| SERTS | Artworks by the Rockefeller Center's single-named muralist |
| MINE | A colliery such as the one depicted in many of the artworks by the Northumberland Pitmen Painters of the Ashington Group (4) |
| OWL | Strigiforme such as the tiny saw-whet found clinging to the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree in 2020 (3) |
| SERT | Rockefeller Center's "American Progress" muralist |
| ICERINK | Frozen arena such as the one at Somerset House, London or the Rockefeller Centre, New York (3,4) |
| RINK | Area for ice-skating such as the one open seasonally at Somerset House or that at the Rockefeller Centre (4) |
| AVRIL | Jane ?, French cancan dancer; subject of artworks by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec |
| ETCH | Create artworks by acid corrosion of metal, glass etc |
| KEROSENE | Fuel that built the Rockefeller fortune |
| EXXON | Company descended from the Rockefeller oil empire |
| DINNERPARTY | Feminist installation artwork by Judy Chicago, with "The" |
| DINNER | The __, large-scale installation artwork by Judy Chicago (6,5) |
| PARTY | The __, large-scale installation artwork by Judy Chicago (6,5) |
| RCA | Rockefeller Center's ___ Building, opened May 1933 |
| DECO | Style of Rockefeller Center's "Prometheus" |
| MONETS | Artworks by Claude |
| DNA | In 1944, scientists working at the Rockefeller Institute in New York discovered this chemical which |
| CALF | The Golden ---, artwork by Damien Hirst, sold at Sotheby's for 10.3m (4) |
| THEBRIDESTRIPPEDBAREBYHER | Artwork by Marcel Duchamp also called The Large Glass (3,5,8,4,2,3,9,4) |
| BACHELORSEVEN | Artwork by Marcel Duchamp also called The Large Glass (3,5,8,4,2,3,9,4) |