Frick Art Museum - Reviews from across the web
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Fairly interesting place - user review Have toured Clayton several times-- we live in Pittsburgh and often have out-of-town visitors. The quality of the tour depends *hugely*-- more than it should-- on the docent: some docent... tripadvisor.com
Beautiful, creepy house! - user review I've visited Clayton before with an interior design group. The house is beautiful. It also has a bit of a creepy feeling to it though, maybe due to the busts, portraits and pictures of t... tripadvisor.com
Welcome to the Frick The Frick Art & Historical Center is a fascinating complex of museums and historical buildings located on over five acres of lawns and gardens in Pittsburgh's residential East End. The Center is devoted to the interpretation of the life and times of industrialist and art collector Henry Clay Fri... frickart.org
Welcome to the Frick The Frick Art Museum was built in 1969 to house Helen Clay Frick's personal collection of fine and decorative arts. According to her wishes the Museum was designed to exhibit her collection in an atmosphere of intimacy. Paintings are displayed with porcelains, bronzes, and rare examples of 17th and ... frickart.org
Frick Art Museum honors Henry Koerner - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review Born in Vienna in 1915, Koerner, who lived most of his life between Pittsburgh and Vienna after moving to Pittsburgh in 1953 to teach at the Pennsylvania College for Women, now Chatham College, first came to the United States in 1939. Not long afterward, he began working for the Office of War Inform... pittsburghlive.com
Frick Art Museum - Pittsburgh Photos - IgoUgo Henry Clay Frick, Andrew Carnegie’s right-hand man who ran Carnegie Steel and called out Pinkerton Guards to enforce his lockout of striking steelworkers in 1892, was known as “a mean man,” responsible for deaths of Pinkerto... photos.igougo.com
Frick Art Museum - CityVoter Pittsburgh The Frick Art & Historical Center is open to the public thanks to the generosity of Helen Clay Frick, daughter of Henry Clay Frick. When the Frick family moved to New York in 1905, Helen remained attached to Clayton, her Pittsburgh home. Her long-time wish was for Clayton and the surrounding est... cityvoter.com
Frick Art and Historical Center: G. Whitney Snyder Gallery, Pittsburgh - IgoUgo Reviews The Standard Steel Car Company, a builder of railroad cars, got into the act, and so did the American Austin Car Company in nearby Butler. After that, autos had to be mass-manufactured to keep up with increasing demand, and the question of the day was which city would get Ford’s plant: Pittsburgh,... igougo.com
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