Kolodney created the educational program for the
YMHA in Pittsburgh in 1926. In 1935, he joined the 92nd street Y in New York as Educational Director, instituting a wide-ranging educational program. He made the "Y" a center for chamber music, poetry readings, and dance performances. He presented great musicians such as
Rudolf Serkin,
Myra Hess,
Gregor Piatigorsky,
Erica Morini, and
Joseph Hoffman as well as the
Budapest String Quartet in annual series. He established the Y School of Music under the direction of
Abraham Wolf Binder, who believed that it was more important to teach a child how to listen to music than to play an instrument. In 1974, Agnes de Mille said "No other institution in the United States has done more for American dance. Without William Kolodney, there simply was no place to go. He gave us a stage and an intelligent audience. He taught us to hope." Kolodney created The Poetry Center at the "Y" in 1939 "to meet the needs of the very few persons in New York to whom poetry offers the theological, ethical and esthetic equivalents of traditional religion". Poetry was Kolodney's greatest love: "At the center we had the greatest poets,
Eliot,
Cummings,
Stevens. Eliot turned down other institutions to read at the 'Y'". His favorite poet was
Edward Arlington Robinson. In 1953 Kolodney arranged for the Poetry Center to present the first NY performance of
Dylan Thomas's
Under Milk Wood. Kolodney attempted to compile a volume of "Y" Poetry Center poets' responses, including a letter from
T.S. Eliot, to the anti-Semitic 1952
Slánský trial in
Soviet Czechoslovakia, but the volume was never released. When he retired from the 92nd Street Y after 35 years in 1969, a
New York Times editorial noted that he had made the "Y" "the source of some of the most varied and stimulating artistic fare in the nation. His view was ecumenical; the person was always submerged in the artist. He made the "Y" a stay against confusion, a place where for a moment all that is harmonious, stable, beautiful comes to rest." ==The Metropolitan Museum of Art==