(Photo by Stefan Cohen)
JUST RELEASED: Lincoln Center’s David Rubenstein Atrium will resume its regular programming on August 9 following a smash run of Christian Marclay’s The Clock.
August and September Target® Free Thursdays include:- August 9: German biergarten party with Mösl Franzi and The Ja Ja Jas - August 16: Fordham Alumni Theater Turn of the Screw  - August 23: 2011 Mountain Stage NewSong Contest Winner Arthur Alligood- August 30: Lysander Piano Trio- September 4 (a Tuesday): The Tres Amigos: The Spicy Special- September 20: The Donations singing groupMeet the Artist Saturday:- September 15: Music for the whole family with Classical Jam Lincoln Center Local final performance:- September 29: Latin music & dance, broadcast live to select Queens librariesThe new start time for Target® Free Thursday events is 7:30 p.m. Admission is FREE. (Read the entire press release here.)
 

(Photo by Stefan Cohen)

JUST RELEASED: Lincoln Center’s David Rubenstein Atrium will resume its regular programming on August 9 following a smash run of Christian Marclay’s The Clock.

August and September Target® Free Thursdays include:
- August 9: German biergarten party with Mösl Franzi and The Ja Ja Jas
- August 16: Fordham Alumni Theater Turn of the Screw 
- August 23: 2011 Mountain Stage NewSong Contest Winner Arthur Alligood
- August 30: Lysander Piano Trio
- September 4 (a Tuesday): The Tres Amigos: The Spicy Special
- September 20: The Donations singing group

Meet the Artist Saturday:
- September 15: Music for the whole family with Classical Jam

Lincoln Center Local final performance:
- September 29: Latin music & dance, broadcast live to select Queens libraries

The new start time for Target® Free Thursday events is 7:30 p.m. Admission is FREE. (Read the entire press release here.)

 

(Credit goes to © Christian Marclay. Courtesy Paula Cooper Gallery, New York and White Cube, London. Photo: Todd-White Photography. Christian Marclay; Detail of The Clock, 2010; Single-channel video with sound; 24 hours.)
Earlier today, we talked to people waiting in line (some for up to four hours!) for Christian Marclay’s spectacular 24-hour work of video art The Clock at Lincoln Center’s David Rubenstein Atrium. You only have one more day to check it out as part of this year’s Lincoln Center Festival if you haven’t already!
 

(Credit goes to © Christian Marclay. Courtesy Paula Cooper Gallery, New York and White Cube, London. Photo: Todd-White Photography. Christian Marclay; Detail of The Clock, 2010; Single-channel video with sound; 24 hours.)

Earlier today, we talked to people waiting in line (some for up to four hours!) for Christian Marclay’s spectacular 24-hour work of video art The Clock at Lincoln Center’s David Rubenstein Atrium. You only have one more day to check it out as part of this year’s Lincoln Center Festival if you haven’t already!

 

SPOTTED AT LINCOLN CENTER: Katie Holmes, Frances McDormand, Mary Tyler Moore, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Joel Cohen, Joel Grey and Wallace Shawn!

This past week, actresses Frances McDormand and Mary Tyler Moore, actors Joel Grey and Wallace Shawn and filmmaker Joel Coen came to the David Rubenstein Atrium at Lincoln Center to check out Christian Marclay’s spectacular 24-hour work of video art The Clock.

And last night, actress Katie Holmes and dancer/actor Mikhail Baryshnikov came to see the Sydney Theater Company’s production of Uncle Vanya at New York City Center. Baryshnikov is also performing in Dmitry Krymov Laboratory’s sold-out production of In Paris, which begins next Wednesday at the Gerald W. Lynch Theater.

Of course, The Clock, Uncle Vanya and In Paris are all part of this year’s fabulous Lincoln Center Festival.

 

Last night, the Young Patrons of Lincoln Center hosted a party for Christian Marclay’s The Clock at the Empire Hotel Rooftop. Attendees, who included Marclay, Lincoln Center president Reynold Levy, Tyra Banks and architect Zaha Hadid were treated to a private showing of the remarkable video installation.

The Clock, which opened to the public at 8:00 this morning, runs through August 1 at the David Rubenstein Atrium.

 

Spotted: Star-Studded Evening at Lincoln Center Last Night

With the summer season well underway, the stars were glistening last night at Lincoln Center.

At Alan Cumming’s one-man Macbeth: Annette Bening

At a Young Patrons of Lincoln Center party for Christian Marclay’s The Clock: Tyra Banks and Zaha Hadid

Keep an eye out for more starry nights at Lincoln Center as the summer continues…

 

Interested in how Christian Marclay created his award-winning and mind-blowing film, The Clock? The New Yorker ran this article about the 3-year process and its current success. Read about it before you come to Lincoln Center’s free presentation of the work as part of Lincoln Center Festival! The Clock will run in the David Rubenstein Atrium from July 13 to August 1. The atrium is open from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday and open 24 hours over weekends (8 a.m. on Friday to 10 p.m. Sunday).

Interested in how Christian Marclay created his award-winning and mind-blowing film, The Clock? The New Yorker ran this article about the 3-year process and its current success. Read about it before you come to Lincoln Center’s free presentation of the work as part of Lincoln Center Festival! The Clock will run in the David Rubenstein Atrium from July 13 to August 1. The atrium is open from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday and open 24 hours over weekends (8 a.m. on Friday to 10 p.m. Sunday).

Lincoln Center Summer Programming Featured on The New York Times’ Hot List Today!

What are you most excited to see?

Christian Marclay’s The Clock:
Artwork That Runs Like Clockwork

DruidMurphy at Lincoln Center Festival:
Lincoln Center Turns Dramatically Irish

Mark Morris’ Dido and Aeneas at the Mostly Mozart Festival:
Song and Dance, and Gender, in ‘Dido’

A Little Night Music at the Mostly Mozart Festival:
Late-Night Drinks With a Pianist

 

Dates and Hours Announced for the Next New York Run of ‘The Clock’

June 6, 2012, 5:37 p.m.
By Carol Vogel

(Photo by Benjamin Norman for The New York Times. Visitors watching “The Clock” at the Paula Cooper Gallery’s theater in 2011.)

“In April Lincoln Center announced that Christian Marclay’s much-loved “The Clock’’ — a 24-hour montage of clips from movies and television that depict particular minutes in the day, synchronized with the moment they are shown — is coming to Lincoln Center’s David Rubenstein Atrium, on Broadway between 62nd and 63rd Streets, where it will be shown for free.

Now the dates and hours of the run have been announced: July 13 through Aug. 1, Tuesdays through Thursdays, 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. and continuously from Fridays at 8 a.m. through Sundays at 10 p.m. It will not be shown on Mondays.

“The Clock’’ was first shown in London in 2010, but when it made its New York debut at the Paula Cooper Gallery in the winter of 2011 people waited in line for hours in the bitter cold to see it. It was also a big draw last summer at the Venice Biennale, winning the Golden Lion award for best artwork. The film has also been shown in Seoul, Moscow, Paris, Boston, Los Angeles and Ottawa.

——

(Read the story on The New York Times website here.)

(Admission is first come, first served; there are no reservations. More information about hours and public access is available online here.)

 

(Photo by Todd White Photography, © Christian Marclay. Courtesy Paula Cooper Gallery, New York and White Cube, Masonʼs Yard, London)
JUST RELEASED: The exhibition hours are set for the FREE showing of Christian Marclay’s The Clock at Lincoln Center’s David Rubenstein Atrium on July 13 through August 1!
Following acclaimed showings in London, Seoul, Moscow, Paris, Boston, Los Angeles, Ottawa and Sydney and last summer’s Golden Lion award for best art work at the Venice Biennale, Christian Marclay’s epic video installation The Clock returns to New York City for a free showing during Lincoln Center Festival 2012. The Clock is on loan from the collection of Jill and Peter Kraus.The Clock is on public view, free of charge, from July 13 through August 1, Tuesday through Thursdays, 8 a.m. to 10 p.m., and runs continuously from Fridays at 8 a.m. through Sundays at 10 p.m. It will be closed on Mondays. The David Rubenstein Atrium is located at Broadway between 62nd and 63rd Streets.
(Read the entire press release here.)
 

(Photo by Todd White Photography, © Christian Marclay. Courtesy Paula Cooper Gallery, New York and White Cube, Masonʼs Yard, London)

JUST RELEASED: The exhibition hours are set for the FREE showing of Christian Marclay’s The Clock at Lincoln Center’s David Rubenstein Atrium on July 13 through August 1!

Following acclaimed showings in London, Seoul, Moscow, Paris, Boston, Los Angeles, Ottawa and Sydney and last summer’s Golden Lion award for best art work at the Venice Biennale, Christian Marclay’s epic video installation The Clock returns to New York City for a free showing during Lincoln Center Festival 2012. The Clock is on loan from the collection of Jill and Peter Kraus.

The Clock is on public view, free of charge, from July 13 through August 1, Tuesday through Thursdays, 8 a.m. to 10 p.m., and runs continuously from Fridays at 8 a.m. through Sundays at 10 p.m. It will be closed on Mondays. The David Rubenstein Atrium is located at Broadway between 62nd and 63rd Streets.

(Read the entire press release here.)

 

Find yourself endlessly hitting the snooze every morning? Here are 12 eye-opening alarm clocks courtesy of Discovery News. The clocks are on the market or will be soon, ranging from $19.95 to over $400. So set your alarms for Christian Marclay’s installation “The Clock” coming to Lincoln Center this summer (July 13-August 1).
  

Find yourself endlessly hitting the snooze every morning? Here are 12 eye-opening alarm clocks courtesy of Discovery News. The clocks are on the market or will be soon, ranging from $19.95 to over $400. So set your alarms for Christian Marclay’s installation The Clock coming to Lincoln Center this summer (July 13-August 1).