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Visual Arts at Americas Society, New York NY | Nearby Businesses


Visual Arts at Americas Society Reviews

680 Park Ave at 68 St
New York, NY 10065

(212) 249-8950

Visual Arts program at the Americas Society organizes and presents modern, contemporary, colonial, archeological and Pre-Columbian exhibitions. Our projects provoke dialogue and debate about regional modernism and global art through talks, panel discussions, lectures, and academic symposia. Publications expand the scope and impact of our work, and together with our exhibitions and public programs, contribute new cultural developments, analysis, and scholarship to the field.

Art Gallery Near Visual Arts at Americas Society

The Frick Collection
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
1 E 70th St
New York, NY 10021

(212) 288-0700

In the elegant galleries of The Frick Collection—a museum housed in the former mansion of industrialist Henry Clay Frick—you will find some of the most exceptional works of Western art. Ranging from the Renaissance through the late nineteenth century, the Collection includes works by such celebrated artists as Bellini, Constable, Corot, Fragonard, Gainsborough, Goya, El Greco, Holbein, Ingres, Manet, Monet, Rembrandt, Renoir, Titian, Turner, Velázquez, Vermeer, and Whistler. In addition to major paintings by these and other masters, the Frick’s galleries contain fine French porcelains, Italian bronzes, sculptures, and period furniture. The permanent collection is further enriched by frequent presentations of special exhibitions. Established by Henry Clay Frick, the museum was greeted with awe when the doors first opened in 1935. It has grown over the years, while maintaining the special ambiance of an art connoisseur’s mansion, and today the Frick is internationally renowned as one of New York’s most remarkable cultural treasures.

Park Avenue Armory
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
643 Park Ave
New York, NY 10065

(212) 616-3930

Galerie Perrotin
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
909 Madison Avenue & 73rd Street
New York, NY 10021

(212) 812-2902

Museum of American Illustration at the Society of Illustrators
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
128 E 63rd St
New York, NY 10065

(212) 838-2560

On February 1, 1901, nine artists and one businessman founded the Society of Illustrators with the following credo: “The object of the Society shall be to promote generally the art of illustration and to hold exhibitions from time to time.” This simple dictum has held true for over a century. At a time when illustration was in what has been called its Golden Age, the first monthly dinners were attended by prominent artists including Howard Pyle, Maxfield Parish, N.C. Wyeth, Charles Dana Gibson, Frederic Remington, James Montgomery Flagg, Howard Chandler Christy and special guests such as Mark Twain and Andrew Carnegie. Throughout its history, the Society’s members have been involved, either in service to, or, on occasion, in protest of American military activity. During World War I, as part of a public relations effort by the U.S. government, Charles Dana Gibson was called upon to assemble a group of artists who would create posters to generate support for the war. Gibson, who served as president and helped bring the Society to national prominence, was an ardent advocate of the cause. He enlisted Flagg, Wyeth, Joseph Pennell and others—artists who would produce some of the war’s most lasting imagery. In a time before widespread use of journalistic photography, eight Society members were commissioned by the army and sent to France to sketch impressions of war. Following the armistice, the Society operated the School for Disabled Soldiers. During and following the war, members continued to have exhibitions at prominent galleries in New York. Incorporated in the 1920s, the Society welcomed women to full membership, an anomaly to most social and professional organizations of the time. The Roaring Twenties and the decade of the Great Depression were the heyday of the Society’s Illustrators Shows (aka the Girlie Shows). Society members produced these popular entertainments—they wrote the theatrical skits and songs, created the sets, and were the actors, along with their models. Outside talent, such as the Cotton Club Band and Jimmy Durante, were called upon for their professional skills. Invitees to these well attended events included Jazz Age Mayor Jimmy Walker and Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia, who, in 1935, luckily failed to attend the night police raided it due to the risqué nature of the nude dancing. In the early twenties, through the auspices of member Watson Barrett, the Illustrators Show was performed at the Shubert Theater, the success of which prompted the Shubert family to purchase the rights to the skits for their own production of Artists and Models in 1923. By the end of the thirties, those funds allowed the Society to acquire its present headquarters on the Upper East Side. Taking advantage of depressed real estate prices, illustrator Wallace Morgan found the building, which would become home to the Society in August 1939. Member Norman Rockwell’s painting, Dover Coach, became the background for the fourth floor bar. Today it continues this auspicious function at the third floor bar. The contribution of Society members during World War II was intense. They participated in massive poster campaigns, created illustrations from and about scenes of the war in Europe and the Pacific, and participated in a program whereby illustrators visited veterans’ hospitals to sketch the wounded. These portraits were then sent on to the subjects’ families as morale boosters. Putting other skills to work, the Illustrators’ Jazz Band was formed to entertain wounded troops. The 1950s saw the creation of three of the Society’s most enduring institutions. Early in the decade, the first Scholarship Fund was established, a program that has benefited countless illustration students nationwide. In 1958 the Society’s Hall of Fame named Norman Rockwell as its first member. Selected annually by former presidents, this honor has since been bestowed on over 150 artists, living and posthumously, for “distinguished achievement in the art of illustration.” At the decade’s close, partly in reaction to the prevalence of photography in graphic arts competitions and exhibitions, especially those of the Art Directors Club of New York, the Society wanted to refocus attention to the art of illustration and the innovative pictorial responses to shifts in technology and the marketplace. In 1959, members Bob Peak, Bradbury Thompson and Stevan Dohanos, among others, juried the First Annual Exhibition that resulted in a show of 350 original artworks. The first Illustrators Annual book followed. For the 25th edition, the book went to full color and in 2005 the format changed from hard to soft cover. In 2009, the system for gathering entries and the jurying process went fully digital—although the art was open to all media. The Society’s commitment to community involvement has included the participation of Society members, from 1961 to 1965, at the Saturday School of the Warwick Training School for Boys, what had been a “reform school” since the 1930s; outreach programs in conjunction with the Police Athletic League (from 1966), the New York City Parks Department, and the Board of Education (from 1999). Since 1992 the Society has donated more than 10,000 children’s books to shelters and charities citywide. Under the stewardship of then president John Witt, the Museum of American Illustration was established in 1981. Today the Society’s Permanent Collection includes over 2,500 works by such legendary artists as Norman Rockwell, Howard Pyle, N.C. Wyeth, Rockwell Kent, Bob Peak, Bernie Fuchs and Brad Holland. The Society of Illustrators is an organization of many layers, one which provides illustrators a center to discuss, demonstrate and exhibit their work, contributes to future artists and to the community at large, honors its preeminent practitioners, takes a stand on legal and ethical issues affecting the profession—and has a great dining room to boot! As it faces the challenges of a swiftly changing future, the Society will continue to “promote generally the art of illustration,” as its founders dictated.

China Institute in America
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
100 Washington St
New York, NY 10006

(212) 744-8181

Hauser & Wirth
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
32 E 69th St
New York, NY 10021

(212) 794-4970

Dominique Lévy
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
909 Madison Ave
New York, NY 10021

(212) 772-2004

Founded in 2013, Dominique Lévy represents Enrico Castellani, Frank Stella, Pierre Soulages, and Günther Uecker, as well as the Estate of Yves Klein, the Estate of Roman Opalka, and the Estate of Germaine Richier. The gallery strives to present a dynamic program of exhibitions of various generations of artists in addition to the aforementioned names, and is committed to publishing accompanying exhibition catalogues and artists' books featuring scholarship by leading contemporary thinkers and previously unpublished archival material. Maintaining exhibition spaces in New York and London, and an office in Geneva, and participating in art fairs internationally, the gallery also specializes in private sales in the secondary market with a focus on the work of Alexander Calder, Willem de Kooning, Lucio Fontana, Alberto Giacometti, Pablo Picasso, Robert Ryman, and Cy Twombly, among other important twentieth-century and contemporary artists. The gallery also provides hands-on advisory and collection management services.

Henrique Faria Fine Art
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
35 E 67th St
New York, NY 10065

(212) 517-4609

Henrique Faria opened an art cabinet on Madison Avenue, New York, in 2001, specializing in Latin American geometric abstract artists such as modern masters Jesus Soto, Raul Lozza, Gego, Mathias Goeritz, Mira Freire, Helio Oticia and Alejandro Otero as well as contemprary midcareer artists such as Luis Roldan, Jose Bechara, Eugenio Espinoza and Jose Gabriel Fernandez. In 2007, the gallery decided to venture into the much lesser known world of conceptual practices from Latin America including artists Juan Downey, Claudio Perna, Nicolas Garcia Uriburu, Diego Barbosa, Marta Minujin, Clemente Padin, Guillermo Deisler and Horacio Zabala. In 2009, we opened a new gallery with an exhibition by argentine artist, poet and filmmaker Leandro Katz. The next year, we doubled the size of the gallery which allowed us to continue exhibiting historical Latin American works from the 50's, 60's and the 70's in addition to a program of exhibitions by contemporary artists such as Emilio Chapela, Alessandro Balteo, Miler Lagos, Javier Tellez and Alexander Apostol. Since we opened the gallery, the demand for Latin American works has increased exponetially. Our client base has expanded from mainly from Latin American collectors to international institutions, foundations and museums. Emilia Azcárate Alessandro Balteo Yazbeck Álvaro Barrios Luis F. Benedit Emilio Chapela Carlos Castillo Omar Carreño Eduardo Costa Jaime Davidovich José Gabriel Fernández Nicolás García Uriburu Mercedes Elena González Terence Gower Anna Bella Geiger Carlos Ginzburg Leandro Katz Marta Minujín Luis Molina-Pantin Alejandro Puente Luis Roldán Osvaldo Romberg Eduardo Santiere Pedro Terán Horacio Zabala Yeni & Nan

Sandra Gering Inc
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
Sandra Gering Inc, 14 East 63rd St
New York, NY 10065

(646) 336-7183

Galerie Perrotin
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
909 Madison Ave
New York, NY

Dominique Levy Gallery
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
909 Madison Ave
New York, NY 10021

Kelly Gallery
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
154 E 71st St
New York, NY 10021

(212) 744-0004

To see Kelly Gallery and all the collection albums, please click 'Photos' on the main page and on the next page click "Albums"' at the top. Stephen E. Kelly, Founder & Chairman Deena Gittle, Gallery Director Michael Carter, Cofounder

Winter Antique Show
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
Park Avenue Armory at 66th Street
New York, NY 10065

Anita Shapolsky Gallery
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
152 E 65th St
New York, NY 10065

(212) 452-1094

The Anita Shapolsky Gallery was founded in 1982 in SoHo as Arbitrage Gallery. It is now located in an historic brownstone in the upper east side where an intimate and discreet service is provided to our clients. The gallery specializes in abstract art from the 1950's and 1960's highlighting marginalized second generation, Latin American, African American and women artists. Please look at our website to learn more about each individual artist and email us with any questions you may have. Anita Shapolsky also founded the AS Art Foundation in Jim Thorpe, PA in 1998 which is situated within a historic church. It is a national non-profit organization, 501 (c) 3, which provides educational programs for children, exhibitions of past modern abstract artists and selected contemporary artworks. The foundation strives to enrich the community through the visual and musical arts providing many activities, programs and events for all ages in the community in the summer. To learn more information please visit asartfoundation.org. Open Tuesday thru Friday 11 am - 6 pm and by appointment.

Kapoor Galleries
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
34 E 67th St
New York, NY 10065

(212) 794-2300

The gallery has been instrumental in developing major museum collections as well as distinguished private collections worldwide. Kapoor Galleries has placed works in The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Norton Simon Museum, Art Institute of Chicago, San Diego Museum of Art, and the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts among others. Joined by their son Suneet, who studied Indian Art at School of Oriental and African Studies, the gallery presents an annual Spring Asia Week NY exhibition, showcasing important and beautiful works of art to a focused audience. Together they have developed a very strong network of collectors and curators. Kapoor Galleries alsp presents a more condensed and focused exhibition during the fall, coinciding with the auction schedule. The gallery also participates in the Annual Madison Avenue Gallery Walk, which benefits the Fund for Public Schools, exposing South Asian Art to a different segment of collectors. Kapoor Galleries will be joining fellow Antique Dealers during the Inaugural Art & Antiques Week, from April 25th to May 1st, 2011.

Van Doren Waxter
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
23 E 73rd St
New York, NY 10021

(212) 445-0444

Founded in 2013, Van Doren Waxter represents the evolution in the partnership between John Van Doren and Dorsey Waxter who worked together for 15 years at Greenberg Van Doren. Van Doren Waxter works exclusively with the James Brooks Estate, the Richard Diebenkorn Foundation, the Al Held Foundation, the Alan Shields Estate, and the Hedda Sterne Foundation. The gallery specializes in American Abstraction from 1950-1990 including a number of artists from California: Richard Diebenkorn, Manny Farber, Sam Francis, Joe Goode, and John McLaughlin. Additionally, the gallery handles secondary market works specializing in: Anthony Caro, John Chamberlain, Joseph Cornell, Helen Frankenthaler, Hans Hofmann, Ellsworth Kelly, Franz Kline, Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Motherwell, Robert Rauschenberg, David Smith, and Frank Stella among others. Van Doren Waxter continues to produce special projects with artists including: Tim Davis, Judy Fiskin, Katsura Funakoshi, Alexander Gorlizki, Eva Lundsager, Cameron Martin, and Dorothea Rockburne. In 2007 the gallery opened Eleven Rivington in New York City's Lower East Side. Directed by Partner Augusto Arbizo, Eleven Rivington focuses on finding new talent and developing the careers of international artists who have had little previous exposure in the US. Van Doren Waxter is a member of the Art Dealers Association of America (ADAA).

Craig F. Starr Gallery
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
5 E 73rd St
New York, NY 10021

(212) 570-1739

Hunter College Art Galleries
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
695 Park Ave
New York, NY 10065

(212) 772-4991

The Hunter College Art Galleries provide a space for critical engagement with art and pedagogy, bringing together historical scholarship, contemporary artistic practice, social awareness, and experimental methodology. The Bertha and Karl Leubsdorf Art Gallery located in the West Building of the main campus at 68th Street and Lexington Avenue focuses on historical and scholarly exhibitions and the 205 Hudson Street Gallery is dedicated to presenting exhibitions that examine the impact of and the critical issues around contemporary art. Each semester, the 205 Hudson Street Gallery also hosts the MFA program’s thesis exhibitions. The Hunter College Art Galleries present exhibitions representing the interests and diversity of the faculty and student body. Exploring a multitude of periods, media, themes and approaches, the shows support the intellectual pursuits of Hunter College's academic community. Follow us: Instagram - @HunterCollegeArtGalleries Twitter - @HCArtGalleries

Feigen Richard L & Co Inc
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
34 E 69th St
New York, NY 10021-5016

(212) 628-0700

Mark Borghi Fine Art, Inc.
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
52 E 76th St
New York, NY 10021

(212) 439-6425

Mark Borghi Fine Art specializes in American and European Modern and Contemporary art. The Gallery focuses especially on American Post-War, maintaining a strong inventory with works by many of New York School artists. MBFA routinely exhibits at Art Fairs in New York, Miami and Chicago including ArtMiami and Art Chicago.

Non-Profit Organization Near Visual Arts at Americas Society

Americas Society/Council of the Americas
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
680 Park Ave
New York, NY 10065

(212) 249-8950

While we appreciate comments, questions, and feedback on our page, we will not permit language attacking race, ethnicity, gender, or sexual preference.

Music of the Americas
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
680 Park Ave
New York, NY 10065

(212) 277-8379

The MetLife Foundation Music of the Americas Concert Series, recipient of the 2014 CMA/ASCAP Award for Adventurous Programming, fulfills an essential part of the cultural mission of Americas Society, annually showcasing dozens of talented artists hailing from across the hemisphere. Presented year-round, the concerts include a wealth of diverse music and performers, ranging from contemporary classical to folk-roots to reggae and jazz. The primary venue for the series is Americas Society’s own Salon Simón Bolivar, an expansive room in the organization’s neo-federal-style headquarters with wide windows, a 15-foot ceiling, and silk fabric walls. Music of the Americas has collaborated with other presenters, including Lincoln Center Out of Doors and the National Museum of the American Indian, and has also presented artists at such prestigious venues as Carnegie Hall’s Weill Hall and the Leonard Nimoy Thalia at Symphony Space. Music of the Americas seeks to further Americas Society’s mission by engaging artists and concertgoers alike in meaningful dialogue through a shared love of excellent music. The series aims to present artists that are both superb musicians in their own right and cultural ambassadors of myriad social and musical traditions, creating a vibrant space and a unique opportunity to hear distinctive and significant music.

CFR Center for Geoeconomic Studies
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
58 E 68th St
New York, NY 10065

Council on Foreign Relations
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
58 E 68th St
New York, NY 10065

(212) 434-9400

CFR carries out its mission by --maintaining a diverse membership; --convening meetings at its headquarters in New York and in Washington, DC, and other cities; --supporting a Studies Program that fosters independent research; --sponsoring Independent Task Forces that produce reports with both findings and policy prescriptions on the most important foreign policy topics; and --providing up-to-date information and analysis about world events and American foreign policy on its website, CFR.org.

Center for Puerto Rican Studies-Centro
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
Hunter College, CUNY, 695 Park Ave
New York, NY 10021

(212) 772-5688

Hunter Hillel
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
695 Park Ave
New York, NY 10065

(212) 650-3568

Hunter Hillel is a dynamic multi-purpose organization at Hunter College. We are the umbrella of Jewish experience and learning, facilitators of conversation about Israel, conveners of inter-cultural collaboration, supporters of Academic learning and professional development opportunities, and we create a warm, welcoming environment for students to find community in fun and meaningful ways. We take great pride in the social, spiritual and intellectual growth that students realize during their time spent with Hillel. Because of the countless events we host throughout the year, organized with student leadership and partnered initiatives, students have ample opportunities to connect with a friendly, diverse group of people.

Students for Justice in Palestine at Hunter College
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
Hunter College - Thomas Hunter 111 - 695 Park Ave, New York NY
New York, NY 10065

Students for Justice in Palestine (Hunter SJP) is a diverse group of students, faculty, staff, and community members at Hunter College, organized on democratic principles to raise awareness about the human rights violations committed by Israel against the Palestinian people. And to build solidarity with the Palestinian struggle for human rights, justice, freedom, self-determination and the right of return. We organize around the principles of the Palestinian Civil Society call for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions of Israel. SJP believes that while the Palestinian people must ultimately be able to decide their future in Palestine, certain key principles, grounded in international law, human rights, and basic standards of justice, will be fundamental to a just resolution of the plight of the Palestinians. These include the full decolonization of all illegally held Palestinian lands; the end of the Israeli occupation of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank; including East Jerusalem; the implementation of the right of return and repatriation for all Palestinian refugees to their original homes and properties; and an end to the Israeli system of Apartheid and discrimination against the indigenous Palestinian population. Just as SJP condemns the racism and discrimination underlying the policies and laws of the state of Israel, SJP rejects any form of hatred or discrimination against any religious or ethnic group. SJP’s strength is in the great diversity of its membership. SJP welcomes individuals of all backgrounds to join in solidarity with the struggle for justice in Palestine.

JNF Greater New York
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
42 E 69th St
New York, NY 10021

Americas Society's Literature Department
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
680 Park Ave
New York, NY 10065

(212) 277-8351

The Explorers Club
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
46 E 70th St
New York, NY 10021

(212) 628-8383

Asia Society
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
725 Park Ave
New York, NY 10021

(212) 288-6400

Knickerbocker Greys
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
643 Park Ave
New York, NY 10065-6122

(212) 585-1881

The Knickerbocker Greys, founded in 1881, is the oldest after school activity for boys and girls ages 6 to 16. Cadets are afforded opportunities over the years to develop their character, confidence, perseverance, social skills, and problem solving in a manner unlike any other found in New York City and likely the country. The group’s name was derived from the original uniform’s knee-length pants that were known as "knickerbockers,” and the color of the dress uniform, “Cadet Grey.” Over 4,500 New Yorkers have been members of the Knickerbocker Grey Cadet Corps over the past 134 years, including Nelson and David Rockefeller, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Pierpont Morgan Hamilton, Cornelius Vanderbilt Jr., John Lindsay, and Lowell Thomas. Today, the Greys are a part of living history and still proudly drill at the landmarked Seventh Regiment Armory on Park Avenue at 66th Street. Boys and girls from a diverse cross section of public, private and parochial schools throughout New York City have participated in the Knickerbocker Greys. Confidence building starts the first day of drill. The main focus of each weekly meeting, led by a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve and his young officers, is to instill in each cadet a sense of self-discipline, leadership, compassion, and orderliness. As cadets master Drill and Ceremony, they become self-assured in their own abilities. Drill includes, marching, crack company, and posting of the Colors at patriotic events. As cadets rise through the ranks they develop confidence and leadership as they instruct the younger cadets. Each rank, from private to cadet colonel has new leadership challenges. Cadets look forward to participation in various field trips, as well as, historical and civic events. All of the activities ensure that the cadets develop an esprit de corps. The corps of cadets has traditional dine-ins and reviews each year at both the Seventh Regiment Armory’s Drill Hall and other historical venues in Manhattan. Cadets receive leadership training and are given opportunities to be in leadership roles as squad leaders, company commanders, and staff officers. Cadets develop skills such as how to motivate others, empathy, patience, supervise junior cadets, and command a group of peers. These elements of leadership help the cadets in all areas of their school lives now and with their jobs, careers and families later in life. The discipline, orderliness, fairness and kindness that characterize the Greys experience are ideals that most parents want for their children, but there are few ways of imparting them in the usual after-school activities. Thanks to the Corps' leadership, the Greys are still one way for the children of New York City to develop those attributes.

The Heckscher Foundation For Children
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
123 E 70th St
New York, NY 10021

(212) 744-0190

The Louis and Nancy Hatch Dupree Foundation
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
954 Lexington Ave, # 118
New York, NY 10021

(917) 546-9369

The Dupree Foundation promotes nation building through information sharing, the underlying vision that created the Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University (ACKU).

American-Italian Cancer Foundation
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
112 E 71st St, Ste 2B
New York, NY 10021

(212) 628-9090

The International Post-Doctoral Research Fellowship Program supports the post-doctoral research of promising young scientists who work and train in collaboration with mentors at major cancer centers in the United States and Italy. Mobile No-Cost Breast Cancer Screening Program AICF’s Mobile Mammography Program serves economically disadvantaged and medically underserved women in New York City who are age 40 and over and have not had a mammogram in the last 12 months. Many of these women have geographic, cultural, or linguistic barriers to receiving screening services and do not make annual screenings for breast cancer a priority. AICF’s mobile clinics travel to priority neighborhoods in the five boroughs to deliver mammograms, clinical breast exams, and instruction in breast self exam. The Program’s mobile nature makes it easy to access important—and potentially lifesaving—breast cancer screening services. All services are provided at no cost, regardless of health insurance status. The generous support of the following contributors is funding the Program during 2010-11: Avon Foundation Breast Health Outreach Program Jane Beasley Foundation The Council of the City of New York Disney VoluntEARS Community Fund Joy Germont Mr. and Mrs. Todd Hollander The Greater New York City Affiliate of Susan G. Komen for the Cure® National Breast Cancer Foundation New York City Council Cancer Initiative New York City Council Manhattan Delegation New York City Council Member Maria Baez New York City Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene New York State Assembly Member Michael Benjamin New York State Assembly Member Jonathan L. Bing New York State Assembly Member Alec Brook-Krasny New York State Assembly Member Steven Cymbrowitz New York State Assembly Member Rhoda Jacobs New York State Assembly Member Micah Kellner New York State Assembly Member Felix Ortiz New York State Department of Health New York State Senator Martin Malavé Dilan New York State Senator Martin J. Golden Pfizer Inc. Additional Individual Donors

Columbus Citizens Foundation
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
8 E 69th St
New York, NY 10021

(212) 249-9923

Roosevelt Institute at Hunter College
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
47-49 E 65th St
New York, NY 10065

(914) 479-9145

China Institute in America
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
100 Washington St
New York, NY 10006

(212) 744-8181

Seeds of Peace YLC
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
370 Lexington Ave, Ste 1201
New York, NY 10017

(212) 573-8040