The Cloisters in popular culture

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The Cloisters is a branch of New York City's Metropolitan Museum of Art, which houses the institution's collection of Medieval art. Located in Fort Tryon Park in Upper Manhattan, The Cloisters opened in 1938. It has been featured and referenced in many works of popular culture since then.

Literature[edit]

  • 1950 – Several chapters of Frederick Buechner's novel, A Long Day's Dying, are set in The Cloisters.
  • 1953 – A 12th century sculpture from The Cloisters collection carries a curse which causes the death of a Ziegfeld girl in Russell Janney's So Long As Love Remembers.[1]
  • 1955 – A kiss in the Heather Garden of Fort Tryon Park and a visit to The Cloisters are memories which resonate throughout Herman Wouk's novel Marjorie Morningstar.[1]
  • 1982 – In Nancy Garden's novel for young adults Annie on My Mind, the lead characters spend time together in The Cloisters; it is an especially meaningful location for the title character.
  • 1994James Morrow's Towing Jehovah has its protagonist meet the Archangel Raphael after taking a ritual bath in the Cux Cloister fountain at midnight.[1][2]
  • 2002Richard Powers' The Year of Our Singing is set in The Cloisters.[2]
  • 2002 – The main character in James Lasdun's The Horned Man visits the Unicorn Tapestries to find the meaning of a growth on his head.[1]
  • 2003 – In The Bone Vault by Linda Fairstein , the body of a Cloisters research assistant is found inside an Egyptian sarcophagus.[1]
  • 2003 – The main character of Han Nolan's novel When We Were Saints meets a Southern boy who she believes shares her spiritual power. She takes him to live in The Cloisters, where the birchwood statue of the "Enthroned Virgin and Child" from Autun, France causes a dispute between them.[1]
  • 2006 – In Mary Pope Osborne's children's book Blizzard of the Blue Moon, the main characters. Grinda and Balor, are sent back to 1938, the year The Cloisters opened, in order to free the unicorn from the Unicorn Tapestries.[1]
  • 2007 – In Gregor and the Code of Claw, the final book in Suzanne Collins' Underland Chronicles, the main character Gregor remembers visiting the Cloisters, and compares himself to a statue of a knight lying on top of a sarcophagus.
  • 2007 – In When Day Breaks by Mary Jane Clark, a murder investigation revolves around the theft of a unicorn amulet, and ends with a deadly fall off the ramparts of The Cloisters.[1]
  • 2010 – A fog which passes through The Cloisters brings to life a manticore in the Narbonne arch door which attacks the narrator of Lee Carroll's Black Swan Rising. ("Lee Carroll" is Carol Goodman and Lee Slonimsky.)[1][2]
  • 2011 – In C.C. Humphreys' young adult novel The Hunt of the Unicorn the protagonist is pulled into the "Unicorn in Captivity" tapestry during a school field trip, and ends up in a fantasy world with a unicorn named Moonspill.[1][2]
  • 2012 – The Autun "Enthroned Virgin and Child" creates a strong bond between the narrator and a dead friend in Carol Rifka Brunt's Tell the Wolves I'm Home.[1]
  • 2017 – In Carol Goodman's young adult novel The Metropolitans, set in The Cloisters, a carved stone basilisk from the Narbonne arch doorway features in the plot.[2]
  • 2018 – In The Cloister, James Carroll tells the story of two relationships that are linked together across 800 years.[2]
  • 2019 – In The Toll, the third book of the Arc of a Scythe series by Neal Shusterman, many chapters are set in The Cloisters.
  • 2022 – In The Cloisters, Katy Hays follows a curatorial associate working a summer job at The Cloisters.

Poetry[edit]

  • 1961Leonard Cohen published The Spice Box Of Earth, a collection of poems including "The Unicorn Tapestries".
  • 1946 – The Unicorn Tapestries inspired poet Anne Morrow Lindbergh to writes a series of poems published in The Unicorn and Other Poems 1935–1955.[1]
  • 1981Jorge Luis Borges' poem "The Cloisters", from La Cifra presents the sense of timelessness that resonates in The Cloisters.[1][2]

Comics[edit]

  • 1980Spider-Man dueled the Rapier in The Cloisters.[1]
  • 2008Nightwing becomes the curator of the museum, which he closes for "renovations" for several months, while in actuality using its offices as his base of operations, having sent home the entire staff.[1]

Film[edit]

Television[edit]

  • 1994 – In season 1, episode 7 of the animated TV series Gargoyles ("Temptation", first broadcast on November 11, 1994), the gargoyles Demona and Brooklyn of the Manhattan Clan fight at The Cloisters.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Carter, Michael (July 22, 2013). "The Cloisters in Popular Culture: "Time in This Place Does Not Obey an Order"". Metropolitan Museum website.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Niedan, Christian (June 13, 2019) "Cloisters in Fiction" Across the Margin
  3. ^ Bouzereau, Laurent (2021). West Side Story the Making of the Steven Spielberg Film. ISBN 9781419750632.