Category: Met After Hours

Day Eight Hundred and Eighty-Six: Attending Private Members Nights at the Museums in New York City-The Museum of Modern Art, The Morgan Library and the Metropolitan Museum of Art                                             March 24th and May 26th, 2026

Day Eight Hundred and Eighty-Six: Attending Private Members Nights at the Museums in New York City-The Museum of Modern Art, The Morgan Library and the Metropolitan Museum of Art March 24th and May 26th, 2026

The Morgan Library at 225 Madison Avenue

https://www.themorgan.org

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g60763-d107356-r1054349477-Morgan_Library-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The Mozart Exhibition at the Morgan Library

In the months of March and May right before the Memorial Day holiday, many of the museums I belong to held their private ‘Members Night’, where they hold extra hours for members after the museums are closed to the public to come and see the exhibitions, listen to music, have something to eat and drink and listen to talks about the exhibitions. The funny part is that the museum’s are more crowded on these nights than when they are open to the public.

Walking inside the soaring dining space at the Morgan Library

The first set of ‘Members Nights’ I went to were on March 24th with my first stop at the Morgan Library. I was there to see the ‘Mozart’ exhibition again.

The wonderful entertainment that evening

Touring the Mozart exhibition

https://www.themorgan.org/press/2026/mozart-exhibition

(from the Morgan Library Website)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Treasures from the Mozarteum Foundation of Salzburg, an exhibition that traces the extraordinary life and enduring legacy of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791). On view March 13th through May 31st, 2026, this two-gallery exhibition combines the Morgan’s significant holdings in Mozart manuscripts and first editions with remarkable objects, on view in the United States for the first time, from the Mozarteum Foundation of Salzburg. These include Mozart’s clavichord on which he composed The Magic Flute and his childhood violin, as well as famous portraits, letters, and personal objects of Mozart and his family (Morgan Library.com).

Touring the exhibition

Video on the exhibition:

The concert of Mozart as a child

The Magic Flute music and costumes

I happen to love ‘The Magic Flute’ and it was interesting to see the notes and some of the original costumes from the opera at the exhibition.

The costumes from the Magic Flute

After I toured the Mozart exhibition, I toured the rest of the museum that included the original part of the mansion.

The old Living Room

The ceiling outside the exhibition hall

The old Library and Rare book collection

The ceiling in the old Library

I then visited the exhibition of ancient Mesopotamia art scrolls. This was really interesting how this form of written art worked into the collection.

The exhibit on ancient scrolls

https://www.themorgan.org/collection/ancient-near-eastern-seals-and-tablets

I thought this was so interesting

An interesting form of communication

Video on the Exhibition

The Dining area during Members Night

After touring the museum, I went to see what everyone was eating in the museum’s small restaurant was eating because it was getting crowded. The counter was filled with delicious looking desserts.

The sweet treats at the dessert bar at the Morgan Library

The selection of desserts at the Morgan Library the night of Member’s Night

I then visited their very interesting Gift Shop

Admiring the flowers at the Coat Check on the way out. I thought this was a nice touch.

All good things come to an end and I made my way up Fifth Avenue to the Museum of Modern Art for the second part of the evening

I could not believe that the museums arranged these ‘Members Nights’ on the same night. They would plan this three weeks late when the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I just had to enough time at one museum and see what I wanted to see and then go up the next.

The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) at 11 West 53rd Street

https://www.moma.org

My review on TripAdvisor:

I started this Member’s Night at the MoMA, finishing the ‘exhibition and then going to the Met.

The opening of the ‘Frida and Diego’ on Members Night

https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/5882

(From the MoMA website):

Frida and Diego: The Last Dream celebrates Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera—two of Mexico’s most beloved icons of 20th-century art—in a first-of-its-kind collaboration with the Metropolitan Opera. Organized in conjunction with the Met’s new production of El Último Sueño de Frida y Diego, the presentation at MoMA features artworks by Kahlo and Rivera in an elaborate setting designed by Jon Bausor, the set and co-costume designer of the opera. For both the opera and installation, Bausor evokes the artists’ lives and artworks in his theatrical designs (MoMA.org).

Key participants in a movement to redefine Mexican culture and identity after the revolution of 1910–20—Rivera through monumental murals and Kahlo through intimate self-portraits—the artists were romantically involved from 1928 until Kahlo’s death in 1954. The fictional narrative of the opera El Último Sueño de Frida y Diego begins three years after Kahlo’s death and follows an aging Rivera as he summons the deceased Kahlo back to life on the Day of the Dead, a Mexican holiday honoring passed loved ones. As the opera and installation design attest, the pair continue to have an enduring influence on artists across the visual and performing arts (MoMA.org).

Video on the exhibition:

The opening of the ‘Frida and Diego’ exhibition brought members out in droves

The description of the exhibition

The tree dominates the center of the exhibition

The signature piece from the exhibition

One of the dominate drawings

Looking over costume designs

Some of my favorite costume designs

Another great costume design

After touring the exhibition, I visited some of the other galleries and looked over other works of art that I admired in the past. I took a quick tour of the Modern Galleries before I left that evening.

The Jackson Pollack work

I loved this creative food service work

After touring the museum, I joined the rest of the crowd on the main floor for music.

The main lobby of the MoMA the night of Member’s Night

A few weeks later, the Metropolitan Museum of Art had planned their Member’s Night and then the Museum of Modern Art planned a Member’s Night the same night. So I planned another night of running back and forth between museums.

Member’s Night at the Museum of Modern Art

The schedule of events

There was a lot of activities happening that evening and I wondered around museum to see all of them. I started in the Museum Garden to hear the singers who were performing that evening.

The first performer was Lizzy Hilliard, who performed the guitar and was really enjoyable to hear. She is a very lively and engaging entertainer.

The crowds were outside enjoying the beautiful weather that evening

Lizzy Hilliard performing that evening in the garden

https://www.lizzyhilliard.com

After the performance, I wondered around the museum to see some of the exhibitions and started on the first floor which was really active.

I love wondering through the lobby of the MoMA.

While most of the crowds were still listening to the entertainment in the garden, I went up to the Marcel Duchamp exhibition and toured the galleries again (I had been there the previous week and quickly walked the exhibition).

The Marcel Duchamp exhibition was the biggest retrospect of the artist’s work in years

https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/5820

(From the MoMA website):

Marcel Duchamp is organized by The Museum of Modern Art, New York, and the Philadelphia Art Museum, with the generous collaboration of the Centre Pompidou. “Contemporary artworks often prompt viewers to ask, ‘Why is this art?’ It is virtually impossible to answer this question without referring to the work of Duchamp,” said Temkin. “More than any other modern artist, Duchamp challenged and transformed the very definition of an artwork.” Kuo added, “Duchamp’s
influence is incalculable and his myriad contributions have established him as one of the most important figures in modern culture (MoMA.org).

Our exhibition will foreground the ways in which Duchamp upended conventional oppositions between hand and machine, original and copy, intention and chance, and matter and idea.” MoMA and PMA have a longstanding history with Duchamp’s work. MoMA was the first museum to acquire a work by Duchamp, in addition to including his work in early landmark exhibitions such as Fantastic Art, Dada, Surrealism (1936) and The Art of Assemblage (1961) (MoMA.org).

Video on the exhibition from the MoMA curator:

I joined the start of the walking tour with one of the docents at the MoMA at the beginning of the exhibition

The gallery was so crowded with people listening to the one docent that was describing the exhibition that I continued on my own. I had never seen much of this artist’s work in museums before and had heard about his piece of changing the look of the Mona Lisa. I really enjoyed seeing it up close.

The 1919 original “L.H.O.O.Q.” was on a card

The 1930 replica “L.H.O.O.Q.”

The information on the replica piece

I then moved on to other works that he was well known for especially his controversial urinal piece.

The work “Fountain” (I thought this was unusual)

The write up on the piece

The last piece that I saw in the exhibition before I left the museum for the Met was his spoke wheel piece.

The work “Bicycle Wheel”

I wondered around the museum for a bit after the tour of the exhibition and admired works in the Modern Wing.

I love Picasso’s Cubism works

After I finished touring the exhibition, I left the MoMA for The Met. The weather was beautiful and with it being light out until almost 8:30pm. It was a beautiful walk up Fifth Avenue with the trees and the flower beds in full bloom.

Arriving at The Metropolitan Museum of Art for “The Met After Hours”

https://www.metmuseum.org/visit-guides/membership

My reviews on “Met After Hours” on MywalkinManhattan.com:

https://mywalkinmanhattan.com/tag/met-after-hours

The lobby and rotunda for the event seemed very quiet to me

The beautiful floral arrangements in the lobby area were fresh Cherry Blossoms

The Cherry Blossoms in the urns around the lobby

The American Wing where the Member’s Bar and entertainment was located

The Met seemed very quiet that night. Being the Tuesday after Memorial Day Weekend, I guess most members were getting back to work or still tired from the weekend. It had been a rainy mess the whole weekend and I could not see many people going away.

The bar and the entertainment in the American Wing were located that evening.

I had about two hours before the museum closed for the evening, so I wondered through some of the special exhibitions and started with the “Raphael-Sublime Poetry” exhibition on the second floor.

The entrance to the “Raphael” exhibition

https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/raphael-sublime-poetry

(From the Met website):

Raphael: Sublime Poetry is the first comprehensive exhibition on Raphael in the United States, bringing together more than 170 of the artist’s greatest masterpieces and rarely seen treasures to illuminate the brilliance of Raphael’s extraordinary creativity. The son of a painter and poet, Raphael engaged with the foremost writers and thinkers of his age in Rome, displaying a poetic sensibility that captivated his peers and generations that followed. Follow the full breadth of his life and career, from his origins in Urbino to his rise in Florence, where he began to emerge as a peer of Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo, to his final, prolific decade at the papal court in Rome (Met.org).

Dive into the artistic process of one of history’s most beloved and influential artists. A true titan of the Italian Renaissance, Raffaello di Giovanni Santi (1483–1520)—better known as Raphael—matched ambition with lyricism to create works with both intellectual heft and emotional depth, a necessary skill in the complex political landscape of Renaissance courts. In his short life of only 37 years, he achieved such profound success as a painter, designer, and architect that he was regarded as the pinnacle of artistic perfection for centuries after his death (Met.org).

Video on the exhibition with the MoMA:

Video on the exhibition with CBS This Morning:

The work admired as I was walking around the exhibition.

This was my favorite piece from the exhibition

The Raphael Exhibition I know was a big deal for the museum but it really was not my taste in art. As much as I admired the work, the whole exhibition did not ‘grab me”.

I was not as impressed with the art in the exhibition and took a quick tour of the works. I had seen the exhibition on a previous tour of the museum so I just wanted to walk around again to see the works that I missed.

I then went back to the first floor and spent more time at the Costume Art exhibition. There had been so much media on the exhibit that you could not get in without timed tickets but because it was quiet on Member’s Night, I just walked in.

The Costume Art Exhibition

https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/costume-art

(From the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s website):

The Costume Institute’s spring 2026 exhibition explores depictions of the dressed body across The Met’s vast collection, pairing garments with artworks to reveal the inherent relationship between clothing and the body (Met.org).

Focusing primarily on Western art from prehistory to the present, Costume Art presents connections between garments from The Costume Institute and objects from the Museum’s other collecting areas. Pairings between fashions and artworks will present a spectrum of connections and experiences: from the formal to the conceptual, the aesthetic to the political, the individual to the universal, the illustrative to the symbolic, and the playful to the profound. These pairings are organized into a series of thematic body types that reflect their pervasiveness and endurance through time and cultures (Met.org).

Video on the Costume Art exhibition:

Walking through the entrance of the exhibition

This gallery was newly created for this collection and I had display the pieces that stood out to me the most in the Costume Art exhibition.

One of the pieces I admired

Some of the Evening clothes I admired

Another piece I admired

I thought this was really unusual

I really enjoyed looking over the exhibition yet wondering how many people would actually wear some of these pieces out in public. It really asks the question “What is art?” Still, I loved the dress with all the human organs on it. Now that would stop everyone in mid conversation at a party.

All good things come to an end again and I left the Met as it was closing for the evening. It really is a pretty site at night looking down Fifth Avenue.

How beautiful the Upper East Side is at night

I was starved when I left the museum and knew not too many places outside the bars would be open this late at night. I remembered Asian 83 on East 83rd Street that still might be open for the evening and I was one of their last customers that night. The food is excellent at this little ‘hole in the wall’ on the Upper East Side.

Dinner at Asian 83 at 1605 Second Avenue

https://www.asian83nyc.com

My review on TripAdviser:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g60763-d13433935-r1061867800-Asian_83-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

Dinner at Asian 83, Beef and Broccoli with Fried Rice

I ordered a combination platter of Beef and Broccoli with Fried Rice and an Egg Roll with a Coke. Their prices are so reasonable and their portion sizes are very fair. It was a nice dinner before I left Manhattan that evening.

The Beef and Broccoli entree

Their Egg Rolls are excellent

Being a member of many museums, this is one of the perks about membership. You get to enjoy these wonderful evenings while supporting the museums which in this economy really helps. That’s why I have enjoyed supporting them for years. The donation benefits everyone.

Day Three Hundred and Seventy-Nine Exploring The Met at ‘Met After Hours’                                                                        February 12th, 2026

Day Three Hundred and Seventy-Nine Exploring The Met at ‘Met After Hours’ February 12th, 2026

One of the things I love about being a member the Metropolitan Museum of Art is the private Member’s Night ‘Met After Hours’ they hold about four times a year. The museum is open after the closing hours and it is a night of wondering the museum galleries, great music and entertainment and wonderful tours and talks in the galleries. You really experience the museum at its best and it does shine.

The outside of The Met at night

https://www.metmuseum.org/

My review on TripAdvisor:

My ‘Met After Hours’ reviews on MywalkinManhattan.com:

https://mywalkinmanhattan.com/category/met-after-hours-event/

The lines move very quickly to get into the museum and with traffic getting into the City that night, I arrived about twenty minutes after opening and there were no crowds to face and I got right in. There’s always a sense of excitement on these nights.

The Grand Hall in the front of the museum decorated with Spring flowers

The beautiful Spring flowers lined all the urns around the Great Hall

The museum welcoming all the members of the museum at ‘The Met After Hours’

I started my walk around the galleries in the Greek Wing touring the main hallway. It still boggles my mind how old these statues are and I am looking at something almost two thousand years old.

The Greek Gallery wing

https://www.metmuseum.org/departments/greek-and-roman-art

(From the Metropolitan Museum of Art website):

The Museum’s collection of Greek and Roman art comprises more than thirty thousand works ranging in date from the Neolithic period (ca. 4500 BCE) to the time of the Roman emperor Constantine’s conversion to Christianity in 312 CE. It includes the art of many cultures and is among the most comprehensive in North America. The geographic regions represented are Greece and Italy, but not as delimited by modern political frontiers: Greek colonies were established around the Mediterranean basin and on the shores of the Black Sea, and Cyprus became increasingly Hellenized. For Roman art, the geographical limits coincide with the expansion of the Roman Empire. The department also exhibits the art of prehistoric Greece (Helladic, Cycladic, and Minoan) and pre-Roman art of Italic peoples, notably the Etruscans (Metropolitan Museum of Art website).

One of the statues that stood out that evening

I spent some time admiring the statues and the craftsmanship of the works along the hallway. The only problem is that most of the Greek and Roman Galleries were closed for the evening so I headed off to the Renaissance Wing. I love the luxury objects in the collection of silver and gold and again their craftsmanship is still unrivaled today. To make these objects takes intensive work and talent.

The historic collection of luxury items

The time pieces of the Renaissance period

https://www.metmuseum.org/learn/educators/curriculum-resources/the-art-of-renaissance-europe

The timepieces show how advanced science had become and the importance of it in not just measurements but in beauty.

The lobby of the American Wing with the facade of what was a former bank and a Wall Street private mansion. I love the quiet elegance of this building and to think they moved it here piece by piece. The American Wing Cafe was open for the evening and the area was busy throughout the evening. It is nice to just sit and enjoy the views by the fountain. The artwork is beautiful.

https://www.metmuseum.org/departments/the-american-wing

(From the Metropolitan Museum of Art website):

Visitors to the American Wing will experience in more than 75 galleries on three floors varied art, design, and culture from the mid-seventeenth to the mid-twentieth century, with some contemporary expressions, by a diverse array of artists from across North America. Since our founding in 1924, this curatorial department has evolved its collecting to include some 20,000 artworks in many mediums by African American, Asian American, Euro-American, Latin American, and Native American makers, affirming ever more inclusive definitions of American art and identity. These dynamic holdings include painting, sculpture, drawing, furniture, textiles, regalia, ceramics, basketry, glass, silver, metalwork, jewelry, as well as historic interiors and architectural fragments, produced by highly trained and self-taught artists, both identified and unrecorded (Metropolitan Museum of Art website).

The evening then moved to the Egyptian Wing and the Temple of Dendur, where the entertainment and the cocktail bar was located.

The Temple of Dendur is the hub of activity on Members Nights

https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/547802

(From the Metropolitan Museum of Art website):

This small temple, built about 15 B.C., honored the goddess Isis and, beside her, Pedesi and Pihor, deified sons of a local Nubian ruler. On the outer walls between earth and sky are carved scenes of the king making offerings to deities who hold scepters and the ankh, the symbol of life. The figures are carved in sunk relief. In the brilliant Egyptian sunlight, shadows cast along the figures’ edges would have emphasized their outlines. Isis, Osiris, their son Horus, and the other deities are identified by their crowns and the inscriptions beside their figures (Metropolitan Museum of Art).

These scenes are repeated in two horizontal registers. The king is identified by his regalia and by his names, which appear close to his head in elongated oval shapes called cartouches; many of the cartouches simply read “pharaoh.” This king was actually Caesar Augustus of Rome, who, as ruler of Egypt, had himself depicted in the traditional regalia of the pharaoh. Augustus had many temples erected in Egyptian style, honoring Egyptian deities (Metropolitan Museum of Art). 

The area was packed with patrons enjoying music and talking by the bars. The crowds were so large at the beginning of the evening that I waited until after 9:00pm for the second performance of the group playing. So I headed into the section of the Egyptian Wing to look at the galleries that were open. I love walking around the Egyptian Wing of the Met. It is one of the most extensive collections outside of Egypt and the most fascinating Mummy exhibition.

Admiring one of the Mummy exhibits in the Egyptian Wing

https://www.metmuseum.org/departments/egyptian-art

(From the Metropolitan Museum of Art website):

The Department of Egyptian Art was established in 1906 to oversee the Museum’s already sizable collection of art from ancient Egypt. In the same year, the Museum’s Board of Trustees voted to establish an Egyptian Expedition to conduct archaeological excavations in Egypt. Between 1906 and 1935, The Met’s Egyptian Expedition worked at a number of important sites, including Lisht in the north and Thebes in the south, and the objects gifted to The Met by the Egyptian antiquities service form the core of our collection. Over the years, the Department of Egyptian Art has also been able to acquire, through purchase and bequest, several important private collections (Metropolitan Museum of Art website).

The ancient tablets outside of the Mummy Exhibition

The Egyptian artwork outside the Mummy Room

The tablets outside the Mummy Room

When the whole gallery is open, it is a treasure trove of objects and information from each Dynasty. I have been mind-boggled by these galleries since I first visited the museum in the third grade for a class field trip. I remember sketching artifacts for a class project and am still fascinated about how old some of these objects are and condition they are still in after thousands of years. It is my favorite part of the museum.

By 9:00pm, the entertainment was starting again, so I joined other members for a cocktail and enjoyed the music in the Temple of Dendur Gallery.

The Temple of Dendur fully lit for the evening before the start of the entertainment

The signature cocktail of the evening, the Starlight Spritz

Enjoying a Starlight Spritz while listening to the music

The bartenders can mix a drink

After a long week at work, it was nice to relax and enjoy the music. The music that night was performed by artist Jasim Perales and Friends, an Afro-Latin Jazz performance. The music was relaxing and soulful and the crowd had a wonderful time.

The start of the music again at 9:00pm

The trio performing

A clip from the entertainment that night

The Master of Ceremonies that night, Jasim Perales

https://www.instagram.com/jasimperales/?hl=en

All good things come to an end and it was time leave. The night was dark and the winter air was crisp creating the perfect Winter evening to set out into for the walk back to Port Authority. The Upper East is so beautiful at night.

The front of the Met that night

The artwork is always so impressive outside the Met

It was in the low 40’s that evening and the perfect night for a walk around the Upper East Side and Midtown. It still surprises me after all these years of walking around Manhattan how beautiful the City really is at night.

The beauty of Carnegie Hall in the evening

https://www.carnegiehall.org/

Passing the front of a quiet Carnegie Hall that evening

Looking up Fifth Avenue at night

Looking up Sixth Avenue and West 35th Street by Herald Square

The New York Public Library on Fifth Avenue at night

https://www.nypl.org/

It was another spectacular evening at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Thank you to the Membership and Special Events Departments for hosting another wonderful evening.

Day Three Hundred and Forty-Two Private Members Nights at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) and the Metropolitan Museum of Art (The Met)                                                                          May 27th, 2025

Day Three Hundred and Forty-Two Private Members Nights at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) and the Metropolitan Museum of Art (The Met) May 27th, 2025

What also is difficult is when two major museums have their Members Night on the same night. I had to do a lot of coordinating to go to both museums. What made it work is that both museums closed at different times with The Met closing at 10:00pm. I timed it perfectly.

Members Night at the MoMA ‘Behind the Flowers’ for the Hilma af Klint exhibition

The theme that evening was based on the Hilma af Klint exhibition

https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/5779

Going this evening took a lot of planning as I had to teach in the morning and cut the lawn on the afternoon. I was already exhausted by the time I left for the City at 4:00pm. Even on this gloomy afternoon, the weather held and it was a nice evening.

The area around the museum was in full bloom that early evening

The event opened early at the MoMA with their event from 6:00pm-9:00pm and the Met went from 7:00pm-10:00pm so I was able to enjoy both with a lot of walking in between. It was worth it as I was able to see several exhibitions on my bucket list before they closed. With work and finals, it had been tough to visit both of them.

People were enjoying conversation and cocktails when I arrived at the MoMA that evening.

I decided to start my evening at the Sculpture Garden on the first floor. The weather was cloudy but still it was a warm evening. People were conversing near the fountains and listening to music. The lines for the cash bar never let up and they were about thirty deep the whole time.

The Sculpture Garden at the MoMA

While I walked around the gardens and fountains I noticed a lot of the art that they were featuring was really unique, some of which I had not seen before.

The gardens with the poppies in bloom

This beautiful mosaic of a octopus did not have a name

This metal artwork was towards the back of the sculpture garden

The Met at night is quite dazzling

The entrance to The Met in the evening

Looking down Fifth Avenue at night

The entrance in the Rotunda was filled with fresh flowers and members chatting away. I even saw some of the members I had seen at the MoMA earlier.

The floral arrangements were spectacular

The beauty of the Rotunda in the evening

Maybe because these Members Nights were on a Tuesday evening, they both did not seem as crowded as they had been in the past. The museum was crowded but not as crowded as the past two Member’s Nights. I think that I arrived at 8:00pm most people were starting to leave. What was nice was that the MoMA night went until 9:00pm and The Met Night went until 10:00pm so it gave me the time to run through both museums.

I started my tour of The Met in the Greek Galleries looking at the Cycladic Art. I always loved the looks of these works.

https://www.metmuseum.org/departments/greek-and-roman-art

The entrance to the Cycladic Wing

The Cycladic Gallery in the Greek wing

Some of the interesting cases I admired that night

I then did a quick tour of the Roman Galleries which I had not toured in detail since the galleries opened years ago.

https://www.metmuseum.org/departments/greek-and-roman-art

Touring the Roman Galleries

Touring the Roman Gslleries

Touring the Roman Galleries

After the tour of the Roman Galleries, I headed to the Egyptian Galleries, I wanted to explore the galleries and get a drink at the Members Bar.

https://www.metmuseum.org/departments/egyptian-art

I love the Egyptian Galleries. I have been coming here since 1973 and have loved them ever since.

I love the ancient hieroglyphics

For the last two Members Nights, the Members Bar was in the Temple of Dendur. It is always so well lit and the music was wonderful. It is a nice way to end the evening.

The Temple of Dendur lit for the evening

The Temple of Dendur was the perfect place to relax and have a cocktail

The crowds were rather large at the bar that evening

The Passion fruit cocktail was the specialty drink of the evening

It was another wonderful evening at both museums.

Day Three Hundred and Thirty-Three Private Members Night ‘Met After Hours’ at the Metropolitan Museum of Art                                  March 20th, 2025

Day Three Hundred and Thirty-Three Private Members Night ‘Met After Hours’ at the Metropolitan Museum of Art March 20th, 2025

I love the Met!

The creative invitation I received from the museum.

Arriving at the museum at night

A walk through the Greek Galleries

Relaxing at the Temple of Dendur at the end of the evening

A wonderful way to end the evening