and Libraries

    Presenting sixteen libraries and sixteen bookstores you have to see before you die. How amazing are these places? They are all so incredible that I tried to write more about them, but I couldn’t pick just a few to talk about. I could barely even figure out which ones I should include photos of. I…

  • Glamour, Modernism, and the City that Never Sleeps: Art Deco in 1920s New York

    “New York is an Art Deco city – indeed, the Deco city […] The Empire State Building, the Chrysler Building, and Rockefeller Center were crowning achievements of the late 1920s and early 1930s, and remain the dominant celebrities of the midtown skyline. Deco lobbies, theatres, jazz bars, restaurants, and details also hide and surprise at eye…

  • Recommended Link: Historic Hotels of America

    Recommended Link: Historic Hotels of America

    I get really excited about historic hotels, and I’ve even stayed in a few.

Welcome

The mission of A Scholarly Skater Art History is to make historical art and architecture accessible to everyone.
I’m Alexandra, an art historian who believes that looking at art can enrich everyone’s life. Welcome to my website!
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An important note

Art history is an inherently subjective field, and my perspective isn’t the only one. I encourage all my readers to seek out differing opinions and read multiple sources to get a broader and more complete view of this complex and fascinating field of study. Read my disclaimers for more information.

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