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  • NEW ORLEANS city PARK THINGS TO DO, THINGS TO SEE

city park

City Park, a 1,300-acre public park in New Orleans, Louisiana, is the 87th largest and 20th-most-visited urban public park in the United States. City Park is approximately 50% larger than Central Park in New York City, the municipal park recognized by Americans nationwide as the archetypal urban greenspace. \ ABOUT:Serving as New Orleans' largest outdoor attraction since 1854, City Park is one of the oldest parks in the country. With its iconic oak trees and picturesque moss canopies, this 1,300 acre green space brings in millions of visitors each year. People come from near and far to enjoy the beautiful trails and scenery, as well as the endless amount of vendors, museums and activities within the park itself. With multiple themed gardens, biking and walking paths, live concerts, an amusement park and the World's largest grove of mature live oak trees, City Park has something for everyone!
Just for KidsFamilies love to bring their kids for a day of outdoor fun at City Park, because everything is kid-friendly. In fact the park holds a few attractions created specifically with kids in mind.
For young ones who love a good fairy tail, Storyland is a storybook-themed playground with over 25 giant sculptures from all your favorite bedtime stories.
Kids also love the Carousel Gardens Amusement Park, where you'll find over 15 different rides for kids of all ages. You can even take a ride on the park's historic, handcrafted carousel that is one of only 100 in the country!
Cafe Du MondeThe French Quarter favorite has found an additional home in New Orleans City Park. Before a visit to NOMA or a family-friendly day at Storyland make a visit to Cafe du Monde for a taste of the perfectly powdered pastries that New Orleans is well-known for.
Golf of all kindsIn addition to its spacious 18-hole golf course, City Park offers a New Orleans-themed mini golf course called City Putt. City Putt has two courses, one with a New Orleans theme and one with a Louisiana theme. Each course is 18 holes. And if that's not enough, the park has its Disc Golf course, taking players through scenic routes of live oak trees, lagoons and bridges.
Botanical GardenThe New Orleans Botanical Garden has grown and developed since the 1930s. Open year round, the gardens hold 12 acres of colorful flowers, greenery and art. You can also explore The Helis Foundation Enrique Alferez Sculpture Garden, an 8,000 sq. foot sculpture garden with works from Enrique Alferez.
Fishing and Boat rentalAt City Park you can explore the area by land or by water! There are 11 lagoons located around the park with bass, catfish and perch in abundance for fishing opportunities. Around Big Lake you can also rent a bike or paddleboat to explore the park in different ways.
The New Orleans Museum of ArtWrapped inside the borders of City Park stands the exquisite NOMA, the city's oldest art institution with famous works from all over America, France, Japan and more! And just outside of the museum you can take a walk through The Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden, a five-acre garden with over 60 uniquely designed sculptures displayed among the 200 hundred year-old oak trees.
The Festival GroundsFirst opened in 2012, the Festival Grounds are a 50-acre space with sports fields, a bike path, an exercise area, wetlands and other areas used for recreational activities year round. And come festival season, the Grounds are a popular spot to host springtime events from private parties to live concert series!
In addition to these points of interest, City Park has an endless amount of trails, bike and running paths, green space and many other hidden gems worth exploring. Check out the listings below to see some of the variety offered!
Address: 1 Palm Dr, New Orleans, LA 70124Departments: City Park Police Department · City Park TrainHours: Open ⋅ Closes 5PM · More hoursArea: 1,300 acres (5.3 km2)Owner: New OrleansPhone: (504) 482-4888

NOMA , new orleans museum of ART

ICURRENT EXHIBITIONS
ANCESTORS IN STONEon view through December 31st, 2020
A recently acquired akwanshi stone monolith from the Cross River region of Nigeria forms the centerpiece of a focus exhibition featuring stone as a material used in ancestral veneration among West African cultures. READ MORE

TORKWASE DYSON: BLACK COMPOSITIONAL THOUGHT | 15 PAINTINGS FOR THE PLANTATIONOCENEon view through December 31st, 2020
Produced for the New Orleans Museum of Art, this new series of fifteen paintings by Torkwase Dyson are inspired by the design systems of architecture, water infrastructure, the oil and gas industry, and the physical impact of global warming. The exhibition also examines the legacy of plantation economies and their relationship to the environmental and infrastructural issues of our current age, which many characterize as the “plantationocene.” READ MORE

NEW PHOTOGRAPHY: CREATE, COLLECT, COMPILEon view through March 7th, 2021
Over the past two decades, the ways in which we create, collect, and compile photographs have shifted dramatically. In broad strokes, we might define this shift as away from photographs as singular, iconic, and private objects to a ubiquitous, public, and collective phenomenon that is now often immaterial. This exhibition presents the work of four photographers, all of whom work with, and critique, these new practices in photography. Unified by their understanding of the photograph as an ambiguous messenger, each of these artists creates, collects, or compiles photographs to trace narratives about identity, community, and power. READ MORE

ARTE SACRA: ROMAN CATHOLIC ART FROM PORTUGUESE INDIAon view through June 20th, 2021
In the centuries following the arrival of Francis Xavier, a Catholic missionary, in 1542, the state of Goa in western India became the administrative and economic center of a Portuguese empire that extended west to Africa and east to Malaysia, China, and Japan. The vast trade networks established by the Portuguese and Spanish allowed not only for the spread of Christianity, but also an unprecedented artistic exchange within these colonial empires. This exhibition, from the collection of Dr. Siddharth Bhansali, reveals both the global influence of European seventeenth- and eighteenth-century styles, as well as the transformation of these styles in the hands of Indian artists creating a new visual tradition. READ MORE

THE PURSUIT OF SALVATION: JAIN ART FROM INDIAon view through June 20th, 2021
The Jain faith has been continuously practiced in India since at least the sixth century BCE. Nonviolence, a respect for all living beings, and the belief in the existence of a permanent soul whose true nature is obscured by accumulated karma are core principles of Jainism. Created over a period of more than fifteen hundred years — the second through nineteenth centuries — the sculptures, paintings, and manuscripts on view in this exhibition of works loaned from the collection of Dr. Siddharth Bhansali illuminate iconographic and stylistic change as well as regional variation. READ MORE

ROBERTO LUGO: “STUNTING” GARNITURE SETon view through April 18th, 2021
In 2019, the New Orleans Museum of Art commissioned Philadelphia-based artist Roberto Lugo to create “Stunting,” a set of three ceramic pots inspired by NOMA’s traditional collection. Best known for cultural mash-ups that blend contemporary social issues with traditional porcelain pottery, Lugo’s powerful commentary on poverty, inequality, and racial injustice has made him a defining artist for our moment. READ MORE

MENDING THE SKYon view through January 31st, 2021
Mending the Sky brings together eleven artist projects that envision our world after disaster. The exhibition takes its title from a Chinese fable in which a rip in the sky causes the earth to split open, bringing floods, fires, famine, and disease—until a goddess takes on the arduous task of mending the broken sky. READ MORE

EAR TO THE GROUND: EARTH AND ELEMENT IN CONTEMPORARY ARTon view through December 31st, 2020
Working with natural elements like earth, wind, water and fire, the contemporary artists in Ear to the Ground show how nature can spur artistic innovation and spark new thinking about human culture and community. READ MORE

ORIENTALISM: TAKING AND MAKINGon view through December 31st, 2020
Drawn from NOMA’s permanent collection, this installation addresses shades of oppression, racism, and superficial cultural understanding layered in 19th-century Orientalist paintings, photographs, and decorative arts. READ MORE
SCULPTURE GARDEN

botanical garden

train garden


TRAIN GARDENA model of New Orleans in the early 19th Century
The Historic New Orleans Train Garden is one of the park’s hidden gems, tucked away in a vibrant, lush corner of the Botanical Garden. The train garden features typical New Orleans home and building architecture made with botanical materials, and replicas of streetcars and trains that wind around the track. Visitors walk along a pathway representing the water surrounding the city and “stops” along the track give brief histories of the neighborhoods and the train and streetcar lines that served them. As visitors walk they overlook 1300 feet of track carrying streetcars and trains like those that traveled the city in the late 1800s to the early 1900s, at 1/22 of their actual size.
The Train Garden layout and its buildings were designed and constructed by renowned artisan Paul Busse, who has built the “mechanical and botanical” displays in gardens from New York City to Chicago.

The Train Garden is open during normal Botanical Garden hours, but trains operate on a limited schedule: Saturdays and Sundays (when the Botanical Garden is open) and during Celebration in the Oaks. The Train Garden is available for birthday and private parties.
For more information about these unique and inspired train gardens, visit the Garden Trains Association.it me.

CAROUSEL GARDEN AMUSEMENT RIDES

Blair House new Orleans
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