Posts Tagged ‘Art and the River project’

Dorsky Museum to be open during Thanksgiving holiday weekend

Monday, November 16th, 2009
Visitors to the "The Hudson River to Niagara Falls: 19th-Century American Landscape Paintings from the New-York Historical Society" exhibition at the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art.

Visitors to the "The Hudson River to Niagara Falls: 19th-Century American Landscape Paintings from the New-York Historical Society" exhibition at the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art.

Those looking for something to do over the Thanksgiving weekend won’t have to look any further than the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art.

The museum will be closed on Thursday, but will reopen and maintain regular hours (11 a.m.-5 p.m.) on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. A free gallery tour will take place on Sunday, Nov. 29.

Visitors are encouraged to visit the current exhibitions: “Inscription” and “The Hudson River – A Great American Treasure,” which close on Nov. 29, and “Panorama of the Hudson River,” which closes on Dec. 13, but will reopen in February. The flagship exhibition of the Dorsky Museum’s Art and the River project, “The Hudson River to Niagara Falls: 19th-Century American Landscape Paintings from the New-York Historical Society,” will conclude its successful run on Dec. 13.

Symposium to explore historic context of ‘Hudson River to Niagara Falls’ exhibition

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

By Samantha Thomson ’09 (Communications and Media)

Public Affairs Intern

On the Esopus, Meadow Groves, ca. 1857-58, oil on canvas by William Hart (1823-1894). Image submitted

On the Esopus, Meadow Groves, ca. 1857-58, oil on canvas by William Hart (1823-1894). Image submitted

The college is hosting “Revisiting the Hudson: 19th Century Landscape Painting in Context,” a daylong symposium on Saturday, Nov. 7, focusing on the art featured in the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art’s “The Hudson River to Niagara Falls: 19th Century American Landscape Painting from the New-York Historical Society” exhibition.

Kerry Dean Carso (Art History) organized the symposium, which will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Lecture Center, room 102.

The lectures will cover a wide range of topics relating to the Hudson River School of Art, including discussions of notable artists Thomas Cole and Frederic Church; landscape painting in the Shawangunks; and architecture found along the Hudson River. Lecturers include art history scholars and professionals from colleges, historical sites and museums from the East Coast.

In addition to the lectures, guided tours of the museum’s successful exhibition, which is on display through Dec. 13, will be available between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.

The event, like the “Hudson River to Niagara Falls” show, is part of the Samuel Dorsky Museum’s “Art &The River” project – a six-month series of exhibitions, lectures and events celebrating the Hudson River’s Quadricentennial.

The symposium is free and open to the public and was made possible through the generous support of The Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area.

Museum to extend popular ‘Panorama of the Hudson River’ exhibition into 2010

Monday, October 19th, 2009

By Samantha Thomson ’09 (Communication and Media)

Public Affairs Intern

Images from the extended "Panorama of the Hudson River" show. Top image is a section of Greg Miller's image; bottom image is from 1910 photo.

Images from the extended "Panorama of the Hudson River" show. Top image is a section of Greg Miller's 2009 photo; bottom image is from a 1910 photo commissioned by the Hudson River Day Line Steamer Company.

Greg Miller’s “Panorama of the Hudson River” has had a lasting impact on the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art.

The photographic panorama’s run at the Sara Bedrick Gallery has been extended into next year. The show, which opened in July, will continue through Dec. 13 and will reopen on Feb. 6 for seven weeks.

Sara Pasti, the Neil C. Trager director of the museum, said the show was extended because of its popularity and to allow students who arrive in the spring semester to view the exhibition.

The museum commissioned Miller, a photographer from Monroe, to create a photographic panorama of the Hudson River that was modeled on earlier painted, engraved and photographic views of the river.

Miller’s photograph of the Hudson River includes both banks and stretches from Manhattan to Albany. The image is paired with a 1910 photographic panorama developed for the Hudson River Day Line Steamer Company; both photographs are 80 feet long.

The show is part of the college’s Art and the River project, a six-month series of exhibitions, lectures and events celebrating the Hudson River’s Quadricentennial.

Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art to open final exhibitions for Art and the River Project

Monday, September 7th, 2009
"Bear Mountain View," photograph by Greg Miller

"Bear Mountain View," photograph by Greg Miller

The openings of “The Hudson River: A Great American Treasure” by Greg Miller and “Inscription” by Philippine Hoegen and Carolien Stikker on Sept. 19 mark the final installment in the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art’s six-month Art and the River project.

The Art and the River project is the museum’s contribution to the Hudson River Quadricentennial taking place this year.

An opening reception will be held for “The Hudson River” and “Inscription” from 4 to 6 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 19.

“The artists behind ‘The Hudson River’ and ‘Inscription’ invested a great deal of time exploring the region in order to create their beautiful and haunting images,” said Sara Pasti, the Neil C. Trager Director of the museum.

Untitled 2004, (still image from video), by Philippine Hoegen and Carolien Stikker

Untitled 2004, (still image from video), by Philippine Hoegen and Carolien Stikker

“The Hudson River: A Great American Treasure” is the second Art and the River project show by Orange County, N.Y.-based photographer Greg Miller. The newest exhibition presents 20 recent color photographs of Hudson Valley landscapes by Miller, whose panoramic photograph of the Hudson River is on display at the museum through Dec. 13. The photographs in “The Hudson River” depict views of the river and its valleys from New York City’s George Washington Bridge to the river’s small upstate tributaries.

For “Inscription,” the Dorsky Museum commissioned Amsterdam artists Philippine Hoegen and Carolien Stikker to produce a short film about the river. The artists, who work together and maintain solo careers, visited the campus in May and June of 2009 to explore the Hudson River and its tributaries. During that time, they made film, videotape and digital audio recordings under the working title “Riverbank.”

There are four works in the exhibition: a video projection, “Crossing;” a slide and video projection installation, “Smoke no smoke;” and hybrid photographic videos, both untitled. In addition, a book, titled “Superstructure,” will be published by the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art and SUNY Press to coincide with the exhibition.

From June to December, the museum is hosting five art exhibitions – including the flagship exhibition, “The Hudson River to Niagara Falls: 19th-century American Landscape Paintings from the New-York Historical Society”; an academic symposium; and various other events.

An artists’ lecture for “Inscription” is set for 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 16, in the campus’s Lecture Center, room 102.

Both exhibitions are open through Nov. 29.

Museum receives nearly $10,000 in funding for Art and the River Project

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

The Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art has received $9,500 in funding for programs related to its Art and the River Project.

The museum received two awards for its “Hudson River to Niagara Falls: 19th-century American Landscape Paintings from the New-York Historical Society” exhibition on display through Dec. 13.The first is a $1,000 sponsorship award from the Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area to help support promotional efforts for the college’s Nov. 7 symposium being held in conjunction with exhibition. The second is a $2,500 quadricentennial mini-grant award from the New York Council on the Humanities will support public education and outreach programs related to the exhibition. Both awards came through the Research Foundation and Office of Sponsored Funds.

Funding for Greg Miller’s “Panorama of the Hudson River,” also on display through Dec. 13, includes $3,500 from the Furthermore Foundation, a program of the J.M. Kaplan Fund, to support publication costs of an exhibition catalog and $2,500 from SUNY Press to go toward the book’s printing costs. The book is scheduled to come out in mid-September.

Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art opens blockbuster “Hudson River to Niagara Falls” exhibition on July 11

Monday, July 20th, 2009

Museum continues its Art and the River Project voyage

Members of the local and campus communities view some of the 45 paintings displayed in “Hudson River to Niagara Falls: 19th-Century American Landscape Paintings from the New-York Historical Society” at the show's July 11 opening at the campus's Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art. (Photo by Eric Gullickson/Public Affairs)

Members of the local and campus communities view some of the 45 paintings displayed in “Hudson River to Niagara Falls: 19th-Century American Landscape Paintings from the New-York Historical Society” at the show's July 11 opening at the campus's Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art. (Photo by Eric Gullickson/Public Affairs)

The headline exhibition of Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art’s Hudson River-themed Art and the River Project opened on July 11.

“Hudson River to Niagara Falls: 19th-Century American Landscape Paintings from the New-York Historical Society” was produced with the New-York Historical Society and will be on display in the Morgan Anderson Gallery and the Howard Greenberg Family Gallery through Dec. 13. Forty-five landscape paintings of the Hudson Valley from the historical society’s collection are featured in the show.

Donald Christian (left), who begins work as provost of the college on Aug. 3, and Mary Hafeli, who arrived on campus on July 1 as dean of the School of Fine and Performing Arts, attended the July 11 opening. (Photo by Eric Gullickson/Public Affairs)

Donald Christian (left), who begins work as provost of the college on Aug. 3, and Mary Hafeli, who arrived on campus on July 1 as dean of the School of Fine and Performing Arts, attended the July 11 opening. (Photo by Eric Gullickson/Public Affairs)

An opening reception for “Hudson River to Niagara Falls” and another Art and the River show, “Panorama of the Hudson: Greg Miller,” was held for both events on July 11 with members of the campus and regional communities in attendance. The Art and the River Project coincides with the valley’s yearlong program celebrating the Hudson River’s quadricentennial. The program was made possible with a $143,449 federal grant from Congressman Maurice Hinchey ‘68, ‘70g and the support of the Institute of Museum and Library Services.

For “Panorama of the Hudson,” a large-scale panoramic photograph of the Hudson River, from New York City to Albany, was commissioned by the museum. Local artist Greg Miller’s completed piece is hanging in the Sara Bedrick Gallery through Dec. 13.

There are three other exhibitions rounding out the Art and the River Project. The museum’s annual Hudson Valley Artists show, “Ecotones and Transition Zones,” opened in the Horace and Alice Chandler Gallery and the North Gallery on June 18. It is on display until September 6.

The series continues with “The Hudson River: A Great American Treasure – Greg Miller” and “Riverbank: Philippine Hoegen and Carolien Stikker” opening on Sept. 16. Both shows, which feature works by visiting artists, are on display through Nov. 29.

Campus marks Hudson River’s 400th anniversary with Art and the River Project

Monday, June 15th, 2009
Francis Augustus Silva(1835-1886)/New York Harbor, N.Y./1880/Oil on canvas, 12 x 20 in./Collection of the New-York Historical Society

Francis Augustus Silva(1835-1886)/New York Harbor, N.Y./1880/Oil on canvas, 12 x 20 in./Collection of the New-York Historical Society

In honor of the Hudson River’s 400th anniversary, the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art embarks on two major Art and the River events this summer: the annual Hudson Valley Artists show and an exhibition of landscape paintings.

The Art and the River Project was made possible with a $143,449 federal grant from Congressman Maurice Hinchey ‘68, ‘70g and the support of the Institute of Museum and Library Services.

Itty Neuhaus (Art – Foundation) installs a piece connecting art and the environment for the 2009 Hudson Valley Artists show, “Ecotones and Transition Zones,” on display in the Alice and Horace Chandler Gallery and North Galley at the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art through September 8.

Itty Neuhaus (Art – Foundation) installs a piece connecting art and the environment for the 2009 Hudson Valley Artists show, “Ecotones and Transition Zones,” on display in the Alice and Horace Chandler Gallery and North Galley at the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art through September 8.

This year’s Hudson Valley Artists show is focused on environmental and ecological themes. The works of approximately 20 emerging area artists and artist teams will be on display in the Alice and Horace Chandler Gallery and North Gallery through Sept. 6. For the show, titled “Ecotones and Transition Zones,” museum curator Brian Wallace selected artwork, information, presentations, activities and other projects that connect global issues such as sustainability, ecological awareness and bioethics to our immediate surroundings.

There are a variety of events associated with “Ecotones and Transition Zones,” including a Habitat for Artists and ecoartspace benefit concert with Dar Williams and Nick Panasevich on Wednesday, June 24.

Flagship exhibition

Meanwhile, the Art and the River Project’s flagship exhibition, “The Hudson River to Niagara Falls: 19th Century American Landscape Paintings from the New-York Historical Society,” opens on July 11.

Featured in the show, which runs through Dec. 13, are 45 landscape paintings by Hudson River School artists. The paintings were selected from the permanent collection of the New-York Historical Society and the show is curated by Linda Ferber, New-York Historical Society museum director.

Another Arts and the River Project show opening this summer is “Panorama of the Hudson River: Greg Miller.” The Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art will also host an Art Along the Hudson – Third Saturday in New Paltz event on July 18.

The Hudson River-themed events continue into the fall. Two more shows – “The Hudson River: A Great American Treasure” by Greg Miller and “Riverbank” by visiting artists Philippine Hoegen and Carolien Stikker – open in September. An educational symposium, “Revisiting the Hudson: Nineteenth Century Landscape Painting in Context,” organized by Kerry Dean Carso (Art History), takes place in November.