BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//Historic Hudson River Towns - ECPv6.15.18//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Historic Hudson River Towns
REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H
X-Robots-Tag:noindex
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/New_York
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20220313T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20221106T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20230312T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20231105T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20240310T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20241103T060000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230406T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230406T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230406T193504Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230406T193505Z
UID:10006172-1680771600-1680811200@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion - Sculptures by Dorothy Gillespie
DESCRIPTION:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion\nSculptures by Dorothy M. Gillespie\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park\nOct. 15\, 2021 – Oct. 2023\nFree to the Public\, Dawn to Dusk\nRoCA is proud to present the The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion exhibit as a part of a tribute to the 20th Century artist and feminist\, Dorothy Gillespie. The exhibit will open October 15th in The Catherine Konner Sculpture Park at RoCA.\nDorothy Gillespie’s joyful and brilliantly colored starbursts glimmer hanging from the trees as well as lining the pathway. The pieces create an enchanted garden of colors in motion. Though stationary they seem to possess a kinetic quality. Two larger pieces can be seen at the entry to RoCA. The exhibit was partially installed this summer and will be completed for exhibit October 15th. The exhibit will remain on display through October 2023.\nGillespie (1920-2012) was born in Roanoke\, VA and lived in Nyack during the later years of her life. She pioneered joyful\, new directions of metal sculpture and is best known for large-scale\, colorfully painted arrangements of cut aluminum strips curling\, radiating\, or undulating in giant arrangements of ribbons\, enchanted towers\, or bursting fireworks. She was well known as a painter\, sculptor and installation artist whose work incorporated many significant 20th-century trends in art.\nDuring Dorothy Gillespie’s youth … “girls did not attend art school\, at least not ‘nice’ girls\,” said Gillespie in 2010. Nevertheless\, she was determined to be an artist and attended the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore. She was more fortunate than women sculptors in the 19th Century who were mostly hired as studio assistants by established male sculptors with few exhibitions. Harriet Hosmer\, Emma Stebbins\, Edmonia Lewis\, Frances Grimes and Helen Mears were some of the few who made names in the arts as women during that time. They did not pursue monumental work as frequently as men did and mostly produced works in bronze and consistent middle-class demand for small-scale sculpture to decorate the home and garden. Today many more women are now entering traditional male dominated sculpture roles in metal\, wood and stone\, thanks to the pioneering activism of women like Dorothy Gillespie in the 20th century.\nAn influential force in the women’s movement\, Gillespie encouraged more women’s art in museums and art in public spaces. In 1970\, Gillespie joined Women in the Arts and created picket signs protesting at the Whitney Museum demanding that the curators choose more women artists for their “Annual exhibition. The demonstration worked\, and more women artists were chosen for the show. Although the increase was very slow\, over time it increased from 8 percent to 40 percent. Gillespie was the Founder of the Women Artists Historical Archives of the Women’s Interart Center in NY\, NY\, filming and taping interviews of some of the most important women artists of the 20th century as well as presenting her own radio show. Gillespie along with Joyce Weinstein founded a group called the NY Professional Women Artists. The 14 members lectures at Universities and wrote articles to encourage other women artists.\nGillespie also coordinated a course to educate and enlighten women in the visual arts\, after being invited to teach at The New School in NYC. The intent was to prepare women for a new\, more aggressive role to function in the art world. Due to her already busy schedule\, she asked artist Alice Barber to share the task of revealing to the young students the ‘system’ that drove the NY art world and how to succeed. In 1974 she organized an innovative outdoor exhibition\, Walk Through Art\, mounted in Central Park\, Battery Park\, and Rockefeller Center\, then travelling to fifty colleges\, universities and street fairs. Compelled to involve viewers in her work\, she created large 7 ft high triangles of art for people to walk through the sculptures. Gillespie has held positions of designing programs as a Professor of Art\, being a Board of Trustees for more than one college or art center\, as a visiting artist in residency and as the Chairperson of the Fine Arts Committee for the International Women’s Art Festival.\nDorothy Gillespie’s career spanned seven decades\, always at the forefront of the American Art movement. She studied at the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore before moving to New York City\, where she studied at the Art Students League. Her works grace many institutions\, museums\, colleges\, universities and public spaces\, including the permanent collection of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the United States Mission to the United Nations. She was one of the first artists to offer her art to the world through displays in the lobbies of public institutions and governmental centers such as the Mayo Clinic\, Epcot Center\, Warren Wilson College\, Fort Lauderdale Airport-Delta Terminal\, Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art\, the Miami Public Library\, United States Mission to the United Nations\, and the Court House Square – Roanoke\, VA and Universities across the country.\nAmong her many honors\, Gillespie received the Alice Baber Art Fund\, Inc. Grant Award: a Doctor of Pedagogy from Niagara University in Niagara Falls\, A Doctor of Fine Arts (Honoris Causa) from Caldwell College in Caldwell\, NY\, an Allied Professions Award from the Virginia Society\, the American Institute of Architects in Richmond\, VA.\, the Distinguished Alumni Award from Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore\, the Outstanding Services Award from University of Arkansas at Little Rock\, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Women’s Caucus for Art\, and the Gala 8 “Distinguished Woman” Award at Birmingham Southern College.\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park is open from dawn to dusk\, free to the public. Brochures can be picked up at the registration desk. For more information visit: www.rocklandartcenter.org or call 845-358-0877.\nThis exhibition was made possible thanks to the generous support of The Dorothy M. Gillespie Foundation and Gary Israel.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Peter & Rebecca Lang\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, Luxury Kitchen and Bath\, Golden Artist Colors\, Inc.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Simona and Jerome Chazen\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/the-enchanted-garden-colors-in-motion-sculptures-by-dorothy-gillespie-163/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\,27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, NY 10994\, USA
CATEGORIES:Art,Outdoors
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/dorothy-gillespie-roca-2021-4QEgWF.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230406T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230406T210000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230401T191952Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230406T193505Z
UID:10006141-1680805800-1680814800@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Food Enthusiast Class: Get Ready for Cinco de Mayo
DESCRIPTION:Food Enthusiast Class: Get Ready for Cinco de Mayo\nIn this class students will prepare a display of personalized quesadillas\, burritos and fajitas.\nWe will also demonstrate Mexican rice and black beans and pico de gallo.\nStudents will be preparing and taking home their delicious culinary creations.\n*In this class we will focus on the cooking methods of sautéing\, dry cooking\, cooking with moisture\, and knife skills.\n \nSnacks are provided upon your arrival and you get to take the food you make home with you.\nPlease arrive on time.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/food-enthusiast-class-get-ready-for-cinco-de-mayo/
LOCATION:RCC Hospitality and Culinary Arts Center\, 70 Main St\, Nyack\, NY\, 10960\, United States
CATEGORIES:enjoy-nyack,Restaurants/Food,Seasonal,Spring Fling,Wellness,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/RCC-Food-Enthusiasts-xeiOci.tmp_.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230407
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230415
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230401T191953Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230413T195008Z
UID:10006142-1680825600-1681516799@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:THE QUIET EPIDEMIC\, streaming at Rivertown Film
DESCRIPTION:Directed by Lindsay Keys and Winslow Crane-Murdoch\nUSA\, 2022\, 101 minutes.\nAfter years of living with mysterious symptoms\, a young girl from Brooklyn\nand a Duke University scientist are diagnosed with a disease said to not\nexist: Chronic Lyme disease. The Quiet Epidemic follows their search for\nanswers\, which lands them in the middle of a vicious medical debate. What\nbegins as a patient story evolves into an investigation into the history of\nLyme disease\, dating back to its discovery in 1975. A paper trail of\nsuppressed scientific research and buried documents reveals why ticks – and\nthe diseases they carry – have been allowed to quietly spread around the\nglobe.\nLyme disease is a potentially debilitating and sometimes fatal infection\ncaused by bacteria transmitted through the bite of an infected tick to\npeople and pets. Nearly half a million (476\,000) or more new cases of Lyme\ndisease are diagnosed each year in all 50 states of the U.S. Due to the\ndifficulty in diagnosing and treating Lyme disease\, more than two million\npeople suffer from its debilitating later stage symptoms. Researchers have\nfound that Lyme disease costs the U.S. healthcare system between $712\nmillion and $1.3 billion a year.\n“Through its masterful storytelling\, The Quiet Epidemic does what any good\ninvestigative doc should do – it informs\, infuriates\, breaks your heart\,\nand fills you with hope.”\n– Awards Daily
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/the-quiet-epidemic-streaming-at-rivertown-film/
LOCATION:https://watch.eventive.org/rivertownfilm/play/6414e13fc8ac210059cdd751
CATEGORIES:Film,Virtual
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230407T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230407T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230407T193400Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230407T193401Z
UID:10006177-1680858000-1680897600@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion - Sculptures by Dorothy Gillespie
DESCRIPTION:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion\nSculptures by Dorothy M. Gillespie\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park\nOct. 15\, 2021 – Oct. 2023\nFree to the Public\, Dawn to Dusk\nRoCA is proud to present the The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion exhibit as a part of a tribute to the 20th Century artist and feminist\, Dorothy Gillespie. The exhibit will open October 15th in The Catherine Konner Sculpture Park at RoCA.\nDorothy Gillespie’s joyful and brilliantly colored starbursts glimmer hanging from the trees as well as lining the pathway. The pieces create an enchanted garden of colors in motion. Though stationary they seem to possess a kinetic quality. Two larger pieces can be seen at the entry to RoCA. The exhibit was partially installed this summer and will be completed for exhibit October 15th. The exhibit will remain on display through October 2023.\nGillespie (1920-2012) was born in Roanoke\, VA and lived in Nyack during the later years of her life. She pioneered joyful\, new directions of metal sculpture and is best known for large-scale\, colorfully painted arrangements of cut aluminum strips curling\, radiating\, or undulating in giant arrangements of ribbons\, enchanted towers\, or bursting fireworks. She was well known as a painter\, sculptor and installation artist whose work incorporated many significant 20th-century trends in art.\nDuring Dorothy Gillespie’s youth … “girls did not attend art school\, at least not ‘nice’ girls\,” said Gillespie in 2010. Nevertheless\, she was determined to be an artist and attended the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore. She was more fortunate than women sculptors in the 19th Century who were mostly hired as studio assistants by established male sculptors with few exhibitions. Harriet Hosmer\, Emma Stebbins\, Edmonia Lewis\, Frances Grimes and Helen Mears were some of the few who made names in the arts as women during that time. They did not pursue monumental work as frequently as men did and mostly produced works in bronze and consistent middle-class demand for small-scale sculpture to decorate the home and garden. Today many more women are now entering traditional male dominated sculpture roles in metal\, wood and stone\, thanks to the pioneering activism of women like Dorothy Gillespie in the 20th century.\nAn influential force in the women’s movement\, Gillespie encouraged more women’s art in museums and art in public spaces. In 1970\, Gillespie joined Women in the Arts and created picket signs protesting at the Whitney Museum demanding that the curators choose more women artists for their “Annual exhibition. The demonstration worked\, and more women artists were chosen for the show. Although the increase was very slow\, over time it increased from 8 percent to 40 percent. Gillespie was the Founder of the Women Artists Historical Archives of the Women’s Interart Center in NY\, NY\, filming and taping interviews of some of the most important women artists of the 20th century as well as presenting her own radio show. Gillespie along with Joyce Weinstein founded a group called the NY Professional Women Artists. The 14 members lectures at Universities and wrote articles to encourage other women artists.\nGillespie also coordinated a course to educate and enlighten women in the visual arts\, after being invited to teach at The New School in NYC. The intent was to prepare women for a new\, more aggressive role to function in the art world. Due to her already busy schedule\, she asked artist Alice Barber to share the task of revealing to the young students the ‘system’ that drove the NY art world and how to succeed. In 1974 she organized an innovative outdoor exhibition\, Walk Through Art\, mounted in Central Park\, Battery Park\, and Rockefeller Center\, then travelling to fifty colleges\, universities and street fairs. Compelled to involve viewers in her work\, she created large 7 ft high triangles of art for people to walk through the sculptures. Gillespie has held positions of designing programs as a Professor of Art\, being a Board of Trustees for more than one college or art center\, as a visiting artist in residency and as the Chairperson of the Fine Arts Committee for the International Women’s Art Festival.\nDorothy Gillespie’s career spanned seven decades\, always at the forefront of the American Art movement. She studied at the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore before moving to New York City\, where she studied at the Art Students League. Her works grace many institutions\, museums\, colleges\, universities and public spaces\, including the permanent collection of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the United States Mission to the United Nations. She was one of the first artists to offer her art to the world through displays in the lobbies of public institutions and governmental centers such as the Mayo Clinic\, Epcot Center\, Warren Wilson College\, Fort Lauderdale Airport-Delta Terminal\, Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art\, the Miami Public Library\, United States Mission to the United Nations\, and the Court House Square – Roanoke\, VA and Universities across the country.\nAmong her many honors\, Gillespie received the Alice Baber Art Fund\, Inc. Grant Award: a Doctor of Pedagogy from Niagara University in Niagara Falls\, A Doctor of Fine Arts (Honoris Causa) from Caldwell College in Caldwell\, NY\, an Allied Professions Award from the Virginia Society\, the American Institute of Architects in Richmond\, VA.\, the Distinguished Alumni Award from Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore\, the Outstanding Services Award from University of Arkansas at Little Rock\, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Women’s Caucus for Art\, and the Gala 8 “Distinguished Woman” Award at Birmingham Southern College.\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park is open from dawn to dusk\, free to the public. Brochures can be picked up at the registration desk. For more information visit: www.rocklandartcenter.org or call 845-358-0877.\nThis exhibition was made possible thanks to the generous support of The Dorothy M. Gillespie Foundation and Gary Israel.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Peter & Rebecca Lang\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, Luxury Kitchen and Bath\, Golden Artist Colors\, Inc.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Simona and Jerome Chazen\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/the-enchanted-garden-colors-in-motion-sculptures-by-dorothy-gillespie-164/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\,27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, NY 10994\, USA
CATEGORIES:Art,Outdoors
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/dorothy-gillespie-roca-2021-4QEgWF.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230407T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230407T183000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230327T190432Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230407T193401Z
UID:10005624-1680886800-1680892200@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Communication through Physical Theater Free Classes and Performance with Shawn Rawls
DESCRIPTION:Communication through Physical Theater\nFree Classes and Performance with Shawn Rawls\nBACK BY POPULAR DEMAND!\nFriday classes:\nApril 7\, 5–6:30pm\nApril 14\, 5–8pm\nApril 21\, 5–8pm\nPerformance/ filming\nFriday\, April 28 at 7:00pm\nFor ages 18 & up\n(space is limited & registration is required)\nRegistration begins March 7\nIn this workshop\, we will use elements of physical theater as a tool to\nimprove communication and interpersonal relationships. Participants will\nexplore internal emotions as the springboard for artistic creation. To\nshare perspective and invoke empathy. Participants will learn various tools\nof physical theatre as well as methods for connecting emotions and their\nbodies. Through the workshop\, 20 mins of live performance will be created.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/communication-through-physical-theater-free-classes-and-performance-with-shawn-rawls/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Dance
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230407T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230407T203000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230401T191953Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230407T193401Z
UID:10006143-1680892200-1680899400@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:CACAO CEREMONY WITH MASHA
DESCRIPTION:A Cacao Ceremony is a beautiful opportunity to gather in circle\, receive inner guidance\, and connect deeper to our selves and each other. 100% Pure Ceremonial Grade Cacao is a sacred and ancient plant medicine for the heart that helps us open up\, heal gently\, and invite more creativity\, joy and love into our lives. Masha Zolotarsky will guide us in honoring the Full Moon in Cancer\, which will be asking you to let go of anything you don’t want to bring into the new year. This Full Moon helps you turn inward to restore\, recharge\, and replenish your spirit…\nDuring the ceremony we will join in circle\, connect with each other\, learn a bit about the power of Ceremonial Cacao\, talk about the energies of this time\, set intentions and drink Cacao\, go through a guided Shamanic drum journey\, and then come back to a sharing circle of whatever may be opening up for us in that moment. (Sharing is very welcome\, but not mandatory).\nBy setting an intention and drinking Ceremonial Cacao\, participants can expect to receive guidance around whatever they are dealing with and looking for answers around. The full moon is also a great opportunity to let go of what is no longer serving on the journey towards one’s destiny…\nLearn more about Masha Zolotarsky at www.freemasha.com
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/cacao-ceremony-with-masha/
LOCATION:Nyack\, NY\, USA
CATEGORIES:Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/cacao-ceremony-8TFXiB.tmp_.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Modern Druid":MAILTO:hello@modern-druid.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230408
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230410
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230402T191935Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230408T193505Z
UID:10006149-1680912000-1681084799@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Photo Exhibit: 82 Pieces of '82: Main Street\, Nyack
DESCRIPTION:82 Pieces of ’82\nMain Street\, Nyack\nPhotos by Brad Hess\nThe Historical Society of the Nyacks\n50 Piermont Avenue\n \nThe exhibit will be open Saturdays from 1 – 4 January 21st through April 15th\nIn 1982\, photographer Brad Hess walked Main Street in Nyack every Sunday morning\, taking over 3\,000 black and white photographs. Trying out a new film\, he decided Main Street was where he would experiment with it. As the images emerged from his dark room\, he became fascinated with the quality of the film as well as the opportunities Main Street offered him. He returned nearly every Sunday morning for the next year\, walking from 9W to the riverfront.\n \n82 Pieces of ’82\, Main Street\, Nyack will be our first traditional “opening” since COVID. Please join us in thanking Brad for sharing his amazing work with us\, and hearing what he has to say about these street scenes and their meaning for Nyack. We look forward to your questions\, feedback and commentary. Brad will have the floor around 1:30. Please come masked – we want to minimize everyone’s exposure to our current variant with its high transmission potential. And for that reason also\, our refreshments are very minimal.\n 
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/photo-exhibit-82-pieces-of-82-main-street-nyack-12/
LOCATION:Historical Society of the Nyacks 50 Piermont Ave.\, Nyack\, NY\, 50 Piermont Ave.\, Nyack\, 10960\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art,enjoy-nyack,Family-Friendly,Free-Admission,photographs,Photography,Portraiture,Seasonal,Spring Fling,Visual-Art,Winter-Fun
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/unnamed-5-wcMFcD.tmp_.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230408T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230408T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230408T193504Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230408T193505Z
UID:10006179-1680944400-1680984000@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion - Sculptures by Dorothy Gillespie
DESCRIPTION:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion\nSculptures by Dorothy M. Gillespie\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park\nOct. 15\, 2021 – Oct. 2023\nFree to the Public\, Dawn to Dusk\nRoCA is proud to present the The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion exhibit as a part of a tribute to the 20th Century artist and feminist\, Dorothy Gillespie. The exhibit will open October 15th in The Catherine Konner Sculpture Park at RoCA.\nDorothy Gillespie’s joyful and brilliantly colored starbursts glimmer hanging from the trees as well as lining the pathway. The pieces create an enchanted garden of colors in motion. Though stationary they seem to possess a kinetic quality. Two larger pieces can be seen at the entry to RoCA. The exhibit was partially installed this summer and will be completed for exhibit October 15th. The exhibit will remain on display through October 2023.\nGillespie (1920-2012) was born in Roanoke\, VA and lived in Nyack during the later years of her life. She pioneered joyful\, new directions of metal sculpture and is best known for large-scale\, colorfully painted arrangements of cut aluminum strips curling\, radiating\, or undulating in giant arrangements of ribbons\, enchanted towers\, or bursting fireworks. She was well known as a painter\, sculptor and installation artist whose work incorporated many significant 20th-century trends in art.\nDuring Dorothy Gillespie’s youth … “girls did not attend art school\, at least not ‘nice’ girls\,” said Gillespie in 2010. Nevertheless\, she was determined to be an artist and attended the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore. She was more fortunate than women sculptors in the 19th Century who were mostly hired as studio assistants by established male sculptors with few exhibitions. Harriet Hosmer\, Emma Stebbins\, Edmonia Lewis\, Frances Grimes and Helen Mears were some of the few who made names in the arts as women during that time. They did not pursue monumental work as frequently as men did and mostly produced works in bronze and consistent middle-class demand for small-scale sculpture to decorate the home and garden. Today many more women are now entering traditional male dominated sculpture roles in metal\, wood and stone\, thanks to the pioneering activism of women like Dorothy Gillespie in the 20th century.\nAn influential force in the women’s movement\, Gillespie encouraged more women’s art in museums and art in public spaces. In 1970\, Gillespie joined Women in the Arts and created picket signs protesting at the Whitney Museum demanding that the curators choose more women artists for their “Annual exhibition. The demonstration worked\, and more women artists were chosen for the show. Although the increase was very slow\, over time it increased from 8 percent to 40 percent. Gillespie was the Founder of the Women Artists Historical Archives of the Women’s Interart Center in NY\, NY\, filming and taping interviews of some of the most important women artists of the 20th century as well as presenting her own radio show. Gillespie along with Joyce Weinstein founded a group called the NY Professional Women Artists. The 14 members lectures at Universities and wrote articles to encourage other women artists.\nGillespie also coordinated a course to educate and enlighten women in the visual arts\, after being invited to teach at The New School in NYC. The intent was to prepare women for a new\, more aggressive role to function in the art world. Due to her already busy schedule\, she asked artist Alice Barber to share the task of revealing to the young students the ‘system’ that drove the NY art world and how to succeed. In 1974 she organized an innovative outdoor exhibition\, Walk Through Art\, mounted in Central Park\, Battery Park\, and Rockefeller Center\, then travelling to fifty colleges\, universities and street fairs. Compelled to involve viewers in her work\, she created large 7 ft high triangles of art for people to walk through the sculptures. Gillespie has held positions of designing programs as a Professor of Art\, being a Board of Trustees for more than one college or art center\, as a visiting artist in residency and as the Chairperson of the Fine Arts Committee for the International Women’s Art Festival.\nDorothy Gillespie’s career spanned seven decades\, always at the forefront of the American Art movement. She studied at the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore before moving to New York City\, where she studied at the Art Students League. Her works grace many institutions\, museums\, colleges\, universities and public spaces\, including the permanent collection of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the United States Mission to the United Nations. She was one of the first artists to offer her art to the world through displays in the lobbies of public institutions and governmental centers such as the Mayo Clinic\, Epcot Center\, Warren Wilson College\, Fort Lauderdale Airport-Delta Terminal\, Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art\, the Miami Public Library\, United States Mission to the United Nations\, and the Court House Square – Roanoke\, VA and Universities across the country.\nAmong her many honors\, Gillespie received the Alice Baber Art Fund\, Inc. Grant Award: a Doctor of Pedagogy from Niagara University in Niagara Falls\, A Doctor of Fine Arts (Honoris Causa) from Caldwell College in Caldwell\, NY\, an Allied Professions Award from the Virginia Society\, the American Institute of Architects in Richmond\, VA.\, the Distinguished Alumni Award from Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore\, the Outstanding Services Award from University of Arkansas at Little Rock\, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Women’s Caucus for Art\, and the Gala 8 “Distinguished Woman” Award at Birmingham Southern College.\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park is open from dawn to dusk\, free to the public. Brochures can be picked up at the registration desk. For more information visit: www.rocklandartcenter.org or call 845-358-0877.\nThis exhibition was made possible thanks to the generous support of The Dorothy M. Gillespie Foundation and Gary Israel.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Peter & Rebecca Lang\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, Luxury Kitchen and Bath\, Golden Artist Colors\, Inc.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Simona and Jerome Chazen\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/the-enchanted-garden-colors-in-motion-sculptures-by-dorothy-gillespie-165/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\,27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, NY 10994\, USA
CATEGORIES:Art,Outdoors
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/dorothy-gillespie-roca-2021-4QEgWF.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230408T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230408T120000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230401T191953Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230407T193401Z
UID:10006144-1680948000-1680955200@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:LGBTQ+ Walking Group
DESCRIPTION:Second Saturdays from 10am – 12pm\nMeets at local walking paths. Check website for each month’s meet-up location and walking path.\nFor information about accessibility\, contact Kris at KrisHillen@rocklandpridecenter.org.\nHosted by the Phyllis B. Frank Rockland County Pride Center.\nIf you have any questions about these or any events\, you can contact the Pride Center at pride@rocklandpridecenter.org\, call 845-353-6300\, or message them on Instagram at rocklandcountypridecenter.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/lgbtq-walking-group-4/
LOCATION:Rockland County Pride Center\, 28 South Franklin Street\, Nyack\, NY\, 10960\, United States
CATEGORIES:diversity,enjoy-nyack,Family-Friendly,Free-Admission,Outdoors,Pride/LGBTQ+,Seasonal,Spring Fling,Wellness
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/unnamed-3-dAG65N.tmp_.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230408T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230408T160000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230403T193432Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230408T193505Z
UID:10006156-1680958800-1680969600@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Unique Crystal Fine Art Paintings
DESCRIPTION:Do you love crystals? Experience the power of crystals\nin a new collection of 20+ original fine art crystal paintings.\nEach painting combines the power of a specific Color\, Image\, and Crystal to\nproduce positive energy for peace\, joy\, success\, and/or wealth. Crystals in the paintings include: Citrine\, Amethyst\,\nRose Quartz\, Clear Quartz\, Peridot\, Moonstone\, and others.\nYou will feel the power of these unique crystal paintings when you visit.\nPaintings come with info about the crystal\, color\, and image used\nand are affordably priced from $60 to $195.\nThis is a must-see\, brand-new\, unique fine-art genre.\nArts Alive Art Gallery\, 85 South Broadway\, Nyack\, NY\nSaturdays & Sundays 1 – 4 pm.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/unique-crystal-fine-art-paintings-21/
LOCATION:Arts Alive Art Gallery\,85 South Broadway\, Nyack\, NY 10960\, USA
CATEGORIES:Art,enjoy-nyack,Family-Friendly,paintings,photographs,Photography,Portraiture,Seasonal,Shopping,Visual-Art,Winter-Fun
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/Screen-Shot-2023-01-25-at-1.04.58-PM-sfsYUv.tmp_.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Arts Alive Art Gallery":MAILTO:hvwebtv@aol.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230408T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230408T170000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230403T193432Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230408T193505Z
UID:10006157-1680958800-1680973200@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Serendipity by Design
DESCRIPTION:A pop-up exhibition featuring monoprints and monotypes by Nina Berlingeri\, Barbara Esmark\, Kellyann Monaghan\, and Susanna Ronner.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/serendipity-by-design-10/
LOCATION:85 S Broadway\, Nyack\, NY 10960\, USA
CATEGORIES:Art,Free-Admission,paintings
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/serendipity-scaled-NHGXKC.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Carole Perry":MAILTO:caroleperry.ny@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230409T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230409T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230409T193745Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230409T193746Z
UID:10006183-1681030800-1681070400@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion - Sculptures by Dorothy Gillespie
DESCRIPTION:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion\nSculptures by Dorothy M. Gillespie\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park\nOct. 15\, 2021 – Oct. 2023\nFree to the Public\, Dawn to Dusk\nRoCA is proud to present the The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion exhibit as a part of a tribute to the 20th Century artist and feminist\, Dorothy Gillespie. The exhibit will open October 15th in The Catherine Konner Sculpture Park at RoCA.\nDorothy Gillespie’s joyful and brilliantly colored starbursts glimmer hanging from the trees as well as lining the pathway. The pieces create an enchanted garden of colors in motion. Though stationary they seem to possess a kinetic quality. Two larger pieces can be seen at the entry to RoCA. The exhibit was partially installed this summer and will be completed for exhibit October 15th. The exhibit will remain on display through October 2023.\nGillespie (1920-2012) was born in Roanoke\, VA and lived in Nyack during the later years of her life. She pioneered joyful\, new directions of metal sculpture and is best known for large-scale\, colorfully painted arrangements of cut aluminum strips curling\, radiating\, or undulating in giant arrangements of ribbons\, enchanted towers\, or bursting fireworks. She was well known as a painter\, sculptor and installation artist whose work incorporated many significant 20th-century trends in art.\nDuring Dorothy Gillespie’s youth … “girls did not attend art school\, at least not ‘nice’ girls\,” said Gillespie in 2010. Nevertheless\, she was determined to be an artist and attended the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore. She was more fortunate than women sculptors in the 19th Century who were mostly hired as studio assistants by established male sculptors with few exhibitions. Harriet Hosmer\, Emma Stebbins\, Edmonia Lewis\, Frances Grimes and Helen Mears were some of the few who made names in the arts as women during that time. They did not pursue monumental work as frequently as men did and mostly produced works in bronze and consistent middle-class demand for small-scale sculpture to decorate the home and garden. Today many more women are now entering traditional male dominated sculpture roles in metal\, wood and stone\, thanks to the pioneering activism of women like Dorothy Gillespie in the 20th century.\nAn influential force in the women’s movement\, Gillespie encouraged more women’s art in museums and art in public spaces. In 1970\, Gillespie joined Women in the Arts and created picket signs protesting at the Whitney Museum demanding that the curators choose more women artists for their “Annual exhibition. The demonstration worked\, and more women artists were chosen for the show. Although the increase was very slow\, over time it increased from 8 percent to 40 percent. Gillespie was the Founder of the Women Artists Historical Archives of the Women’s Interart Center in NY\, NY\, filming and taping interviews of some of the most important women artists of the 20th century as well as presenting her own radio show. Gillespie along with Joyce Weinstein founded a group called the NY Professional Women Artists. The 14 members lectures at Universities and wrote articles to encourage other women artists.\nGillespie also coordinated a course to educate and enlighten women in the visual arts\, after being invited to teach at The New School in NYC. The intent was to prepare women for a new\, more aggressive role to function in the art world. Due to her already busy schedule\, she asked artist Alice Barber to share the task of revealing to the young students the ‘system’ that drove the NY art world and how to succeed. In 1974 she organized an innovative outdoor exhibition\, Walk Through Art\, mounted in Central Park\, Battery Park\, and Rockefeller Center\, then travelling to fifty colleges\, universities and street fairs. Compelled to involve viewers in her work\, she created large 7 ft high triangles of art for people to walk through the sculptures. Gillespie has held positions of designing programs as a Professor of Art\, being a Board of Trustees for more than one college or art center\, as a visiting artist in residency and as the Chairperson of the Fine Arts Committee for the International Women’s Art Festival.\nDorothy Gillespie’s career spanned seven decades\, always at the forefront of the American Art movement. She studied at the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore before moving to New York City\, where she studied at the Art Students League. Her works grace many institutions\, museums\, colleges\, universities and public spaces\, including the permanent collection of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the United States Mission to the United Nations. She was one of the first artists to offer her art to the world through displays in the lobbies of public institutions and governmental centers such as the Mayo Clinic\, Epcot Center\, Warren Wilson College\, Fort Lauderdale Airport-Delta Terminal\, Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art\, the Miami Public Library\, United States Mission to the United Nations\, and the Court House Square – Roanoke\, VA and Universities across the country.\nAmong her many honors\, Gillespie received the Alice Baber Art Fund\, Inc. Grant Award: a Doctor of Pedagogy from Niagara University in Niagara Falls\, A Doctor of Fine Arts (Honoris Causa) from Caldwell College in Caldwell\, NY\, an Allied Professions Award from the Virginia Society\, the American Institute of Architects in Richmond\, VA.\, the Distinguished Alumni Award from Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore\, the Outstanding Services Award from University of Arkansas at Little Rock\, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Women’s Caucus for Art\, and the Gala 8 “Distinguished Woman” Award at Birmingham Southern College.\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park is open from dawn to dusk\, free to the public. Brochures can be picked up at the registration desk. For more information visit: www.rocklandartcenter.org or call 845-358-0877.\nThis exhibition was made possible thanks to the generous support of The Dorothy M. Gillespie Foundation and Gary Israel.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Peter & Rebecca Lang\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, Luxury Kitchen and Bath\, Golden Artist Colors\, Inc.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Simona and Jerome Chazen\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/the-enchanted-garden-colors-in-motion-sculptures-by-dorothy-gillespie-166/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\,27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, NY 10994\, USA
CATEGORIES:Art,Outdoors
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/dorothy-gillespie-roca-2021-4QEgWF.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230409T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230409T160000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230409T193746Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230409T193746Z
UID:10006185-1681045200-1681056000@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Unique Crystal Fine Art Paintings
DESCRIPTION:Do you love crystals? Experience the power of crystals\nin a new collection of 20+ original fine art crystal paintings.\nEach painting combines the power of a specific Color\, Image\, and Crystal to\nproduce positive energy for peace\, joy\, success\, and/or wealth. Crystals in the paintings include: Citrine\, Amethyst\,\nRose Quartz\, Clear Quartz\, Peridot\, Moonstone\, and others.\nYou will feel the power of these unique crystal paintings when you visit.\nPaintings come with info about the crystal\, color\, and image used\nand are affordably priced from $60 to $195.\nThis is a must-see\, brand-new\, unique fine-art genre.\nArts Alive Art Gallery\, 85 South Broadway\, Nyack\, NY\nSaturdays & Sundays 1 – 4 pm.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/unique-crystal-fine-art-paintings-22/
LOCATION:Arts Alive Art Gallery\,85 South Broadway\, Nyack\, NY 10960\, USA
CATEGORIES:Art,enjoy-nyack,Family-Friendly,paintings,photographs,Photography,Portraiture,Seasonal,Shopping,Visual-Art,Winter-Fun
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/Screen-Shot-2023-01-25-at-1.04.58-PM-sfsYUv.tmp_.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Arts Alive Art Gallery":MAILTO:hvwebtv@aol.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230409T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230409T170000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230409T193745Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230409T193746Z
UID:10006184-1681045200-1681059600@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Serendipity by Design
DESCRIPTION:A pop-up exhibition featuring monoprints and monotypes by Nina Berlingeri\, Barbara Esmark\, Kellyann Monaghan\, and Susanna Ronner.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/serendipity-by-design-11/
LOCATION:85 S Broadway\, Nyack\, NY 10960\, USA
CATEGORIES:Art,Free-Admission,paintings
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/serendipity-scaled-NHGXKC.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Carole Perry":MAILTO:caroleperry.ny@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230409T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230607T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230427T203359Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230607T220850Z
UID:10006284-1681066800-1686168000@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Oral Storytelling for All// Your Story Matters
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/oral-storytelling-for-all-your-story-matters-2/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\,27 S Greenbush Rd\, West Nyack\, NY 10994\, USA\, 2 S Greenbush Rd\, United States
CATEGORIES:Literary,Workshop
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230410T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230410T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230410T194907Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230410T194907Z
UID:10006187-1681117200-1681156800@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion - Sculptures by Dorothy Gillespie
DESCRIPTION:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion\nSculptures by Dorothy M. Gillespie\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park\nOct. 15\, 2021 – Oct. 2023\nFree to the Public\, Dawn to Dusk\nRoCA is proud to present the The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion exhibit as a part of a tribute to the 20th Century artist and feminist\, Dorothy Gillespie. The exhibit will open October 15th in The Catherine Konner Sculpture Park at RoCA.\nDorothy Gillespie’s joyful and brilliantly colored starbursts glimmer hanging from the trees as well as lining the pathway. The pieces create an enchanted garden of colors in motion. Though stationary they seem to possess a kinetic quality. Two larger pieces can be seen at the entry to RoCA. The exhibit was partially installed this summer and will be completed for exhibit October 15th. The exhibit will remain on display through October 2023.\nGillespie (1920-2012) was born in Roanoke\, VA and lived in Nyack during the later years of her life. She pioneered joyful\, new directions of metal sculpture and is best known for large-scale\, colorfully painted arrangements of cut aluminum strips curling\, radiating\, or undulating in giant arrangements of ribbons\, enchanted towers\, or bursting fireworks. She was well known as a painter\, sculptor and installation artist whose work incorporated many significant 20th-century trends in art.\nDuring Dorothy Gillespie’s youth … “girls did not attend art school\, at least not ‘nice’ girls\,” said Gillespie in 2010. Nevertheless\, she was determined to be an artist and attended the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore. She was more fortunate than women sculptors in the 19th Century who were mostly hired as studio assistants by established male sculptors with few exhibitions. Harriet Hosmer\, Emma Stebbins\, Edmonia Lewis\, Frances Grimes and Helen Mears were some of the few who made names in the arts as women during that time. They did not pursue monumental work as frequently as men did and mostly produced works in bronze and consistent middle-class demand for small-scale sculpture to decorate the home and garden. Today many more women are now entering traditional male dominated sculpture roles in metal\, wood and stone\, thanks to the pioneering activism of women like Dorothy Gillespie in the 20th century.\nAn influential force in the women’s movement\, Gillespie encouraged more women’s art in museums and art in public spaces. In 1970\, Gillespie joined Women in the Arts and created picket signs protesting at the Whitney Museum demanding that the curators choose more women artists for their “Annual exhibition. The demonstration worked\, and more women artists were chosen for the show. Although the increase was very slow\, over time it increased from 8 percent to 40 percent. Gillespie was the Founder of the Women Artists Historical Archives of the Women’s Interart Center in NY\, NY\, filming and taping interviews of some of the most important women artists of the 20th century as well as presenting her own radio show. Gillespie along with Joyce Weinstein founded a group called the NY Professional Women Artists. The 14 members lectures at Universities and wrote articles to encourage other women artists.\nGillespie also coordinated a course to educate and enlighten women in the visual arts\, after being invited to teach at The New School in NYC. The intent was to prepare women for a new\, more aggressive role to function in the art world. Due to her already busy schedule\, she asked artist Alice Barber to share the task of revealing to the young students the ‘system’ that drove the NY art world and how to succeed. In 1974 she organized an innovative outdoor exhibition\, Walk Through Art\, mounted in Central Park\, Battery Park\, and Rockefeller Center\, then travelling to fifty colleges\, universities and street fairs. Compelled to involve viewers in her work\, she created large 7 ft high triangles of art for people to walk through the sculptures. Gillespie has held positions of designing programs as a Professor of Art\, being a Board of Trustees for more than one college or art center\, as a visiting artist in residency and as the Chairperson of the Fine Arts Committee for the International Women’s Art Festival.\nDorothy Gillespie’s career spanned seven decades\, always at the forefront of the American Art movement. She studied at the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore before moving to New York City\, where she studied at the Art Students League. Her works grace many institutions\, museums\, colleges\, universities and public spaces\, including the permanent collection of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the United States Mission to the United Nations. She was one of the first artists to offer her art to the world through displays in the lobbies of public institutions and governmental centers such as the Mayo Clinic\, Epcot Center\, Warren Wilson College\, Fort Lauderdale Airport-Delta Terminal\, Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art\, the Miami Public Library\, United States Mission to the United Nations\, and the Court House Square – Roanoke\, VA and Universities across the country.\nAmong her many honors\, Gillespie received the Alice Baber Art Fund\, Inc. Grant Award: a Doctor of Pedagogy from Niagara University in Niagara Falls\, A Doctor of Fine Arts (Honoris Causa) from Caldwell College in Caldwell\, NY\, an Allied Professions Award from the Virginia Society\, the American Institute of Architects in Richmond\, VA.\, the Distinguished Alumni Award from Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore\, the Outstanding Services Award from University of Arkansas at Little Rock\, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Women’s Caucus for Art\, and the Gala 8 “Distinguished Woman” Award at Birmingham Southern College.\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park is open from dawn to dusk\, free to the public. Brochures can be picked up at the registration desk. For more information visit: www.rocklandartcenter.org or call 845-358-0877.\nThis exhibition was made possible thanks to the generous support of The Dorothy M. Gillespie Foundation and Gary Israel.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Peter & Rebecca Lang\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, Luxury Kitchen and Bath\, Golden Artist Colors\, Inc.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Simona and Jerome Chazen\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/the-enchanted-garden-colors-in-motion-sculptures-by-dorothy-gillespie-167/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\,27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, NY 10994\, USA
CATEGORIES:Art,Outdoors
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/dorothy-gillespie-roca-2021-4QEgWF.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230411T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230411T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230411T194929Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230411T194930Z
UID:10006193-1681203600-1681243200@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion - Sculptures by Dorothy Gillespie
DESCRIPTION:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion\nSculptures by Dorothy M. Gillespie\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park\nOct. 15\, 2021 – Oct. 2023\nFree to the Public\, Dawn to Dusk\nRoCA is proud to present the The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion exhibit as a part of a tribute to the 20th Century artist and feminist\, Dorothy Gillespie. The exhibit will open October 15th in The Catherine Konner Sculpture Park at RoCA.\nDorothy Gillespie’s joyful and brilliantly colored starbursts glimmer hanging from the trees as well as lining the pathway. The pieces create an enchanted garden of colors in motion. Though stationary they seem to possess a kinetic quality. Two larger pieces can be seen at the entry to RoCA. The exhibit was partially installed this summer and will be completed for exhibit October 15th. The exhibit will remain on display through October 2023.\nGillespie (1920-2012) was born in Roanoke\, VA and lived in Nyack during the later years of her life. She pioneered joyful\, new directions of metal sculpture and is best known for large-scale\, colorfully painted arrangements of cut aluminum strips curling\, radiating\, or undulating in giant arrangements of ribbons\, enchanted towers\, or bursting fireworks. She was well known as a painter\, sculptor and installation artist whose work incorporated many significant 20th-century trends in art.\nDuring Dorothy Gillespie’s youth … “girls did not attend art school\, at least not ‘nice’ girls\,” said Gillespie in 2010. Nevertheless\, she was determined to be an artist and attended the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore. She was more fortunate than women sculptors in the 19th Century who were mostly hired as studio assistants by established male sculptors with few exhibitions. Harriet Hosmer\, Emma Stebbins\, Edmonia Lewis\, Frances Grimes and Helen Mears were some of the few who made names in the arts as women during that time. They did not pursue monumental work as frequently as men did and mostly produced works in bronze and consistent middle-class demand for small-scale sculpture to decorate the home and garden. Today many more women are now entering traditional male dominated sculpture roles in metal\, wood and stone\, thanks to the pioneering activism of women like Dorothy Gillespie in the 20th century.\nAn influential force in the women’s movement\, Gillespie encouraged more women’s art in museums and art in public spaces. In 1970\, Gillespie joined Women in the Arts and created picket signs protesting at the Whitney Museum demanding that the curators choose more women artists for their “Annual exhibition. The demonstration worked\, and more women artists were chosen for the show. Although the increase was very slow\, over time it increased from 8 percent to 40 percent. Gillespie was the Founder of the Women Artists Historical Archives of the Women’s Interart Center in NY\, NY\, filming and taping interviews of some of the most important women artists of the 20th century as well as presenting her own radio show. Gillespie along with Joyce Weinstein founded a group called the NY Professional Women Artists. The 14 members lectures at Universities and wrote articles to encourage other women artists.\nGillespie also coordinated a course to educate and enlighten women in the visual arts\, after being invited to teach at The New School in NYC. The intent was to prepare women for a new\, more aggressive role to function in the art world. Due to her already busy schedule\, she asked artist Alice Barber to share the task of revealing to the young students the ‘system’ that drove the NY art world and how to succeed. In 1974 she organized an innovative outdoor exhibition\, Walk Through Art\, mounted in Central Park\, Battery Park\, and Rockefeller Center\, then travelling to fifty colleges\, universities and street fairs. Compelled to involve viewers in her work\, she created large 7 ft high triangles of art for people to walk through the sculptures. Gillespie has held positions of designing programs as a Professor of Art\, being a Board of Trustees for more than one college or art center\, as a visiting artist in residency and as the Chairperson of the Fine Arts Committee for the International Women’s Art Festival.\nDorothy Gillespie’s career spanned seven decades\, always at the forefront of the American Art movement. She studied at the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore before moving to New York City\, where she studied at the Art Students League. Her works grace many institutions\, museums\, colleges\, universities and public spaces\, including the permanent collection of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the United States Mission to the United Nations. She was one of the first artists to offer her art to the world through displays in the lobbies of public institutions and governmental centers such as the Mayo Clinic\, Epcot Center\, Warren Wilson College\, Fort Lauderdale Airport-Delta Terminal\, Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art\, the Miami Public Library\, United States Mission to the United Nations\, and the Court House Square – Roanoke\, VA and Universities across the country.\nAmong her many honors\, Gillespie received the Alice Baber Art Fund\, Inc. Grant Award: a Doctor of Pedagogy from Niagara University in Niagara Falls\, A Doctor of Fine Arts (Honoris Causa) from Caldwell College in Caldwell\, NY\, an Allied Professions Award from the Virginia Society\, the American Institute of Architects in Richmond\, VA.\, the Distinguished Alumni Award from Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore\, the Outstanding Services Award from University of Arkansas at Little Rock\, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Women’s Caucus for Art\, and the Gala 8 “Distinguished Woman” Award at Birmingham Southern College.\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park is open from dawn to dusk\, free to the public. Brochures can be picked up at the registration desk. For more information visit: www.rocklandartcenter.org or call 845-358-0877.\nThis exhibition was made possible thanks to the generous support of The Dorothy M. Gillespie Foundation and Gary Israel.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Peter & Rebecca Lang\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, Luxury Kitchen and Bath\, Golden Artist Colors\, Inc.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Simona and Jerome Chazen\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/the-enchanted-garden-colors-in-motion-sculptures-by-dorothy-gillespie-168/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\,27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, NY 10994\, USA
CATEGORIES:Art,Outdoors
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/dorothy-gillespie-roca-2021-4QEgWF.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230412T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230412T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230412T194920Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230412T194922Z
UID:10006194-1681290000-1681329600@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion - Sculptures by Dorothy Gillespie
DESCRIPTION:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion\nSculptures by Dorothy M. Gillespie\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park\nOct. 15\, 2021 – Oct. 2023\nFree to the Public\, Dawn to Dusk\nRoCA is proud to present the The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion exhibit as a part of a tribute to the 20th Century artist and feminist\, Dorothy Gillespie. The exhibit will open October 15th in The Catherine Konner Sculpture Park at RoCA.\nDorothy Gillespie’s joyful and brilliantly colored starbursts glimmer hanging from the trees as well as lining the pathway. The pieces create an enchanted garden of colors in motion. Though stationary they seem to possess a kinetic quality. Two larger pieces can be seen at the entry to RoCA. The exhibit was partially installed this summer and will be completed for exhibit October 15th. The exhibit will remain on display through October 2023.\nGillespie (1920-2012) was born in Roanoke\, VA and lived in Nyack during the later years of her life. She pioneered joyful\, new directions of metal sculpture and is best known for large-scale\, colorfully painted arrangements of cut aluminum strips curling\, radiating\, or undulating in giant arrangements of ribbons\, enchanted towers\, or bursting fireworks. She was well known as a painter\, sculptor and installation artist whose work incorporated many significant 20th-century trends in art.\nDuring Dorothy Gillespie’s youth … “girls did not attend art school\, at least not ‘nice’ girls\,” said Gillespie in 2010. Nevertheless\, she was determined to be an artist and attended the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore. She was more fortunate than women sculptors in the 19th Century who were mostly hired as studio assistants by established male sculptors with few exhibitions. Harriet Hosmer\, Emma Stebbins\, Edmonia Lewis\, Frances Grimes and Helen Mears were some of the few who made names in the arts as women during that time. They did not pursue monumental work as frequently as men did and mostly produced works in bronze and consistent middle-class demand for small-scale sculpture to decorate the home and garden. Today many more women are now entering traditional male dominated sculpture roles in metal\, wood and stone\, thanks to the pioneering activism of women like Dorothy Gillespie in the 20th century.\nAn influential force in the women’s movement\, Gillespie encouraged more women’s art in museums and art in public spaces. In 1970\, Gillespie joined Women in the Arts and created picket signs protesting at the Whitney Museum demanding that the curators choose more women artists for their “Annual exhibition. The demonstration worked\, and more women artists were chosen for the show. Although the increase was very slow\, over time it increased from 8 percent to 40 percent. Gillespie was the Founder of the Women Artists Historical Archives of the Women’s Interart Center in NY\, NY\, filming and taping interviews of some of the most important women artists of the 20th century as well as presenting her own radio show. Gillespie along with Joyce Weinstein founded a group called the NY Professional Women Artists. The 14 members lectures at Universities and wrote articles to encourage other women artists.\nGillespie also coordinated a course to educate and enlighten women in the visual arts\, after being invited to teach at The New School in NYC. The intent was to prepare women for a new\, more aggressive role to function in the art world. Due to her already busy schedule\, she asked artist Alice Barber to share the task of revealing to the young students the ‘system’ that drove the NY art world and how to succeed. In 1974 she organized an innovative outdoor exhibition\, Walk Through Art\, mounted in Central Park\, Battery Park\, and Rockefeller Center\, then travelling to fifty colleges\, universities and street fairs. Compelled to involve viewers in her work\, she created large 7 ft high triangles of art for people to walk through the sculptures. Gillespie has held positions of designing programs as a Professor of Art\, being a Board of Trustees for more than one college or art center\, as a visiting artist in residency and as the Chairperson of the Fine Arts Committee for the International Women’s Art Festival.\nDorothy Gillespie’s career spanned seven decades\, always at the forefront of the American Art movement. She studied at the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore before moving to New York City\, where she studied at the Art Students League. Her works grace many institutions\, museums\, colleges\, universities and public spaces\, including the permanent collection of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the United States Mission to the United Nations. She was one of the first artists to offer her art to the world through displays in the lobbies of public institutions and governmental centers such as the Mayo Clinic\, Epcot Center\, Warren Wilson College\, Fort Lauderdale Airport-Delta Terminal\, Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art\, the Miami Public Library\, United States Mission to the United Nations\, and the Court House Square – Roanoke\, VA and Universities across the country.\nAmong her many honors\, Gillespie received the Alice Baber Art Fund\, Inc. Grant Award: a Doctor of Pedagogy from Niagara University in Niagara Falls\, A Doctor of Fine Arts (Honoris Causa) from Caldwell College in Caldwell\, NY\, an Allied Professions Award from the Virginia Society\, the American Institute of Architects in Richmond\, VA.\, the Distinguished Alumni Award from Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore\, the Outstanding Services Award from University of Arkansas at Little Rock\, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Women’s Caucus for Art\, and the Gala 8 “Distinguished Woman” Award at Birmingham Southern College.\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park is open from dawn to dusk\, free to the public. Brochures can be picked up at the registration desk. For more information visit: www.rocklandartcenter.org or call 845-358-0877.\nThis exhibition was made possible thanks to the generous support of The Dorothy M. Gillespie Foundation and Gary Israel.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Peter & Rebecca Lang\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, Luxury Kitchen and Bath\, Golden Artist Colors\, Inc.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Simona and Jerome Chazen\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/the-enchanted-garden-colors-in-motion-sculptures-by-dorothy-gillespie-169/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\,27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, NY 10994\, USA
CATEGORIES:Art,Outdoors
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/dorothy-gillespie-roca-2021-4QEgWF.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230412T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230412T210000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230404T121831Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230404T121831Z
UID:10006161-1681327800-1681333200@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:The American Revolution in Westchester: From the Hudson to the Sound
DESCRIPTION:Learn about the places and events that unfolded along the Hudson River during the nearly eight year fight for American independence — from the Battle of Saratoga\, to the many lesser known intimate examples of the river’s influence during the course of the war. \nConstance Kehoe\, president of the non-profit Revolutionary Westchester 250 (RW250) will highlight some of the crucial events\, places and people that made a difference. RW250 is working to commemorate the upcoming 250th anniversary in 2026 by building awareness of the events\, places\, ideas\, and people — both the unsung and the famous — of the Revolutionary War in Westchester. There will be a Q&A after the program. \n\nRSVP is required for admission to the Lecture Series\nLimited guest capacity\nFREE to attend
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/the-american-revolution-in-westchester-from-the-hudson-to-the-sound/
LOCATION:Shattemuc Yacht Club\, 46 Westerly Rd\, Ossining\, NY\, 10562
CATEGORIES:Educational,Free-Admission,History,Talks and Presentations
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Kehoe-event.jpeg
GEO:41.1610958;-73.8698822
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Shattemuc Yacht Club 46 Westerly Rd Ossining NY 10562;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=46 Westerly Rd:geo:-73.8698822,41.1610958
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230413T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230413T140000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230406T193505Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230412T194922Z
UID:10006173-1681372800-1681394400@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Nyack Farmer's Market
DESCRIPTION:Nyack Farmers Market – A Four Season Outdoor Farmers Market\nThe Market offers a cornucopia of the best local produce\, grass-fed meat\, fresh seafood\, beautiful baked goods\, perfectly prepared foods\, and handcrafted goods ready to fill your tables and gift baskets.\n \nHOURS:\nThursdays from 8am to 2pm\, outdoors year-round in the Main Street parking lot year-round.\n \nPARKING:\nParking in the Artopee Lot is free during Market hours\, and street parking is free before 10am. Meters throughout the Village are in effect Monday-Saturday from 11am to 7pm. Farmers Market vendors and patrons: please do not park in the M&T Bank parking lot.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/nyack-farmers-market-30/
LOCATION:Main Street Parking Lot\, 119 Main Street\, Nyack\, NY\, 10960\, United States
CATEGORIES:Children,enjoy-nyack,Fall-Fun,Family-Friendly,Free-Admission,Holiday Fun,Live-Music,Music,Outdoors,Restaurants/Food,Seasonal,Shopping,Spring Fling,Summer-Fun
ORGANIZER;CN="Nyack Chamber of Commerce":MAILTO:info@nyackchamber.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230413T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230413T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230413T195007Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230413T195008Z
UID:10006195-1681376400-1681416000@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion - Sculptures by Dorothy Gillespie
DESCRIPTION:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion\nSculptures by Dorothy M. Gillespie\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park\nOct. 15\, 2021 – Oct. 2023\nFree to the Public\, Dawn to Dusk\nRoCA is proud to present the The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion exhibit as a part of a tribute to the 20th Century artist and feminist\, Dorothy Gillespie. The exhibit will open October 15th in The Catherine Konner Sculpture Park at RoCA.\nDorothy Gillespie’s joyful and brilliantly colored starbursts glimmer hanging from the trees as well as lining the pathway. The pieces create an enchanted garden of colors in motion. Though stationary they seem to possess a kinetic quality. Two larger pieces can be seen at the entry to RoCA. The exhibit was partially installed this summer and will be completed for exhibit October 15th. The exhibit will remain on display through October 2023.\nGillespie (1920-2012) was born in Roanoke\, VA and lived in Nyack during the later years of her life. She pioneered joyful\, new directions of metal sculpture and is best known for large-scale\, colorfully painted arrangements of cut aluminum strips curling\, radiating\, or undulating in giant arrangements of ribbons\, enchanted towers\, or bursting fireworks. She was well known as a painter\, sculptor and installation artist whose work incorporated many significant 20th-century trends in art.\nDuring Dorothy Gillespie’s youth … “girls did not attend art school\, at least not ‘nice’ girls\,” said Gillespie in 2010. Nevertheless\, she was determined to be an artist and attended the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore. She was more fortunate than women sculptors in the 19th Century who were mostly hired as studio assistants by established male sculptors with few exhibitions. Harriet Hosmer\, Emma Stebbins\, Edmonia Lewis\, Frances Grimes and Helen Mears were some of the few who made names in the arts as women during that time. They did not pursue monumental work as frequently as men did and mostly produced works in bronze and consistent middle-class demand for small-scale sculpture to decorate the home and garden. Today many more women are now entering traditional male dominated sculpture roles in metal\, wood and stone\, thanks to the pioneering activism of women like Dorothy Gillespie in the 20th century.\nAn influential force in the women’s movement\, Gillespie encouraged more women’s art in museums and art in public spaces. In 1970\, Gillespie joined Women in the Arts and created picket signs protesting at the Whitney Museum demanding that the curators choose more women artists for their “Annual exhibition. The demonstration worked\, and more women artists were chosen for the show. Although the increase was very slow\, over time it increased from 8 percent to 40 percent. Gillespie was the Founder of the Women Artists Historical Archives of the Women’s Interart Center in NY\, NY\, filming and taping interviews of some of the most important women artists of the 20th century as well as presenting her own radio show. Gillespie along with Joyce Weinstein founded a group called the NY Professional Women Artists. The 14 members lectures at Universities and wrote articles to encourage other women artists.\nGillespie also coordinated a course to educate and enlighten women in the visual arts\, after being invited to teach at The New School in NYC. The intent was to prepare women for a new\, more aggressive role to function in the art world. Due to her already busy schedule\, she asked artist Alice Barber to share the task of revealing to the young students the ‘system’ that drove the NY art world and how to succeed. In 1974 she organized an innovative outdoor exhibition\, Walk Through Art\, mounted in Central Park\, Battery Park\, and Rockefeller Center\, then travelling to fifty colleges\, universities and street fairs. Compelled to involve viewers in her work\, she created large 7 ft high triangles of art for people to walk through the sculptures. Gillespie has held positions of designing programs as a Professor of Art\, being a Board of Trustees for more than one college or art center\, as a visiting artist in residency and as the Chairperson of the Fine Arts Committee for the International Women’s Art Festival.\nDorothy Gillespie’s career spanned seven decades\, always at the forefront of the American Art movement. She studied at the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore before moving to New York City\, where she studied at the Art Students League. Her works grace many institutions\, museums\, colleges\, universities and public spaces\, including the permanent collection of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the United States Mission to the United Nations. She was one of the first artists to offer her art to the world through displays in the lobbies of public institutions and governmental centers such as the Mayo Clinic\, Epcot Center\, Warren Wilson College\, Fort Lauderdale Airport-Delta Terminal\, Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art\, the Miami Public Library\, United States Mission to the United Nations\, and the Court House Square – Roanoke\, VA and Universities across the country.\nAmong her many honors\, Gillespie received the Alice Baber Art Fund\, Inc. Grant Award: a Doctor of Pedagogy from Niagara University in Niagara Falls\, A Doctor of Fine Arts (Honoris Causa) from Caldwell College in Caldwell\, NY\, an Allied Professions Award from the Virginia Society\, the American Institute of Architects in Richmond\, VA.\, the Distinguished Alumni Award from Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore\, the Outstanding Services Award from University of Arkansas at Little Rock\, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Women’s Caucus for Art\, and the Gala 8 “Distinguished Woman” Award at Birmingham Southern College.\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park is open from dawn to dusk\, free to the public. Brochures can be picked up at the registration desk. For more information visit: www.rocklandartcenter.org or call 845-358-0877.\nThis exhibition was made possible thanks to the generous support of The Dorothy M. Gillespie Foundation and Gary Israel.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Peter & Rebecca Lang\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, Luxury Kitchen and Bath\, Golden Artist Colors\, Inc.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Simona and Jerome Chazen\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/the-enchanted-garden-colors-in-motion-sculptures-by-dorothy-gillespie-170/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\,27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, NY 10994\, USA
CATEGORIES:Art,Outdoors
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/dorothy-gillespie-roca-2021-4QEgWF.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230413T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230413T193000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230331T171011Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230331T171011Z
UID:10005952-1681408800-1681414200@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Sunset Hike at Rockwood Hall
DESCRIPTION:Come join us for a 3-mile hike and witness the spectacular view of the sun setting over the Hudson and the Tappan Zee Bridge. Leashed dogs are welcome. Please bring water and wear comfortable shoes. This hike is at Rockwood Hall\, DO NOT go to the main entrance. The parking lot is on Kendal Way off route 117\, just after the intersection of Phelps and Regeneron. If the lot is full\, you may park in the Phelps garage (free).Gather at the kiosk at the top of the hill across the street from the parking lot. In case of bad weather\, the hike will be canceled; you will be notified via email at least 2 hours in advance. Max: 40 people.  Photo courtesy of Shayla Schott.  Tickets are $4 and should be purchased in advance online at the link shown. 
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/sunset-hike-at-rockwood-hall/
LOCATION:Rockefeller State Park Preserve\, 125 Phelps Way\, Pleasantville\, 10570\, United States
CATEGORIES:Nature Center,Outdoors,Walks and Tours
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/SunsethikeRockefeller.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230413T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230413T203000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230401T191953Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230413T195008Z
UID:10006145-1681410600-1681417800@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:OGHAM WITH MORGANA
DESCRIPTION:Ogham\, the mysterious ancient Irish alphabet\, is based on a set of characters (feda) that are  associated with specific trees and/or plants and is considered to represent an ancient system of knowledge. Most often used today for divination\, each letter symbol has specific\, and often complicated and multi-faceted\, concepts associated with each one.  The 20 symbol-letters (‘feda’) are organized across 4 ‘families’ (aicme). Morgana will guide us in learning about each feda and its associated plant over the course of a year.\nWe will learn where Ogham originated\, how to pronounce and write the feda\, and utilize plant matter\, teas\, poetry\, art\, historical lore\, guided meditations and of course the Ogham Intention Oils\, to integrate us with each plant’s healing essence.\nThe Second Aicme ‘hÚathe’ begins March 2nd…\n– hÚath (H)\, Hawthorn: (Overcoming) Despair\, Fear & Anxiety\n– Dair (D)\, Oak: Strength & Endurance\n– Tinne (T)\, Holly: Mastery\, Skill & Manifestation\n– Coll (C)\, Hazel: Wisdom\, Enlightenment\n– Ceirt (Q)\, AppleTree: (Dealing With) Misfortune and Bad Luck\nSign up for a single class\, or an Aicme of 5.\nEach class only $21\nEach Aicme (5 Feda) $90  (save $15)\n(20% discount for Students\, OAPs\, Veterans\, Persons with Disabilities\, call for details)
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/ogham-with-morgana-2/
LOCATION:Nyack\, NY\, USA
CATEGORIES:Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/ogham-with-morgana-71nTU7.tmp_.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Modern Druid":MAILTO:hello@modern-druid.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230413T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230413T203000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230320T151302Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230320T151302Z
UID:10005584-1681412400-1681417800@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Turn-of-the-Century Croton
DESCRIPTION:Using rare photographs and postcards from the Croton Historical Society and other sources\, Village Historian Marc Cheshire will take us on a tour of Croton at the dawn of the 20th century. See familiar streets and buildings as they looked more than 100 years ago and discover long-lost treasures like Croton’s first train station\, the barn at Van Cortlandt Manor\, Gardiner estate on Hessian Hill\, and much more. \nThursday\, April 13\, 7 p.m. at the Croton Free Library\, Ottinger Room.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/turn-of-the-century-croton/
LOCATION:Croton Free Library\, 171 Cleveland Drive\, Croton-on-Hudson\, NY\, 10520
CATEGORIES:History,Talks and Presentations
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/125-title-image.jpg
GEO:41.2081955;-73.8791195
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Croton Free Library 171 Cleveland Drive Croton-on-Hudson NY 10520;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=171 Cleveland Drive:geo:-73.8791195,41.2081955
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230414T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230414T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230414T194917Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230414T194918Z
UID:10006197-1681462800-1681502400@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion - Sculptures by Dorothy Gillespie
DESCRIPTION:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion\nSculptures by Dorothy M. Gillespie\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park\nOct. 15\, 2021 – Oct. 2023\nFree to the Public\, Dawn to Dusk\nRoCA is proud to present the The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion exhibit as a part of a tribute to the 20th Century artist and feminist\, Dorothy Gillespie. The exhibit will open October 15th in The Catherine Konner Sculpture Park at RoCA.\nDorothy Gillespie’s joyful and brilliantly colored starbursts glimmer hanging from the trees as well as lining the pathway. The pieces create an enchanted garden of colors in motion. Though stationary they seem to possess a kinetic quality. Two larger pieces can be seen at the entry to RoCA. The exhibit was partially installed this summer and will be completed for exhibit October 15th. The exhibit will remain on display through October 2023.\nGillespie (1920-2012) was born in Roanoke\, VA and lived in Nyack during the later years of her life. She pioneered joyful\, new directions of metal sculpture and is best known for large-scale\, colorfully painted arrangements of cut aluminum strips curling\, radiating\, or undulating in giant arrangements of ribbons\, enchanted towers\, or bursting fireworks. She was well known as a painter\, sculptor and installation artist whose work incorporated many significant 20th-century trends in art.\nDuring Dorothy Gillespie’s youth … “girls did not attend art school\, at least not ‘nice’ girls\,” said Gillespie in 2010. Nevertheless\, she was determined to be an artist and attended the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore. She was more fortunate than women sculptors in the 19th Century who were mostly hired as studio assistants by established male sculptors with few exhibitions. Harriet Hosmer\, Emma Stebbins\, Edmonia Lewis\, Frances Grimes and Helen Mears were some of the few who made names in the arts as women during that time. They did not pursue monumental work as frequently as men did and mostly produced works in bronze and consistent middle-class demand for small-scale sculpture to decorate the home and garden. Today many more women are now entering traditional male dominated sculpture roles in metal\, wood and stone\, thanks to the pioneering activism of women like Dorothy Gillespie in the 20th century.\nAn influential force in the women’s movement\, Gillespie encouraged more women’s art in museums and art in public spaces. In 1970\, Gillespie joined Women in the Arts and created picket signs protesting at the Whitney Museum demanding that the curators choose more women artists for their “Annual exhibition. The demonstration worked\, and more women artists were chosen for the show. Although the increase was very slow\, over time it increased from 8 percent to 40 percent. Gillespie was the Founder of the Women Artists Historical Archives of the Women’s Interart Center in NY\, NY\, filming and taping interviews of some of the most important women artists of the 20th century as well as presenting her own radio show. Gillespie along with Joyce Weinstein founded a group called the NY Professional Women Artists. The 14 members lectures at Universities and wrote articles to encourage other women artists.\nGillespie also coordinated a course to educate and enlighten women in the visual arts\, after being invited to teach at The New School in NYC. The intent was to prepare women for a new\, more aggressive role to function in the art world. Due to her already busy schedule\, she asked artist Alice Barber to share the task of revealing to the young students the ‘system’ that drove the NY art world and how to succeed. In 1974 she organized an innovative outdoor exhibition\, Walk Through Art\, mounted in Central Park\, Battery Park\, and Rockefeller Center\, then travelling to fifty colleges\, universities and street fairs. Compelled to involve viewers in her work\, she created large 7 ft high triangles of art for people to walk through the sculptures. Gillespie has held positions of designing programs as a Professor of Art\, being a Board of Trustees for more than one college or art center\, as a visiting artist in residency and as the Chairperson of the Fine Arts Committee for the International Women’s Art Festival.\nDorothy Gillespie’s career spanned seven decades\, always at the forefront of the American Art movement. She studied at the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore before moving to New York City\, where she studied at the Art Students League. Her works grace many institutions\, museums\, colleges\, universities and public spaces\, including the permanent collection of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the United States Mission to the United Nations. She was one of the first artists to offer her art to the world through displays in the lobbies of public institutions and governmental centers such as the Mayo Clinic\, Epcot Center\, Warren Wilson College\, Fort Lauderdale Airport-Delta Terminal\, Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art\, the Miami Public Library\, United States Mission to the United Nations\, and the Court House Square – Roanoke\, VA and Universities across the country.\nAmong her many honors\, Gillespie received the Alice Baber Art Fund\, Inc. Grant Award: a Doctor of Pedagogy from Niagara University in Niagara Falls\, A Doctor of Fine Arts (Honoris Causa) from Caldwell College in Caldwell\, NY\, an Allied Professions Award from the Virginia Society\, the American Institute of Architects in Richmond\, VA.\, the Distinguished Alumni Award from Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore\, the Outstanding Services Award from University of Arkansas at Little Rock\, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Women’s Caucus for Art\, and the Gala 8 “Distinguished Woman” Award at Birmingham Southern College.\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park is open from dawn to dusk\, free to the public. Brochures can be picked up at the registration desk. For more information visit: www.rocklandartcenter.org or call 845-358-0877.\nThis exhibition was made possible thanks to the generous support of The Dorothy M. Gillespie Foundation and Gary Israel.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Peter & Rebecca Lang\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, Luxury Kitchen and Bath\, Golden Artist Colors\, Inc.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Simona and Jerome Chazen\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/the-enchanted-garden-colors-in-motion-sculptures-by-dorothy-gillespie-171/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\,27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, NY 10994\, USA
CATEGORIES:Art,Outdoors
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/dorothy-gillespie-roca-2021-4QEgWF.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230414T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230414T203000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230402T191935Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230414T194918Z
UID:10006150-1681497000-1681504200@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Shadow Work with Meghan McSweeney @ Modern Druid
DESCRIPTION:SHADOW WORK WITH MEGHAN MCSWEENEY\nShadow work facilitates a deep and intimate relationship with your core self\, your patterns. These are the woven structures our outward self is created from. It is here that we find the Key to unlock those pieces of ourselves\, but first we must find the Torch so we can reveal what is there waiting to be seen.\nThis two-part class will give you the tools to go deeper and explore your Shadow\, learn how to cut away what doesn’t serve you\, and how to adapt to the changes within.\nEach participant will work with at least one pattern\, and through meditation and visualization\, we will be able to observe\, acknowledge\, accept\, integrate\, and release a personal Shadow or pattern.\nDue to the intimate nature of this work\, there are only 5 places available… please reserve early.\nDATES: \nFriday\, April 14th\, AND \nFriday\, April 21st\, 2023\nTIME: 6:30 PM – 8:30 PM  \n \nEVENT LINK:\nhttps://modern-druid.shoplightspeed.com/shadow-work-workshop-with-meghan-mcsweeney.html\n \nPRICE: $75 per person (for both classes) \n 
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/shadow-work-with-meghan-mcsweeney-modern-druid/
LOCATION:Modern Druid\, 60 S. Broadway\, Nyack\, NY\, 10960\, United States
CATEGORIES:enjoy-nyack,Metaphysical,Seasonal,Shopping,Spring Fling,Wellness,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/meghan-dr-witch-shadow-work-workshop-with-meghan-m-scaled-fGozu2.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Modern Druid":MAILTO:hello@modern-druid.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230415
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230627
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230508T204929Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230625T223847Z
UID:10006529-1681516800-1687823999@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Kibbitz & Nosh: New York City’s Vanishing Cafeterias
DESCRIPTION:Kibbitz & Nosh: New York City’s Vanishing Cafeterias\nPhotographs by Marcia Bricker Halperin\nDuring the early to mid-20th Century\, the streets of New York City were filled with hundreds of cafeterias\, and self-service eating establishments. One particular restaurant\, Dubrow’s Cafeteria in Brooklyn\, was a legendary institution. New York City-based photographer Marcia Bricker Halperin documented Dubrow’s and other cafeterias in their waning days\, drawn to the memorable faces and the liveliness and sorrow of urban life in that vanished world.\nHopper House Hours\nThursday\n1–5 PM\nFriday\n1–5 PM\nSaturday\n12–5 PM\nSunday\n12–5 PM
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/kibbitz-nosh-new-york-citys-vanishing-cafeterias-2/
LOCATION:Edward Hopper House Art Center\, 82 N Broadway\, Nyack\, NY
CATEGORIES:Art,enjoy-nyack,Featured,History,photographs,Photography,Portraiture,Seasonal,Spring Fling,Visual-Art
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/unnamed-1-2-scaled-TWyQZy.tmp_.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230415
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230417
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230409T193747Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230415T195211Z
UID:10006186-1681516800-1681689599@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Photo Exhibit: 82 Pieces of '82: Main Street\, Nyack
DESCRIPTION:82 Pieces of ’82\nMain Street\, Nyack\nPhotos by Brad Hess\nThe Historical Society of the Nyacks\n50 Piermont Avenue\n \nThe exhibit will be open Saturdays from 1 – 4 January 21st through April 15th\nIn 1982\, photographer Brad Hess walked Main Street in Nyack every Sunday morning\, taking over 3\,000 black and white photographs. Trying out a new film\, he decided Main Street was where he would experiment with it. As the images emerged from his dark room\, he became fascinated with the quality of the film as well as the opportunities Main Street offered him. He returned nearly every Sunday morning for the next year\, walking from 9W to the riverfront.\n \n82 Pieces of ’82\, Main Street\, Nyack will be our first traditional “opening” since COVID. Please join us in thanking Brad for sharing his amazing work with us\, and hearing what he has to say about these street scenes and their meaning for Nyack. We look forward to your questions\, feedback and commentary. Brad will have the floor around 1:30. Please come masked – we want to minimize everyone’s exposure to our current variant with its high transmission potential. And for that reason also\, our refreshments are very minimal.\n 
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/photo-exhibit-82-pieces-of-82-main-street-nyack-13/
LOCATION:Historical Society of the Nyacks 50 Piermont Ave.\, Nyack\, NY\, 50 Piermont Ave.\, Nyack\, 10960\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art,enjoy-nyack,Family-Friendly,Free-Admission,photographs,Photography,Portraiture,Seasonal,Spring Fling,Visual-Art,Winter-Fun
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/unnamed-5-wcMFcD.tmp_.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230415T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230415T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230415T195211Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230415T195211Z
UID:10006201-1681549200-1681588800@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion - Sculptures by Dorothy Gillespie
DESCRIPTION:The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion\nSculptures by Dorothy M. Gillespie\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park\nOct. 15\, 2021 – Oct. 2023\nFree to the Public\, Dawn to Dusk\nRoCA is proud to present the The Enchanted Garden: Colors in Motion exhibit as a part of a tribute to the 20th Century artist and feminist\, Dorothy Gillespie. The exhibit will open October 15th in The Catherine Konner Sculpture Park at RoCA.\nDorothy Gillespie’s joyful and brilliantly colored starbursts glimmer hanging from the trees as well as lining the pathway. The pieces create an enchanted garden of colors in motion. Though stationary they seem to possess a kinetic quality. Two larger pieces can be seen at the entry to RoCA. The exhibit was partially installed this summer and will be completed for exhibit October 15th. The exhibit will remain on display through October 2023.\nGillespie (1920-2012) was born in Roanoke\, VA and lived in Nyack during the later years of her life. She pioneered joyful\, new directions of metal sculpture and is best known for large-scale\, colorfully painted arrangements of cut aluminum strips curling\, radiating\, or undulating in giant arrangements of ribbons\, enchanted towers\, or bursting fireworks. She was well known as a painter\, sculptor and installation artist whose work incorporated many significant 20th-century trends in art.\nDuring Dorothy Gillespie’s youth … “girls did not attend art school\, at least not ‘nice’ girls\,” said Gillespie in 2010. Nevertheless\, she was determined to be an artist and attended the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore. She was more fortunate than women sculptors in the 19th Century who were mostly hired as studio assistants by established male sculptors with few exhibitions. Harriet Hosmer\, Emma Stebbins\, Edmonia Lewis\, Frances Grimes and Helen Mears were some of the few who made names in the arts as women during that time. They did not pursue monumental work as frequently as men did and mostly produced works in bronze and consistent middle-class demand for small-scale sculpture to decorate the home and garden. Today many more women are now entering traditional male dominated sculpture roles in metal\, wood and stone\, thanks to the pioneering activism of women like Dorothy Gillespie in the 20th century.\nAn influential force in the women’s movement\, Gillespie encouraged more women’s art in museums and art in public spaces. In 1970\, Gillespie joined Women in the Arts and created picket signs protesting at the Whitney Museum demanding that the curators choose more women artists for their “Annual exhibition. The demonstration worked\, and more women artists were chosen for the show. Although the increase was very slow\, over time it increased from 8 percent to 40 percent. Gillespie was the Founder of the Women Artists Historical Archives of the Women’s Interart Center in NY\, NY\, filming and taping interviews of some of the most important women artists of the 20th century as well as presenting her own radio show. Gillespie along with Joyce Weinstein founded a group called the NY Professional Women Artists. The 14 members lectures at Universities and wrote articles to encourage other women artists.\nGillespie also coordinated a course to educate and enlighten women in the visual arts\, after being invited to teach at The New School in NYC. The intent was to prepare women for a new\, more aggressive role to function in the art world. Due to her already busy schedule\, she asked artist Alice Barber to share the task of revealing to the young students the ‘system’ that drove the NY art world and how to succeed. In 1974 she organized an innovative outdoor exhibition\, Walk Through Art\, mounted in Central Park\, Battery Park\, and Rockefeller Center\, then travelling to fifty colleges\, universities and street fairs. Compelled to involve viewers in her work\, she created large 7 ft high triangles of art for people to walk through the sculptures. Gillespie has held positions of designing programs as a Professor of Art\, being a Board of Trustees for more than one college or art center\, as a visiting artist in residency and as the Chairperson of the Fine Arts Committee for the International Women’s Art Festival.\nDorothy Gillespie’s career spanned seven decades\, always at the forefront of the American Art movement. She studied at the Maryland Institute College in Baltimore before moving to New York City\, where she studied at the Art Students League. Her works grace many institutions\, museums\, colleges\, universities and public spaces\, including the permanent collection of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the United States Mission to the United Nations. She was one of the first artists to offer her art to the world through displays in the lobbies of public institutions and governmental centers such as the Mayo Clinic\, Epcot Center\, Warren Wilson College\, Fort Lauderdale Airport-Delta Terminal\, Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art\, the Miami Public Library\, United States Mission to the United Nations\, and the Court House Square – Roanoke\, VA and Universities across the country.\nAmong her many honors\, Gillespie received the Alice Baber Art Fund\, Inc. Grant Award: a Doctor of Pedagogy from Niagara University in Niagara Falls\, A Doctor of Fine Arts (Honoris Causa) from Caldwell College in Caldwell\, NY\, an Allied Professions Award from the Virginia Society\, the American Institute of Architects in Richmond\, VA.\, the Distinguished Alumni Award from Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore\, the Outstanding Services Award from University of Arkansas at Little Rock\, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Women’s Caucus for Art\, and the Gala 8 “Distinguished Woman” Award at Birmingham Southern College.\nThe Catherine Konner Sculpture Park is open from dawn to dusk\, free to the public. Brochures can be picked up at the registration desk. For more information visit: www.rocklandartcenter.org or call 845-358-0877.\nThis exhibition was made possible thanks to the generous support of The Dorothy M. Gillespie Foundation and Gary Israel.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Peter & Rebecca Lang\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, Luxury Kitchen and Bath\, Golden Artist Colors\, Inc.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Simona and Jerome Chazen\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/the-enchanted-garden-colors-in-motion-sculptures-by-dorothy-gillespie-172/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\,27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, NY 10994\, USA
CATEGORIES:Art,Outdoors
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/dorothy-gillespie-roca-2021-4QEgWF.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230415T093000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230415T163000
DTSTAMP:20260404T183214
CREATED:20230331T172411Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230331T172914Z
UID:10005954-1681551000-1681576200@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Lyndhurst Mansion Flower Show
DESCRIPTION:The Spring Flower Show returns the weekend of April 15th and 16th. Floral designers transform Lyndhurst with luscious botanical displays that highlight and harmonize with the opulent interiors of the historic mansion. The mansion can be visited at your own pace and is perfect for families with kids. New this year\, the basement kitchens have been added to our display and the Grand Picture Gallery is reserved for the display of contemporary art and floral jewelry. Free activities are available throughout the property including a botanical market offering plants\, flowers\, and garden-related items\, special lectures\, landscape tours\, and workshops for the whole family. Tickets for this weekend are for general admission with timed entry. You may enter the mansion within the one-hour time frame of your chosen time slot. Your ticket includes admission to our Welcome Center tent where our local botanical market\, free workshops and lectures\, and food by Geordanes of Irvington are located.  Please expect to enter the Mansion at the designated time on your ticket.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/lyndhurst-mansion-flower-show/2023-04-15/
LOCATION:Lyndhurst\, 635 South Broadway\, Tarrytown\, NY\, 10591\, United States
CATEGORIES:Garden,Historic House Tour
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Lyndhurst-best-1.jpeg
ORGANIZER;CN="Lyndhurst":MAILTO:lyndhurst@savingplaces.org
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR