New York Post

Finding Treasures Amid the Lockdown

- KELLY JANE TORRANCE Twitter: @KJTorrance

IMOVED to New York City so I could, on any given day, listen to some of the world’s greatest classical music, see some of the world’s finest art and eat at some of the country’s most exciting restaurant­s. Three months later, everything shut down. OK, that’s not quite true. I moved here to take a job at the great newspaper Alexander Hamilton founded. But Gotham’s cultural greatness had long been a lure.

Six months after the shutdown, I feel bereft. The Metropolit­an Opera just canceled its 2020-21 season, and Broadway likely won’t reopen before next fall. I uprooted my DC life for this?

So thank God for the Metropolit­an Museum of Art. I’ve visited it three times since it reopened, and it’s been a balm to my shattered soul — and a reminder that this city is well worth its expense when not under lockdown.

There are some changes at the

Met, of course. You must wear a mask and submit to a temperatur­e check before entering. Water fountains are disabled, and cafés closed. But you can still eat a New

York hot dog on the museum steps and marvel at the life outside one of the city’s best rendezvous.

That main entrance has a long line, but I’m not sure it’s because the museum can only operate at

25 percent capacity. Buy a timed ticket online — or become a member — and breeze in much more quickly through the 81st Street doors.

Do so and you’ll enter into the museum proper in the Hellenisti­c and Roman galleries. That light-filled court has always been my favorite place in the museum’s 2 million square feet. The benches now contain signs advising patrons to “maintain physical distancing,” but there are plenty of them, and I never pass up the opportunit­y to sit silently in that grand room amongst the beautiful human sculptures.

It was there, among the incomplete figures — a head missing here, a limb there — that I felt I might finally become whole again.

As I walked toward the fountain to throw in a coin and make a wish, I saw a woman sketching the headless but still breathtaki­ng Three Graces. We’re lucky to have this font of inspiratio­n once again.

After nearly six months without art, of course the great masters stuck out. The one-of-a-kind light of a Vermeer painting; the workmanlik­e genius of a Michelange­lo chalk drawing; the hypnotic folds of a bright blue dress in an Ingres portrait.

But other things among the museum’s one-and-a-half million objects drew me, too. Rodin was one of the first living artists the Met collected, and his sculptural forms taking shape out of a void touched me now more than ever. Various sculptures and paintings on the theme of artist-as-life-giver seemed essential after months of life coming to a screeching halt.

That’s not to say I wasn’t also struck by less life-affirming works. I’m still haunted by Alexandre Cabanel’s 1864 academic painting “Echo,” with its redheaded solo subject, half-dressed, holding her hands over her ears in some distress: Had someone in the past envisioned my pandemic life?

Manet’s “Young Lady in 1866” was more reassuring: This redhead, standing tall in a pink dressing gown next to her pet parakeet, plays with a monocle, her vision challengin­g our own.

Portraitur­e is my great love, and

‘ Having spent the day with a collection of the best the world’s civilizati­ons have had ’ to offer, I felt refreshed.

I had to commune with some John Singer Sargents before leaving on my first visit. His masterpiec­e “Madame X” is part of the interestin­g “Making The Met: 1870 – 2020” exhibition (yes, there’s another line for that). But the American Wing, though a little harder to access, had its rewards: I could be alone with some of the most interestin­g personalit­ies of the Edwardian and Gilded ages.

Having spent the day with a collection of the best the world’s civilizati­ons have had to offer, I felt refreshed. Walking to a wine bar to continue contemplat­ing, I ran into Woody Allen and Soon-Yi Previn on a nearby street. I had to tell the director how much I enjoyed his memoir published this year, and he pulled down his mask to reply. “Stay safe,” his wife told me as I walked on.

My first year in New York City might not be so bad after all.

Kelly Jane Torrance is a member of The Post Editorial Board.

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