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Spanish Culture in New York City


Spanish Culture in New York City is a reflection of Spain’s own regional diversity including: Andalusian, Basque, Catalan, Castilian, Galician, Romani, and other cultures. 🇪🇸

Flamenco is Spain’s most famous culture. Flamenco Festival New York brings Spain’s best dancers and musicians to New York every spring.

Little Spain” used to be on 14th Street between Eighth and Ninth Avenue. The Spanish social club La Nacional is the only remnant. 🇪🇸

The Spanish Consulate is in Midtown East. Instituto Cervantes, the Spanish government’s language school and cultural center, hosts NYC’s largest Spanish library.

Spanish art is very present in New York museums and auctions. Hispanic Society has arguably the best Spanish art collection outside of Spain.

Repertorio Español is Cuban, but adapts Spanish literature into theatre. Thalia Spanish Theatre has a Spanish producer.

Mercado Little Spain is José Andrés and the Adrià brothers’ Spanish food market with restaurants and kiosks.


Spanish Culture and Artists



Spanish News


Jazz Gallery Jazz Club and Museum

Marta Sanchez Trio, Spanish jazz vocalist 🇪🇸
Miguel Zenón Puerto Rican sax with Dan Weiss Even Odds Trio jazz 🇵🇷
Emmanuel Michael Duo Ugandan South Sudanese jazz guitar 🇺🇬 🇸🇸
National Tap Dance Day with Melissa Almaguer 🇺🇸
Luciana Souza Trio Brazilian bossa nova jazz singer 🇧🇷
Alfredo Colón Blood Burden Dominican sax 🇩🇴

NOMAD, Manhattan

New York Philharmonic is One of the World’s Great Orchestras

Spring Gala with Gustavo Dudamel, Common, Hera Hyesang Park, Bernie Williams 🇦🇹 🇧🇷 🇮🇳 🇲🇽 🇵🇷 🇰🇷 🇺🇸 🇻🇪
Violinist Hilary Hahn Sounds of Spain Sarasate, Ginastera, Ravel, Debussy conducted by Juanjo Mena 🇪🇸
“Sound On” women’s commissions, Trinidadian conductor Kwame Ryan 🇦🇲 🇹🇹
Memorial Day Concert at Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine

DAVID GEFFEN HALL, Lincoln Center, Manhattan

Madison Square Garden is Manhattan’s Arena

Davido “Timeless Tour” Nigerian afrobeats 🇳🇬
Aventura with Romeo Santos “Cerrando Ciclos Tour” Dominican bachata 🇩🇴
Melanie Martinez “The Trilogy Tour” Dominican Puerto Rican pop rock 🇩🇴 🇵🇷
Feid “Ferxxocalipsis Tour” Colombian reggaeton 🇨🇴
Los Temerarios “Hasta Siempre Tour” Regional Mexican grupera 🇲🇽
Sebastian Maniscalco “It Ain’t Right Tour” Italian American comedy 🇮🇹

CHELSEA, Manhattan

Joyce Theater is New York’s Busiest Dance Theater

Ailey II African American Modern dance 🇺🇸
Soledad Barrio & Noche Flamenca “Searching for Goya” Spanish flamenco 🇪🇸
ABT Studio Company classical, neoclassical, and contemporary ballet
Flamenco Vivo Carlota Santana “Equilibrio (Clásica/Tradición)” Spanish flamenco 🇪🇸
Dorrance Dance tap 🇺🇸
Ballet Festival curated by ABT’s Calvin Royal III 🇺🇸

CHELSEA, Manhattan

Le Poisson Rouge is an Eclectic Night Club

María José Llergo and Sandra Carrasco contemporary flamenco 🇪🇸
Ana Tijoux Chilean French hip hop 🇨🇱 🇫🇷
Flamenco Vivo Carlota Santana Spanish flamenco tablao 🇪🇸
Combo Chimbita & Pachyman Colombian alternative cumbia & Puerto Rican reggae 🇨🇴 🇵🇷
Céu Brazilian música popular brasileira (MPB) 🇧🇷
Bebel Gilberto Brazilian bossa nova 🇧🇷
Carmen Consoli Italian pop 🇮🇹
Louane French pop 🇫🇷

GREENWICH VILLAGE, Manhattan

Film Forum Screens Classic and International Film

“Robot Dreams” (2023) Pablo Berger Spanish animation 🇪🇸
“The Fugitive Slaves of Liberty” (1979) Hondo, French Mauritanian view of West Indian history 🇫🇷 🇲🇷

HUDSON SQUARE, Manhattan

Dizzy’s Club at Jazz at Lincoln Center Swings Nightly

Emilio Solla and Antonia Lizana, Argentine folk Spanish flamenco jazz 🇦🇷 🇪🇸
Rycardo Moreno, Yotam Silberstein, and Celia Flores, Spanish flamenco meets jazz 🇪🇸 🇮🇱
Ekep Nkwelle Cameroonian American jazz 🇨🇲 🇺🇸
Duduka da Fonseca, Maucha Adnet, and Helio Alves, Brazilian samba, bossa nova, jazz 🇧🇷
Melissa Aldana, Chilean tenor sax jazz 🇨🇱
Luciana Souza and Trio Corrente, Brazilian samba, bossa nova, jazz 🇧🇷
Luisito Quintero Afro-Venezuelan jazz 🇻🇪
Mandla Mlangeni and Sausa Experience with Ronnie Burrage, South African jazz 🇿🇦 🇺🇸

COLUMBUS CIRCLE, Manhattan

Joe’s Pub at the Public Theater is an Eclectic Music Supper Club

Alejandro Hurtado “Tamiz” brings Spanish flamenco guitar 🇪🇸
Alex Ferreira Dominican alternative 🇩🇴
Las Migas “Libres,” all-women Spanish flamenco 🇪🇸
Cyro Baptista Brazilian jazz 🇧🇷
Federico Aubele tango-infused Argentine alternative 🇦🇷
Raul Cantizano & Los Voluble “Zona Acordonada” experimental Spanish flamenco 🇪🇸
Rodrigo Amarante Brazilian alternative 🇧🇷
Claudia Acuña Chilean jazz 🇨🇱
Leyla McCalla afrobeat, African Diaspora folk and blues 🇭🇹
Chano Domínguez Antonio Lizana Spanish flamenco jazz 🇪🇸

NOHO, Manhattan

The Town Hall Theater is a Performing Arts Center at the Crossroads of Culture and History

Tomatito Flamenco Festival guitar 🇪🇸
Sofiane Pamart French pop piano 🇫🇷
Nathalie Lermitte “PIAF! The Show” chanson folk 🇫🇷
Orchestra Noir “Y2K Meets 90s Vibe” African American pop orchestra 🇺🇸
Eric D’Alessandro comedy 🇮🇹
Niña Pastori “Camino Tour” pop flamenco 🇪🇸
Stephane Wrembel “Django a Gogo” jazz manouche 🇫🇷
Daniela Darcourt “Atrevida Y Teatral” salsa 🇵🇪
Sofía Niño de Rivera “Vacaciones de Sus Hijos Gira 2024” comedy 🇲🇽
Francis Cabrel pop 🇫🇷

MIDTOWN, Manhattan

Repertorio Español’s Spanish-Language Theatre is Some of New York’s Most Successful Off-Broadway

“En el tiempo de las mariposas,” from Julia Álvarez 🇩🇴
“Eva Luna,” from Isabel Allende 🇨🇱
“La breve y maravillosa vida de Oscar Wao” from Juno Díaz 🇩🇴
“La dama boba,” from Lope de Vega 🇪🇸
“La golondrina” by Guillem Clua 🇪🇸
“Radojka by Schmidt and Ibarzabal 🇺🇾

APRIL
“El Quijote” from Cervantes 🇪🇸
“La llamada” musical comedy by Javier Ambrossi and Javier Calvo 🇪🇸

KIPS BAY, Manhattan

World Music Institute is a Leading World Music Producer

THE TOWN HALL, Midtown ~ Tomatito Spanish flamenco jazz 🇪🇸
MERKIN HALL, Lincoln Square ~ Israel Fernández & Diego Del Morao Spanish flamenco 🇪🇸
LE POISSON ROUGE, Greenwich Village ~ María José Llergo & Sandra Carrasco contemporary Spanish flamenco 🇪🇸
BROOKLYN ACADEMY OF MUSIC, Fort Greene, Brooklyn ~ Caetano Veloso “Meu Coco” Brazilian MPB 🇧🇷

Theater at Madison Square Garden Hosts Major Latin Artists

Pablo Alboran Tour La Cu4rta Hoja, Spanish pop 🇪🇸
Los Ángeles Azules El Amor de mi Vida Tour, Mexican cumbia 🇲🇽
Laura Pausini, Italian and Spanish pop 🇮🇹 🇪🇸
Mon Laferte Autopoiética Tour, Chilean Mexican alternative 🇨🇱 🇲🇽
Zucchero Overdose D’Amore World Tour, Italian alternative rock 🇮🇹
Jay Wheeler Trappii Tour, Puerto Rican reggaeton and trap 🇵🇷
CHELSEA, Manhattan

Radio City Music Hall is The World’s Largest Indoor Theater

Juanes Colombian rock 🇨🇴
Gloria Trevi Mexican pop rock 🇲🇽
Gilberto Santa Rosa “Auténtico” Puert Rican salsa 🇵🇷
Silvestre Dangond ‘Ta Malo Colombian vallenato 🇨🇴
Tony Touch “The Piece Maker Concert” Puerto Rican hip hop 🇵🇷
Hombres G 40 Aniversario Spanish pop rock 🇪🇸

ROCKEFELLER CENTER, Midtown, Manhattan


Spanish New York City


Little Spain

Spanish NYC disbursed after the Spanish-American War of 1898.

New York City’s “Little Spain” used to be on 14th Street between Seventh and Eighth Avenues. La Nacional, the Spanish social club, is the only remnant.


Spanish Art

The Hispanic Society Museum and Library in Washington Heights has the best collection of Colonial Spanish art outside of Madrid.

Eva Davidova is a New York Spanish multimedia artist. 🇪🇸


Spanish Books

In the U.S., “Don Quixote” is treated as a children’s story. Actually it is the beginning of modern literature. It was the first time a character a story knew they were being written about.

The Jorge Luis Borges Library at Instituto Cervantes in Midtown East is New York City’s biggest Spanish-language library.

The King Juan Carlos Center at NYU promotes Spanish-language literature at New York University.

The Hispanic Institute at Columbia University hosts talks about Hispanic culture. Twitter @CasaHispanicaNY


Spanish Consulate

The Spanish Consulate is in Midtown East, Manhattan.

They produce Spain Culture New York, a website and newsletter about Spanish events in New York City. spainculture.us


Spanish Dance

The Flamenco Festival New York and Flamenco Festival New York City Center, and other venues, brings the best flamenco artists from Spain to New York.

Bárbara Martínez is a New York flamenco singer and dancer. 🇦🇷 🇻🇪

Flamenco Vivo Carlota Santana is one of the leading flamenco dance companies in the United States. It produces the Flamenco Certamen USA national amateur Flamenco competition. 🇪🇸


Spanish Fashion

Ágatha Ruiz de la Prada is a Spanish fashion designer who regularly presents her New York Fashion Week shows at Fashion Designers of Latin America.

Chus Burés is a Spanish jewelry designer who got famous for jewelry used in Pedro Almódovar movies.

Custo Barcelona presents his fashion shows at Fashion Designers of Latin America.

Desigual is a Spanish fashion house with stores in New York City.

Manolo Blahnik is a legendary Spanish shoe designer.

Zara is a fast fashion leader.


Spanish Festivals

Columbus Day is controversial because the man was evil and unleashed great evil on the world.

Hispanic Heritage Month is more about the Spanish-speaking peoples of the Americas.

Three Kings Day is the traditional Spanish Christmas gift-giving day.


Spanish Film

Film at Lincoln Center presents Spanish film. Pedro Almodóvar often participates.


Spanish Food

Mercado Little Spain by Chef Andrés and the Adría Brothers is a collection of Spanish restaurants, kiosks and bars in Hudson Yards.


Spanish Language School

Instituto Cervantes is a language school and cultural center sponsored by the government of Spain.


Spanish Music

Carnegie Hall in Midtown and the New York Philharmonic in Lincoln Center both produce concerts of Spanish artists and composers.


Spanish Sports

Atlético Madrid NYC is New York’s Atlético Madrid soccer supporters club.

FC Barcelona NYC is New York’s Barcelona soccer supporters club.

Peña Madridista is New York’s Real Madrid soccer supporters club.


Spanish Theatre

Most of New York City’s Spanish-language theatre is Hispanic, but the director of the Thalia is a Spaniard.

Repertorio Español is a Cuban Off-Broadway theatre company that produces Spanish and Hispanic theatre, often from literature.

Thalia Spanish Theatre produces Spanish and Hispanic theatre in Sunnyside, Queens. 🇪🇸


Culture of Spain


Spanish NYC (Ocusfocus/Dreamstime)

Spanish culture has been a major influence on the culture of New York City, the United States, the Americas, and the world.

Spain is famous for flamenco, but is influential in every cultural dimension. Spanish culture is a blend of Celtic, Roman, North African, Jewish, Gothic, Arab, Romani culture, and more. Spain also absorbed culture from the Americas.

Islamic Spain (711-1492) was one of the three great European civilizations. It was one of the most advanced societies of its time and developed a lot of scientific knowledge that we use today.

Hispanic culture is a legacy of the Spanish Empire (1492-1898) which brutally forced Spanish language, religion, and culture on the Indigenous peoples of the Americas and the African Diaspora. The colonial Spanish church was violent, but allowed intermarriage which created the “Latin” people.

The western two-thirds of the United States was once part of New Spain (1519-1821). Today the U.S. has the world’s second largest Spanish-speaking population after Mexico.

The first European Thanksgiving in what became the U.S. was in St Augustine, Florida in 1565.


Spain is Multicultural


Spain is so multicultural that it is one of the proofs that there is no “pure” nationality. We are genetic and cultural mixes of each other. It’s human to think the world has always been the way it is in our lifetimes, but many modern nations are less that 200 years, five or ten generations old.

The Mediterranean Was a Lake to the Ancients

Ancient peoples, notably the Phoenicians from what is now Lebanon, traveled the Mediterranean Sea like a lake. They established colonies around the Sea including in in Western North Africa in Southern Spain.

Jewish communities built colonies too. So Spain has this diverse ancient heritage.

The End of the World was a Violent Place

Europe is not physically a continent. It is a peninsula on the western side of Eurasia and Spain is the tip of the peninsula.

Eurasian migration is generally east to west, so migrating peoples eventually ended up in Spain, the “end of the world” in old European thinking. As people neared the tip of Spain, the land acted like a funnel forcing them into an ever smaller space, so there was a lot of fighting. Violence was part of the ancient Spanish character. It manifested in the so-called Reconquista (722-1492), colonial violence against Indigenous Peoples and the African Diaspora (1492-1899), and the Spanish Inquisition (1478-1834).

People also came the other way from North Africa across the Straight of Gibraltar, which is only nine miles wide. There were two major invasions. The first was North African. The second was Arab.

Amongst all this fighting, there was also cooperation among peoples. When humans work together, we do amazing things. Sephardic Jewish poets who wrote in Arabic and worked for both Moorish and Spanish kings, recovered classical Greco-Roman ideals from the great libraries of Islam. “Western Culture” was resurrected by those Jewish poets.

Flamenco is a Spanish song and dance form of the Romani people, originally from Rajasthan in Northern India. They traveled northern and southern routes around the Mediterranean to Spain, absorbing many cultures along the road.

So when you say something is “Spanish,” that can mean many different things. In spite of the horrors of our past, Spain’s diversity is probably why Spanish culture is so rich and beautiful. ¡Olé!


Spanish Artists


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