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While the world watches the Met Gala unfold on the steps of the Metropolitan Museum, we invite you into a virtual salon: art that captures the spirit of New York in all its color.
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The Collection
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Featured Artists
Hunt SlonemBorn in Maine, forged in New York. Slonem's studio practice—spanning five decades and rooted in Manhattan—has made him one of the most collected American painters alive. His bunnies, tropical birds, and neo-expressionist portraits occupy collections from Sutton Place to Zurich.
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Xan Padron
Xan Padrón arrived in New York with a musician's ear for rhythm. His Time Lapse series, begun in 2011 after years of New York street projects, is one of the most original bodies of work in contemporary photography.
Padrón conceals himself and his camera, then shoots a single urban wall or backdrop for hours, days, sometimes multiple seasons. The resulting composite layers dozens, sometimes hundreds, of passersby into a single, seamless frame. Inspired by sheet music, each figure is a note; together they form the full score of a neighborhood.
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David Yarrow
At twenty years old, David Yarrow photographed Diego Maradona lifting the World Cup for The Times of London. That image announced a career defined by once-in-a-lifetime access and an uncompromising eye for the decisive frame.
His New York work carries that biography. Once Upon a Time on Wall Street, shot on a quiet day against the white Georgian marble of the NYSE's Corinthian facade, is as much a statement about power, nostalgia, and American mythology as it is a photograph. Wall Street Stories continues that meditation. Cinematic, monochrome, and monumental in scale, these prints sell through Sotheby's and command rooms the way few photographs can.
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Alexi Torres
Born in the village of Bermeja, Cuba, Torres arrived in the United States in 2003 with a practice already shaped by political urgency and agrarian ritual. He begins and completes each work on a waning moon, following the lunar cycles of his ancestors, a discipline that gives his output an almost ceremonial weight.
His Thread Works are among the most technically singular objects in contemporary art: portraits and cultural icons reconstructed entirely on black canvas. Works that dissolve the boundary between painting and textile, image and idea. This Unbrainwashable series reminds you to think for yourself.
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New York After Dark: MET GALA 2026 · PRIVATE VIEWING ROOM
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