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48 Third Avenue
48 Third Avenue
48 Third Avenue image

48 Third Avenue

Stuyvesant Curio Shop, c. 1970s
48 Third Avenue image

48 Third Avenue

48 Third Avenue image

48 Third Avenue

48 Third Avenue image

48 Third Avenue
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8 Third Avenue & 95 East 10th Street Building Date : 1886 Original Use : Residential Original Owner : S. Thorne & S.F. Jenkins Original Architect : James M. Farnsworth & Co. Description & Building Alterations This five-story old-law tenement still retains its original cornice, but its ground floor storefront has been altered. The quirky Stuyvesant Curiosity Shop occupied this ground floor in the 1920’s and 30’s. In the 1950’s through 1970’s a wine and liquor store occupied the 3rd Avenue and 10th Street storefronts. The building also housed the March Gallery from 1957 until 1960, which was run by Boris Lurie, a Holocaust survivor. Lurie gained national attention in 1960 as one of the founders of the NO!art movement, which stood in opposition to the popular movements of the era such as Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art.
48 Third Avenue image

48 Third Avenue

Stuyvesant Curiosity Shop; Changing New York 48 Third Avenue.
48 Third Avenue image

48 Third Avenue

Elaine de Kooning
48 Third Avenue image

48 Third Avenue
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48 Third Avenue Built in 1886 by Samuel Thorne and S. F. Jenkins as a tenement with stores, 48 Third Avenue cost $15,000 to construct and was designed by James M. Farnsworth. Samuel Thorne (1835-1915) was kind of a big deal in his day — he was President of the Pennsylvania Coal Company, and served on the boards of Bank of America, the New York Life Insurance Company, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. As a member of tony private social clubs, the Union League and the Metropolitan Club , he regularly rubbed shoulders with J. P. Morgan and the Vanderbilts. Appropriately enough, Thorne’s building at 48 Third Avenue was no less distinguished, in spite of it being a tenement located in what was then a hard-scrabble, working-class district. Compared to the heavier ornament typical of other Victorian era buildings, architect James M. Farnsworth (1847-1917) used a light and purposeful approach to the building’s detailing. Recessed mortar joints and belt courses wrapping the building emphasize its structure. The patterns of its cornice imply more abstract, naturalistic forms than the classically derived ornament more typically found on tenement cornices from this era. However, the most richly detailed element of the building is the gorgeous, balconette-like iron fire escapes on the 10th Street elevation, more reminiscent of New Orleans that New York. What kind of talent created such a building? James Mace Farnsworth worked as a draftsman for Calvert Vaux, the man who, along with Frederick Law Olmsted, designed Central Park and a number of buildings for the Children’s Aid Society. Later, with his partner Benjamin Sillman, Jr., Farnsworth designed office and institutional buildings including the Morse Building (1878-80) at 138-142 Nassau Street, and the Temple Court Building (1881-83) at 3-9 Beekman Street, both designated New York City landmarks. Red brick buildings in the Romanesque Revival style seemed to be a favorite motif. From 1883-1897, Farnsworth also practiced independently and one of his most notable works was the renovation and additions to the Bennett Building (1872-73, 1890-92, and 1894) at 93-99 Nassau Street, one of New York’s finest and largest Second Empire cast iron buildings. On the applications submitted to construct 48 Third Avenue, Farnsworth listed his address as 218 West 23rd Street. Can you guess what iconic New York City building that is? Give up or did you Google it? Yep, it’s the Chelsea Hotel. Hmm, wonder if Farnsworth was inspired by the then-recently completed (1885) Chelsea Hotel’s lovely balconies (the work of the Cornell Foundry)?
48 Third Avenue image

48 Third Avenue

“Portrait of Fairfield Porter” by Elaine de Kooning
48 Third Avenue image

48 Third Avenue

Stuyvesant Curio Shop, 52 3rd Avenue, west side between 10th & 11th