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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Historic Hudson River Towns
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230424T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230424T160000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230416T200631Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230606T123936Z
UID:10006735-1682334000-1682352000@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Encore Encounter:  Recycled Art of Poramit Thantapalit
DESCRIPTION:Encore Encounter in Gallery Two\nRecycled Works by Poramit Thantapalit\nApril 15 – June 10\, 2023 \nOpening Reception: Saturday\, April 15\, 2pm – 5pm\nFree to the Public \nPlease join Rockland Center for the Arts for the opening Encore Encounter: Recycled works by Poramit Thantapalit in Gallery Two. \nEncore Encounter features the works of Poramit Thantapalit.  Poramit’s work is inspired by the relationship and connection between humans\, nature and the surroundings such as trees\, flowers\, the ocean\, people and animals.  The artist focuses on using both recycled and non-recycled materials to create his artwork.  Discarded shopping bags\, cereal boxes\, and plastic bottles that were once considered “trash” are altered into unexpected visions of beauty such as coral clouds hanging from the ceiling and bluetanica gardens growing on the wall .  Poramit’s artwork is created from small parts and are uniquely assembled like puzzles.  Each piece can stand alone as an individual object or together to create a large installation.  Cyanotype prints are often made of the recycled objects of art.  Beautifully created sculptures\, installations\, mixed media and drawings exemplify just how much waste we generate.  It also His work inspires viewers to protect our environment. \nA native of Thailand\, Poramit Thantapalit has a degree in journalism and a master’s in computer graphics from New York Institute of Technology.  He has over 15 years experience as a graphic designer\, artist and photographer with global marketing organizations.  His installations and artworks have been exhibited at the Arcadia Earth Museum\, National Academy Museum\, the James Rose Center\, IPCNY Print Fest at Robert Miller Gallery\, the Jersey City Theater\, and the Sodertalje Arts Gallery in Sweden.  His installation “Masked Arts” that he created during the pandemic was featured in the New York Times Sunday edition in May 2021.  Poramit now lives in New Jersey. \nPlease also join Rockland Center for the exhibit opening with an artist reception on Saturday\, April 15th\, 2:00pm – 5:00pm.  The exhibit will be on view through June 10th\, open Mondays – Saturdays 11am – 4pm\, (closed Sundays).  Free to the Public.  For more information call (845) 358-0877 or visit www.rocklandartcenter.org.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Rea Charitable Trust\, ArtsWestchester\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Walter Cain & Paulo Ribeiro\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\,\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/encore-encounter-recycled-art-of-poramit-thantapalit-2/2023-04-24/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\, 27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, 10994
CATEGORIES:Art,Family-Friendly,Free-Admission,Visual-Art
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Bluetanical_Garden_wall-scaled-4wyeIX.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230424T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230424T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230424T201845Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230424T201845Z
UID:10006252-1682326800-1682366400@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-182/
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:20230424T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230424T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230424T201845Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230424T201845Z
UID:10006254-1682326800-1682366400@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-183/
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:20230423T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230423T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230423T201847Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230423T201847Z
UID:10006249-1682240400-1682280000@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-181/
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:20230423T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230423T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230423T201847Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230423T201847Z
UID:10006250-1682240400-1682280000@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-180/
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:20230422T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230422T180000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230420T200505Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230422T200834Z
UID:10006231-1682182800-1682186400@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Artist Talk
DESCRIPTION:Vladimir Cybil Charlier & Sari Dienes Foundation\nModerated by GARNER Arts Center
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/artist-talk/
LOCATION:Garner Arts Center\,55 W Railroad Ave\, Garnerville\, NY 10923\, USA\, 2 W Railroad Ave\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230422T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230422T160000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230416T200632Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230421T200350Z
UID:10006210-1682168400-1682179200@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-24/
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:20230422T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230422T160000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230416T200631Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230606T123936Z
UID:10006734-1682161200-1682179200@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Encore Encounter:  Recycled Art of Poramit Thantapalit
DESCRIPTION:Encore Encounter in Gallery Two\nRecycled Works by Poramit Thantapalit\nApril 15 – June 10\, 2023 \nOpening Reception: Saturday\, April 15\, 2pm – 5pm\nFree to the Public \nPlease join Rockland Center for the Arts for the opening Encore Encounter: Recycled works by Poramit Thantapalit in Gallery Two. \nEncore Encounter features the works of Poramit Thantapalit.  Poramit’s work is inspired by the relationship and connection between humans\, nature and the surroundings such as trees\, flowers\, the ocean\, people and animals.  The artist focuses on using both recycled and non-recycled materials to create his artwork.  Discarded shopping bags\, cereal boxes\, and plastic bottles that were once considered “trash” are altered into unexpected visions of beauty such as coral clouds hanging from the ceiling and bluetanica gardens growing on the wall .  Poramit’s artwork is created from small parts and are uniquely assembled like puzzles.  Each piece can stand alone as an individual object or together to create a large installation.  Cyanotype prints are often made of the recycled objects of art.  Beautifully created sculptures\, installations\, mixed media and drawings exemplify just how much waste we generate.  It also His work inspires viewers to protect our environment. \nA native of Thailand\, Poramit Thantapalit has a degree in journalism and a master’s in computer graphics from New York Institute of Technology.  He has over 15 years experience as a graphic designer\, artist and photographer with global marketing organizations.  His installations and artworks have been exhibited at the Arcadia Earth Museum\, National Academy Museum\, the James Rose Center\, IPCNY Print Fest at Robert Miller Gallery\, the Jersey City Theater\, and the Sodertalje Arts Gallery in Sweden.  His installation “Masked Arts” that he created during the pandemic was featured in the New York Times Sunday edition in May 2021.  Poramit now lives in New Jersey. \nPlease also join Rockland Center for the exhibit opening with an artist reception on Saturday\, April 15th\, 2:00pm – 5:00pm.  The exhibit will be on view through June 10th\, open Mondays – Saturdays 11am – 4pm\, (closed Sundays).  Free to the Public.  For more information call (845) 358-0877 or visit www.rocklandartcenter.org.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Rea Charitable Trust\, ArtsWestchester\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Walter Cain & Paulo Ribeiro\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\,\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/encore-encounter-recycled-art-of-poramit-thantapalit-2/2023-04-22/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\, 27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, 10994
CATEGORIES:Art,Family-Friendly,Free-Admission,Visual-Art
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Bluetanical_Garden_wall-scaled-4wyeIX.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230422T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230422T120000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230416T200632Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230421T200350Z
UID:10006209-1682159400-1682164800@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:LGBTQ+ Family Spring Craft Workshop
DESCRIPTION:LGBTQ+ Family Spring Craft Workshop\nSaturday\, April 22\, 2023\n10:30 AM – 12:00 PM\nJoin the Pride Center and Creative Arts Workshop for some seasonal crafts & games…prizes included!\nFor LGBTQ+ families with children of all ages.\nRSVP required.\nFor questions or to RSVP:\nKrisHillen@rocklandpridecenter.org.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/lgbtq-family-spring-craft-workshop/
LOCATION:Creative Arts Workshop\, 48 Burd St\, Nyack\, NY\, 10960\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art,Children,diversity,enjoy-nyack,Family-Friendly,inclusion,Pride/LGBTQ+,Seasonal,Spring Fling,Visual-Art,Wellness,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Screen-Shot-2023-03-29-at-11.44.24-AM-Jn2t4s.tmp_.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230422T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230422T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230422T200833Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230422T200834Z
UID:10006239-1682154000-1682193600@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-179/
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:20230421T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230421T213000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230420T200504Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230421T200350Z
UID:10006229-1682107200-1682112600@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Adam Falcon Trio feat. Etienne Stadwijk and Jonathan Toscano at Maureen's Jazz Cellar
DESCRIPTION:Adam Falcon brings his trio into Maureen’s Jazz Cellar\, one of Rockland\nCounty’s most intimate music venues. This singer-songwriter will be\nfeaturing Etienne Stadwijk on piano and Jonathan Toscano on bass for a\nspecial evening of stories\, music and song.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/adam-falcon-trio-feat-etienne-stadwijk-and-jonathan-toscano-at-maureens-jazz-cellar/
LOCATION:Maureen’s Jazz Cellar\,2 North Broadway\, Nyack\, NY 10960\, USA
CATEGORIES:Live-Music
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230421T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230421T220000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230416T200632Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230421T200350Z
UID:10006208-1682105400-1682114400@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:INSPIRED! 2023\, a benefit for Rivertown Film
DESCRIPTION:People who create are inspirations to us all. But what inspires them? Find\nout at Rivertown Film’s 8th Inspired! on Friday\, April 21 at Nyack Center\,\nwhen fifteen local artists in varied disciplines share the sources of their\ninspiration\, each using ten slides and twenty seconds per slide to explain\nthem. Join us for a fast-paced night of creativity and enjoy the many ways\nthat artists find inspiration. The program starts at 8:00\, but arrive early\nfor complementary hors d’oeuvres and to look over our silent auction items\nand raffles. After the presentation\, additional hors d’oeuvres\, desserts\nand beverages will be available as you mingle with the artists. Our food\ndonors include Bolzano’s Restaurant-Congers\, Hudson House\, Otto’s Full\nService in Piermont\, BJ’s\, Prohibition River\, Olde Village Inne\, Dolce\nVita\, Turiellos\, Stop & Shop Orangeburg and Boxer Donuts. Tickets are $35\nor $25 for members of Rivertown Film.\nTaking part this year are:\nEvent MC: GLEN SCHLOSS\, Performer\, Producer\, Remixer and\nMulti-Instrumentalist\nThe 2023 Inspired! Honorees:\nDRU PLUHOWSKI\, Choral director\nELLIOTT FORREST\, Broadcaster\, Director/Producer/Designer/Filmmaker\nELENA MELENER SCHLOSS\, Voice Actor\, Writer\, Director and Content Creator\nTREY BOHNAM SCHLOSS\, Drummer and Singer\nRAY LEVIER\, Drummer / Composer / Producer\nKIM CROSS\, Actor\nDOROTHY GILLESPIE\, Sculptor represented posthumously by her son Gary Israel\nSUSAN HILLARY (aka SHAPIRO)\, Filmmaker & Painter\nKIMBERLY FENNELL\, Social Media Content Creator\nHERNZ LAGUERRE\, JR.\, Journalist / Video Storyteller\nCHARU KRISHAN\, Hindi Storyteller / Writer and Translator\nJ. FAITH ALMIRON\, Cultural Studies Scholar and Critic\nPETER ARTIN\, Sculptor\nOSCAR GONZÁLEZ-BARRETO\, Scholar /Teacher / Playwright / Radio Host\nDAVID SHIRE: Composer
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/inspired-2023-a-benefit-for-rivertown-film/
LOCATION:Rivertown Film at the Nyack Center\,58 Depew Avenue\, Nyack\, NY 10960\, USA\, entrance on South Broadway
CATEGORIES:Theater,Visual-Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230421T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230421T203000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230416T200631Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230421T200350Z
UID:10006207-1682105400-1682109000@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Art Lillard's Blue Heaven Swing Sextet
DESCRIPTION:The Blue Heaven swing sextet is a small band with a big band sound. Wherever they perform\, Blue Heaven is enthusiastically received by listening audiences and swing dancers alike.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/art-lillards-blue-heaven-swing-sextet-2/
LOCATION:The Nyack Library\, 59 South Broadway\, 10960
CATEGORIES:Live-Music,Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Screenshot-2023-03-16-173609-1-iJ2Vz7.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Nyack Library":MAILTO:dpaciarello@nyacklibrary.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230421T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230421T203000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230415T195211Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230421T200350Z
UID:10006202-1682101800-1682109000@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-2/
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;TZID=America/New_York:20230421T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230421T160000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230416T200631Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230606T123936Z
UID:10006733-1682074800-1682092800@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Encore Encounter:  Recycled Art of Poramit Thantapalit
DESCRIPTION:Encore Encounter in Gallery Two\nRecycled Works by Poramit Thantapalit\nApril 15 – June 10\, 2023 \nOpening Reception: Saturday\, April 15\, 2pm – 5pm\nFree to the Public \nPlease join Rockland Center for the Arts for the opening Encore Encounter: Recycled works by Poramit Thantapalit in Gallery Two. \nEncore Encounter features the works of Poramit Thantapalit.  Poramit’s work is inspired by the relationship and connection between humans\, nature and the surroundings such as trees\, flowers\, the ocean\, people and animals.  The artist focuses on using both recycled and non-recycled materials to create his artwork.  Discarded shopping bags\, cereal boxes\, and plastic bottles that were once considered “trash” are altered into unexpected visions of beauty such as coral clouds hanging from the ceiling and bluetanica gardens growing on the wall .  Poramit’s artwork is created from small parts and are uniquely assembled like puzzles.  Each piece can stand alone as an individual object or together to create a large installation.  Cyanotype prints are often made of the recycled objects of art.  Beautifully created sculptures\, installations\, mixed media and drawings exemplify just how much waste we generate.  It also His work inspires viewers to protect our environment. \nA native of Thailand\, Poramit Thantapalit has a degree in journalism and a master’s in computer graphics from New York Institute of Technology.  He has over 15 years experience as a graphic designer\, artist and photographer with global marketing organizations.  His installations and artworks have been exhibited at the Arcadia Earth Museum\, National Academy Museum\, the James Rose Center\, IPCNY Print Fest at Robert Miller Gallery\, the Jersey City Theater\, and the Sodertalje Arts Gallery in Sweden.  His installation “Masked Arts” that he created during the pandemic was featured in the New York Times Sunday edition in May 2021.  Poramit now lives in New Jersey. \nPlease also join Rockland Center for the exhibit opening with an artist reception on Saturday\, April 15th\, 2:00pm – 5:00pm.  The exhibit will be on view through June 10th\, open Mondays – Saturdays 11am – 4pm\, (closed Sundays).  Free to the Public.  For more information call (845) 358-0877 or visit www.rocklandartcenter.org.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Rea Charitable Trust\, ArtsWestchester\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Walter Cain & Paulo Ribeiro\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\,\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/encore-encounter-recycled-art-of-poramit-thantapalit-2/2023-04-21/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\, 27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, 10994
CATEGORIES:Art,Family-Friendly,Free-Admission,Visual-Art
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Bluetanical_Garden_wall-scaled-4wyeIX.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230421T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230421T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230421T200349Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230421T200350Z
UID:10006235-1682067600-1682107200@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-178/
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:20230420T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230420T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230410T194909Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230420T200504Z
UID:10006190-1682020800-1682020800@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:James Webb Telescope Images Set to Music Birth of the Universe Featured Guest from the Space Telescope Science Institute
DESCRIPTION:Thursday\, April 20\, 2023\nJames Webb Telescope Images Set to Music\nBirth of the Universe\nFeatured Guest from the Space Telescope Science Institute\nTime: 8:00pm EST\nOld Nyack High School\n151 N Midland Avenue\, Nyack\, NY\nTickets: $20\nFor the first time anywhere\, spectacular new images from the JAMES WEBB TELESCOPE will be seen on BIG SCREEN set to music. These new images far surpass what scientists previously received from the Hubble Telescope. Award-winning director\, producer\, Elliott Forrest has set these out-of-this-world images to music. Special guests will be on hand to explain the images.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/james-webb-telescope-images-set-to-music-birth-of-the-universe-featured-guest-from-the-space-telescope-science-institute/
LOCATION:Rittenhausen Theater at BOCES 131 North Midland Avenue Nyack\, NY
CATEGORIES:enjoy-nyack,Seasonal,Spring Fling,Theater
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Birth-of-the-Universe-main-4qvX3H.tmp_.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230420T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230420T160000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230416T200631Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230606T123936Z
UID:10006732-1681988400-1682006400@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Encore Encounter:  Recycled Art of Poramit Thantapalit
DESCRIPTION:Encore Encounter in Gallery Two\nRecycled Works by Poramit Thantapalit\nApril 15 – June 10\, 2023 \nOpening Reception: Saturday\, April 15\, 2pm – 5pm\nFree to the Public \nPlease join Rockland Center for the Arts for the opening Encore Encounter: Recycled works by Poramit Thantapalit in Gallery Two. \nEncore Encounter features the works of Poramit Thantapalit.  Poramit’s work is inspired by the relationship and connection between humans\, nature and the surroundings such as trees\, flowers\, the ocean\, people and animals.  The artist focuses on using both recycled and non-recycled materials to create his artwork.  Discarded shopping bags\, cereal boxes\, and plastic bottles that were once considered “trash” are altered into unexpected visions of beauty such as coral clouds hanging from the ceiling and bluetanica gardens growing on the wall .  Poramit’s artwork is created from small parts and are uniquely assembled like puzzles.  Each piece can stand alone as an individual object or together to create a large installation.  Cyanotype prints are often made of the recycled objects of art.  Beautifully created sculptures\, installations\, mixed media and drawings exemplify just how much waste we generate.  It also His work inspires viewers to protect our environment. \nA native of Thailand\, Poramit Thantapalit has a degree in journalism and a master’s in computer graphics from New York Institute of Technology.  He has over 15 years experience as a graphic designer\, artist and photographer with global marketing organizations.  His installations and artworks have been exhibited at the Arcadia Earth Museum\, National Academy Museum\, the James Rose Center\, IPCNY Print Fest at Robert Miller Gallery\, the Jersey City Theater\, and the Sodertalje Arts Gallery in Sweden.  His installation “Masked Arts” that he created during the pandemic was featured in the New York Times Sunday edition in May 2021.  Poramit now lives in New Jersey. \nPlease also join Rockland Center for the exhibit opening with an artist reception on Saturday\, April 15th\, 2:00pm – 5:00pm.  The exhibit will be on view through June 10th\, open Mondays – Saturdays 11am – 4pm\, (closed Sundays).  Free to the Public.  For more information call (845) 358-0877 or visit www.rocklandartcenter.org.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Rea Charitable Trust\, ArtsWestchester\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Walter Cain & Paulo Ribeiro\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\,\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/encore-encounter-recycled-art-of-poramit-thantapalit-2/2023-04-20/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\, 27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, 10994
CATEGORIES:Art,Family-Friendly,Free-Admission,Visual-Art
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Bluetanical_Garden_wall-scaled-4wyeIX.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230420T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230420T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230420T200503Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230420T200504Z
UID:10006227-1681981200-1682020800@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-177/
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:20230420T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230420T140000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230413T195009Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230419T200422Z
UID:10006196-1681977600-1681999200@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-31/
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:20230419T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230419T210000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230408T193506Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230419T200422Z
UID:10006182-1681927200-1681938000@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Lesbian Happy Hour
DESCRIPTION:LESBIAN HAPPY HOUR\nWednesday\, April 19\, 2023 | 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM\nMusic and mingling…a Lesbian-only evening in the heart of Nyack at Maureen’s Jazz Cellar.\nTrans\, cis\, Non-Binary: all Lesbians are welcome!\n18+\nThis event is held at Maureen’s Jazz Cellar\, 2 North Broadway\, Nyack.\nFor questions about accessibility\, menu\, or directions\, please call 845-535-3143 or email Brianne@maureensjazzcellar.com.\nFor questions about the event\, contact Kris at krishillen@rocklandpridecenter.org.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/lesbian-happy-hour-3/
LOCATION:Maureen’s Jazz Cellar\, 2 North Broadway\, Nyack\, NY\, 10960\, United States
CATEGORIES:diversity,enjoy-nyack,Free-Admission,Music,Nightlife,Pride/LGBTQ+,Restaurants/Food,Seasonal,Spring Fling,Wellness
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Lesbian-Happy-Hour-April-19_Page_1-768x768-1-h1aJYh.tmp_.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230419T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230419T160000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230416T200631Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230606T123936Z
UID:10006731-1681902000-1681920000@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Encore Encounter:  Recycled Art of Poramit Thantapalit
DESCRIPTION:Encore Encounter in Gallery Two\nRecycled Works by Poramit Thantapalit\nApril 15 – June 10\, 2023 \nOpening Reception: Saturday\, April 15\, 2pm – 5pm\nFree to the Public \nPlease join Rockland Center for the Arts for the opening Encore Encounter: Recycled works by Poramit Thantapalit in Gallery Two. \nEncore Encounter features the works of Poramit Thantapalit.  Poramit’s work is inspired by the relationship and connection between humans\, nature and the surroundings such as trees\, flowers\, the ocean\, people and animals.  The artist focuses on using both recycled and non-recycled materials to create his artwork.  Discarded shopping bags\, cereal boxes\, and plastic bottles that were once considered “trash” are altered into unexpected visions of beauty such as coral clouds hanging from the ceiling and bluetanica gardens growing on the wall .  Poramit’s artwork is created from small parts and are uniquely assembled like puzzles.  Each piece can stand alone as an individual object or together to create a large installation.  Cyanotype prints are often made of the recycled objects of art.  Beautifully created sculptures\, installations\, mixed media and drawings exemplify just how much waste we generate.  It also His work inspires viewers to protect our environment. \nA native of Thailand\, Poramit Thantapalit has a degree in journalism and a master’s in computer graphics from New York Institute of Technology.  He has over 15 years experience as a graphic designer\, artist and photographer with global marketing organizations.  His installations and artworks have been exhibited at the Arcadia Earth Museum\, National Academy Museum\, the James Rose Center\, IPCNY Print Fest at Robert Miller Gallery\, the Jersey City Theater\, and the Sodertalje Arts Gallery in Sweden.  His installation “Masked Arts” that he created during the pandemic was featured in the New York Times Sunday edition in May 2021.  Poramit now lives in New Jersey. \nPlease also join Rockland Center for the exhibit opening with an artist reception on Saturday\, April 15th\, 2:00pm – 5:00pm.  The exhibit will be on view through June 10th\, open Mondays – Saturdays 11am – 4pm\, (closed Sundays).  Free to the Public.  For more information call (845) 358-0877 or visit www.rocklandartcenter.org.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Rea Charitable Trust\, ArtsWestchester\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Walter Cain & Paulo Ribeiro\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\,\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/encore-encounter-recycled-art-of-poramit-thantapalit-2/2023-04-19/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\, 27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, 10994
CATEGORIES:Art,Family-Friendly,Free-Admission,Visual-Art
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Bluetanical_Garden_wall-scaled-4wyeIX.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230419T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230419T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230419T200421Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230419T200422Z
UID:10006224-1681894800-1681934400@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-176/
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:20230419T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230419T170000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230408T193506Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230419T200421Z
UID:10006181-1681891200-1681923600@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:NOSH AND PLAY! - A BI-WEEKLY ADULT "RETREAT"
DESCRIPTION:NOSH AND PLAY! – A BI-WEEKLY ADULT “RETREAT”\nEvery other Wednesday 6:30-8:15pm\n$25 per visit\nA continuation of our “Paint\, Nosh\, Reflection” series.\nThis go around we will have guest facilitators lead a group activity which will be focused from theatre\, the arts\, dance\, or mindfulness.\nThis is an easy to swallow (pun-intended) evening meant to relax\, inspire\, and engage all of your senses.\nSo come join the fun and get out of the week-day brunt and let’s Nosh and Play!!\nEach week a special “nosh” will be featured to “feed the soul” in a very figurative way!\nThis is a safe space to make art\, be yourself\, and heal. Please come with that in mind as we hold space and kindness towards one another in the shared retreat.\nCome for one or all evenings.\n 
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/nosh-and-play-a-bi-weekly-adult-retreat-5/
LOCATION:Creative Arts Workshop\, 48 Burd St\, Nyack\, NY\, 10960\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art,enjoy-nyack,Fall-Fun,Holiday Fun,inclusion,paintings,Restaurants/Food,Seasonal,Spring Fling,Summer-Fun,Visual-Art,Wellness,Winter-Fun,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/44f2f184-a3de-41f1-9ed0-1b3a534573aa___13080221090-1-scaled-UDvJ3T.tmp_.webp
ORGANIZER;CN="Creative Arts Workshop":MAILTO:jgarreffa@arts-workshop.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230418T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230418T160000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230416T200631Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230606T123936Z
UID:10006730-1681815600-1681833600@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Encore Encounter:  Recycled Art of Poramit Thantapalit
DESCRIPTION:Encore Encounter in Gallery Two\nRecycled Works by Poramit Thantapalit\nApril 15 – June 10\, 2023 \nOpening Reception: Saturday\, April 15\, 2pm – 5pm\nFree to the Public \nPlease join Rockland Center for the Arts for the opening Encore Encounter: Recycled works by Poramit Thantapalit in Gallery Two. \nEncore Encounter features the works of Poramit Thantapalit.  Poramit’s work is inspired by the relationship and connection between humans\, nature and the surroundings such as trees\, flowers\, the ocean\, people and animals.  The artist focuses on using both recycled and non-recycled materials to create his artwork.  Discarded shopping bags\, cereal boxes\, and plastic bottles that were once considered “trash” are altered into unexpected visions of beauty such as coral clouds hanging from the ceiling and bluetanica gardens growing on the wall .  Poramit’s artwork is created from small parts and are uniquely assembled like puzzles.  Each piece can stand alone as an individual object or together to create a large installation.  Cyanotype prints are often made of the recycled objects of art.  Beautifully created sculptures\, installations\, mixed media and drawings exemplify just how much waste we generate.  It also His work inspires viewers to protect our environment. \nA native of Thailand\, Poramit Thantapalit has a degree in journalism and a master’s in computer graphics from New York Institute of Technology.  He has over 15 years experience as a graphic designer\, artist and photographer with global marketing organizations.  His installations and artworks have been exhibited at the Arcadia Earth Museum\, National Academy Museum\, the James Rose Center\, IPCNY Print Fest at Robert Miller Gallery\, the Jersey City Theater\, and the Sodertalje Arts Gallery in Sweden.  His installation “Masked Arts” that he created during the pandemic was featured in the New York Times Sunday edition in May 2021.  Poramit now lives in New Jersey. \nPlease also join Rockland Center for the exhibit opening with an artist reception on Saturday\, April 15th\, 2:00pm – 5:00pm.  The exhibit will be on view through June 10th\, open Mondays – Saturdays 11am – 4pm\, (closed Sundays).  Free to the Public.  For more information call (845) 358-0877 or visit www.rocklandartcenter.org.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Rea Charitable Trust\, ArtsWestchester\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Walter Cain & Paulo Ribeiro\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\,\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/encore-encounter-recycled-art-of-poramit-thantapalit-2/2023-04-18/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\, 27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, 10994
CATEGORIES:Art,Family-Friendly,Free-Admission,Visual-Art
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Bluetanical_Garden_wall-scaled-4wyeIX.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230418T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230418T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230418T200404Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230418T200405Z
UID:10006222-1681808400-1681848000@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-175/
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:20230417T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230417T160000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230416T200631Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230606T123936Z
UID:10006206-1681729200-1681747200@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Encore Encounter:  Recycled Art of Poramit Thantapalit
DESCRIPTION:Encore Encounter in Gallery Two\nRecycled Works by Poramit Thantapalit\nApril 15 – June 10\, 2023 \nOpening Reception: Saturday\, April 15\, 2pm – 5pm\nFree to the Public \nPlease join Rockland Center for the Arts for the opening Encore Encounter: Recycled works by Poramit Thantapalit in Gallery Two. \nEncore Encounter features the works of Poramit Thantapalit.  Poramit’s work is inspired by the relationship and connection between humans\, nature and the surroundings such as trees\, flowers\, the ocean\, people and animals.  The artist focuses on using both recycled and non-recycled materials to create his artwork.  Discarded shopping bags\, cereal boxes\, and plastic bottles that were once considered “trash” are altered into unexpected visions of beauty such as coral clouds hanging from the ceiling and bluetanica gardens growing on the wall .  Poramit’s artwork is created from small parts and are uniquely assembled like puzzles.  Each piece can stand alone as an individual object or together to create a large installation.  Cyanotype prints are often made of the recycled objects of art.  Beautifully created sculptures\, installations\, mixed media and drawings exemplify just how much waste we generate.  It also His work inspires viewers to protect our environment. \nA native of Thailand\, Poramit Thantapalit has a degree in journalism and a master’s in computer graphics from New York Institute of Technology.  He has over 15 years experience as a graphic designer\, artist and photographer with global marketing organizations.  His installations and artworks have been exhibited at the Arcadia Earth Museum\, National Academy Museum\, the James Rose Center\, IPCNY Print Fest at Robert Miller Gallery\, the Jersey City Theater\, and the Sodertalje Arts Gallery in Sweden.  His installation “Masked Arts” that he created during the pandemic was featured in the New York Times Sunday edition in May 2021.  Poramit now lives in New Jersey. \nPlease also join Rockland Center for the exhibit opening with an artist reception on Saturday\, April 15th\, 2:00pm – 5:00pm.  The exhibit will be on view through June 10th\, open Mondays – Saturdays 11am – 4pm\, (closed Sundays).  Free to the Public.  For more information call (845) 358-0877 or visit www.rocklandartcenter.org.\nRoCA gratefully acknowledges support for its programs from The Rea Charitable Trust\, ArtsWestchester\, Sarah and Stephen Thomas\, The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation\, M&T Bank\, The M&T Charitable Foundation\, The Dorothy Gillespie Foundation\, Walter Cain & Paulo Ribeiro\, Kantrowitz\, Goldhamer & Graifman P.C.\, QuietEvents\, the Estate of Joan Konner\, Lighting Services Inc.\,\, the Mark and Jessie Milano Foundation\, Zaklin Family Charitable Fund\, The County of Rockland\, Art Services Group\, RoCA members\, donors and business members.\nRoCA’s programs are made possible\, in part\, with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts\, with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature. Funding is also made possible by the County of Rockland.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/encore-encounter-recycled-art-of-poramit-thantapalit-2/2023-04-17/
LOCATION:Rockland Center for the Arts\, 27 South Greenbush Road\, West Nyack\, 10994
CATEGORIES:Art,Family-Friendly,Free-Admission,Visual-Art
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Bluetanical_Garden_wall-scaled-4wyeIX.tmp_.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rockland Center for the Arts":MAILTO:info@rocklandartcenter.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230417T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230417T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230417T200355Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230417T200356Z
UID:10006214-1681722000-1681761600@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-174/
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:20230416T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230416T170000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230408T193506Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230416T200631Z
UID:10006180-1681657200-1681664400@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Sparkill Concert Series Presents - All Rachmaninov Program
DESCRIPTION:Four extraordinary artists performing in a venue that is equally\nextraordinary.\nPlease Note:\n– Capacity will be limited so purchase tickets now!\n– Concerts take place on the second floor of the Arts Center\, a fully\nrenovated 100-yr old building without ADA access.\n– Reserve your table for dinner downstairs at Roost after the concert** –\nCall 845-359-6700\n**Union Arts Center is now the home of the highly acclaimed Roost\nRestaurant\, a casual American bistro providing elevated fare and an\ninventive cocktail list.\n__________\nBios\nCELLIST DANIEL GAISFORD\nAmerican cellist Daniel Gaisford enjoys a career that has expanded over 30\nyears as a soloist\, chamber musician\, recording artist and teacher. Hailed\nby the New York Times as “transfixing\,” and The Philadelphia Inquirer as\n“remarkable.”\nAfter hearing Gaisford perform\, the Senior Editor at the National Review\nand Critic for The New Criterion Jay Nordlinger wrote…\n“Gaisford is an American cellist and not well known. Why this is so is a\nmystery – and it teaches us something about the music business. When I\nfirst heard Gaisford in Philadelphia\, I was stunned: How could there be so\ngood a cellist I had never heard\, or even heard of? Evidently\, not every\nmaster is on the covers of magazines\, or the covers of CDs; some have\nunorthodox careers. Gaisford has a formidable technique and a formidable\nmind. He can make a hundred sounds : fat\, thin\, spiky\, lyrical\, rich\,\nsickly\, piercing\, warm. ”\nOn the Barge series in New York\, Gaisford played with a grave mien\nthroughout. He gave the impression that he was not merely performing a\nsonata\, but doing something supremely important. The Chief Critic for the\nPhiladelphia Inquirer had a similar reaction\, calling Gaisford “America’s\ngreatest unknown cellist.” The New York Times also stated that “Gaisford\ndeserves more recognition.”\nGaisford continues to infuse with new life the great works of the past\,\nwhile fiercely advocating for the music of our own time. As soloist\, Mr.\nGaisford has appeared with orchestras throughout the United States and\nCanada; among them the major orchestras of Saint Louis\, Seattle\, Toronto\nand Montreal\, under the direction of conductors such as Robert Spano\, David\nZinman and Hermann Michael. Equally active as a recitalist and chamber\nmusician\, Mr. Gaisford has performed throughout the U.S. and abroad in\ncities ranging from New York\, San Francisco and Berlin\, to Boston\, Rome and\nTokyo. He has been a featured guest at major festivals throughout the world\nincluding New York City’s Mostly Mozart Festival\, the Chautauqua Festival\,\nthe Caramoor Festival\, and the Davos Festival in Switzerland. Other\nfestivals appearances include the RomaEuropa\, New Jersey’s Festival of the\nAtlantic\, Michigan’s Matrix Festival\, the Prince Albert Festival in Kauai\,\nthe Aspen Music Festival and the Vail Valley Music Festival in Colorado.\nMr. Gaisford has been a frequent guest on radio programs around the country\nand his performances can be heard on NPR’s Performance Today series. In\n2001\, Mr. Gaisford recorded composer Michael Hersch’s Sonata No. 1 for\nUnaccompanied Cello and gave the NY premiere at the Tisch Center for the\nperforming Arts to great acclaim. In 2004\, he recorded Hersch’s Sonata No.\n2 for Unaccompanied Cello\, which was dedicated to Mr. Gaisford. The\nperformance was recorded on he Vangaurd Classics label and selected by The\nWashington Post as one of the most important recordings of 2005 by chief\ncritic Tim Page. In 2015\, Last Autumn was released on Innova Records.\nNew releases also include the Bach Suites for Solo Cello and the Piatti\nCaprices for Solo Cello. Daniel Gaisford grew up in Salt Lake City\, Utah\nwhere he studied with Richard Hoyt and Gayle Smith. Further studies took\nhim to the University of Southern California where he studied with Gabor\nRejto and Ronald Leonard. Gaisford continued his studies with Harvey\nShapiro and Channing Robbins at The Juilliard School of Music in New York.\nWhile at The Juilliard School of Music\, Gaisford was principal cellist of\nthe symphony orchestra and was the first prize winner of the Shostakovich\nCello Competition which resulted in his Lincoln Center debut.\nMr. Gaisford’s recordings can be found at the iTunes store and on his\nwebsite\, as well as many other online music vendors.\nGaisford has an online cello class of talented students and professionals\nand is currently in video and recording projects soon to be released.\n____________\nVIOLINIST FILLIP POGADY\nPogády has performed in some of the most renowned concert venues in the\nworld including Lincoln Center (New York)\, Rudolphinum (Prague)\,\nKonzerthaus (Vienna)\, Tel Aviv Opera House\, Lotte Hall (Seoul)\, and Seoul\nArts Center.\nHe also makes TV appearances\, including guest starring on Louis CK’s\n“Louie”.\nAs a firm believer that music should be available to everyone\, Pogády\njoined Yehudi Menuhin’s “Live Music NOW!” Foundation\, which is dedicated to\nbringing music to orphanages\, nursing homes\, prisons and hospitals. Pogády\nhas played over 30 recitals for “Live Music NOW!”. Pogády decided to take\nthis concept to the next level and has been performing the Sonatas and\nPartitas by J.S. Bach in the New York City subway throughout his studies at\nthe Manhattan School of Music until present. “Most of these people have\nnever heard this kind of music before\, and yet it touches them on a basic\nhuman level\, because this music is just SO good\,” he says.\nPogády gave his solo debut with orchestra at age 11 at the Wiener\nKonzerthaus in Vienna after winning the 1st prize at the Tsusuki Violin\nCompetition as the youngest contestant.\nHe participated three times at Austria’s nationwide music competition\n“Prima La Musica” and won the 1st prize each time. He was also honored with\nspecial prizes by the Austrian String Society and the Raiffeisen Bank for\nextraordinary results at this competition.\nPogády earned his Master’s Degree in Violin Performance under the tutelage\nof Maestro Pinchas Zukerman at the Manhattan School of Music\, where he was\nawarded a full scholarship.\nBorn in Bratislava (Slovakia)\, Pogády moved with his family to Austria as a\nchild and began his violin studies at age 7. Just one year later he was\nadmitted to the Bruckner Conservatory Pre-college in Linz. He gave his\nfirst recital at age 10.\nPogády resides in New York City.\n____________\nOXANA MIKHAILOFF\nOxana Mikhailoff was hailed in a recent review by Jon Sobel as “a titan of\nthe Romantic Piano Literature.” Of her playing\, Vladimir Feltsman said\n“…(Oxana Mikhailoff) is a mature and accomplished musician…Her playing has\ncharacter\, imagination\, and is poetic. She has a strong personality and\nstage presence.”\nOxana has performed throughout Russia and Europe as a recitalist\, concert\nsoloist and chamber musician. Her United States debut took place at\nCarnegie Hall in 1999. She later returned to Carnegie Hall to play an\nall-Chopin recital on the 150th anniversary of the composer’s death.\nOxana maintains an active teaching studio in Westchester County less than\none-half hour from New York City. Along with Vassily Primakov\, Oxana is\nco-Artistic Director of the Sparkill Concert Series and the Midland Music\nSeries in Bronxville\, NY.\n_____________\nVASSILY PRIMAKOV\nIn recent years\, Vassily Primakov has been hailed as a pianist of world\nclass importance. In 1999\, as a teen-aged prizewinner of the Cleveland\nInternational Piano Competition\, Primakov was praised by Donald Rosenberg\nof the Cleveland Plain Dealer: “How many pianists can make a line sing as\nthe Moscow native did on this occasion? Every poignant phrase took ethereal\nwing. Elsewhere the music soared with all of the turbulence and poetic\nvibrancy it possesses. We will be hearing much from this remarkable\nmusician.”\nVassily Primakov has released numerous recordings for Bridge Records that\ninclude works by Bach\, Mozart\, Beethoven\, Schubert\, Schumann\, Mendelssohn\,\nBrahms\, Chopin\, Dvorak\, Debussy\, Tchaikovsky\, Scriabin\, Rachmaninoff\,\nPhilip Glass\, Arlene Sierra and Poul Ruders.\nIn 2011\, Mr. Primakov\, along with Natalia Lavrova established a new and\nvibrant record company\, L.P. Classics\, Inc. Their first release was Anton\nArensky: Four Suites for Two Pianos. Most recently\, they released\nPrimakov’s Live in Concert Album that includes works by Medtner\, Schumann\,\nBrahms’ Handel Variations and Ravel’s La Valse.http://www.lpclassics.net\nIn March 2012 Vassily Primakov became a Yamaha Artist.\nVassily Primakov is Artistic Director of Sparkill Concert Series since 2018\ntogether with Oxana Mikhailoff.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/sparkill-concert-series-presents-all-rachmaninov-program-2/
LOCATION:Union Arts Center\,2 Union Street\, Sparkill\, NY 10976\, USA
CATEGORIES:Live-Music
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230416T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230416T170000
DTSTAMP:20260405T121850
CREATED:20230407T193402Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230416T200630Z
UID:10006178-1681657200-1681664400@www.hudsonriver.com
SUMMARY:Sparkill Concert Series Presents - All Rachmaninov Program
DESCRIPTION:Four extraordinary artists performing in a venue that is equally extraordinary.\n_________\nPlease Note:\n– Capacity will be limited so purchase tickets now!\n– Concerts take place on the second floor of the Arts Center\, a fully renovated 100-yr old building without ADA access.\n– Reserve your table for dinner downstairs at Roost after the concert** – Call 845-359-6700\n**Union Arts Center is now the home of the highly acclaimed Roost Restaurant\, a casual American bistro providing elevated fare and an inventive cocktail list.\n__________\nBios\nCELLIST DANIEL GAISFORD\nAmerican cellist Daniel Gaisford enjoys a career that has expanded over 30 years as a soloist\, chamber musician\, recording artist and teacher.  Hailed by the New York Times as “transfixing\,” and The Philadelphia Inquirer as “remarkable.”\nAfter hearing Gaisford perform\, the Senior Editor at the National Review and Critic for The New Criterion Jay Nordlinger wrote…\n“Gaisford is an American cellist and not well known. Why this is so is a mystery – and it teaches us something about the music business. When I first heard Gaisford in Philadelphia\, I was stunned: How could there be so good a cellist I had never heard\, or even heard of?  Evidently\, not every master is on the covers of magazines\, or the covers of CDs; some have unorthodox careers. Gaisford has a formidable technique and a formidable mind.  He can make a hundred sounds : fat\, thin\, spiky\, lyrical\, rich\, sickly\, piercing\, warm. “\nOn the Barge series in New York\, Gaisford played with a grave mien throughout.  He gave the impression that he was not merely performing a sonata\, but doing something supremely important.  The Chief Critic for the Philadelphia Inquirer had a similar reaction\, calling Gaisford  “America’s greatest unknown cellist.”  The New York Times also stated that “Gaisford deserves more recognition.”\nGaisford continues to infuse with new life the great works of the past\, while fiercely advocating for the music of our own time. As soloist\, Mr. Gaisford has appeared with orchestras throughout the United States and Canada; among them the major orchestras of Saint Louis\, Seattle\, Toronto and Montreal\, under the direction of conductors such as Robert Spano\, David Zinman and Hermann Michael. Equally active as a recitalist and chamber musician\, Mr. Gaisford has performed throughout the U.S. and abroad in cities ranging from New York\, San Francisco and Berlin\, to Boston\, Rome and Tokyo. He has been a featured guest at major festivals throughout the world including New York City’s Mostly Mozart Festival\, the Chautauqua Festival\, the Caramoor Festival\, and the Davos Festival in Switzerland. Other festivals appearances include the RomaEuropa\, New Jersey’s Festival of the Atlantic\, Michigan’s Matrix Festival\, the Prince Albert Festival in Kauai\, the Aspen Music Festival and the Vail Valley Music Festival in Colorado. Mr. Gaisford has been a frequent guest on radio programs around the country and his performances can be heard on NPR’s Performance Today series. In 2001\, Mr. Gaisford recorded composer Michael Hersch’s Sonata No. 1 for Unaccompanied Cello and gave the NY premiere at the Tisch Center for the performing Arts to great acclaim. In 2004\, he recorded Hersch’s Sonata No. 2 for Unaccompanied Cello\, which was dedicated to Mr. Gaisford. The performance was recorded on he Vangaurd Classics label and selected by The Washington Post as one of the most important recordings of 2005 by chief critic Tim Page.  In 2015\, Last Autumn was released on Innova Records.\nNew releases also include the Bach Suites for Solo Cello and the Piatti Caprices for Solo Cello.  Daniel Gaisford grew up in Salt Lake City\, Utah where he studied with Richard Hoyt and Gayle Smith. Further studies took him to the University of Southern California where he studied with Gabor Rejto and Ronald Leonard. Gaisford continued his studies with Harvey Shapiro and Channing Robbins at The Juilliard School of Music in New York. While at The Juilliard School of Music\, Gaisford was principal cellist of the symphony orchestra and was the first prize winner of the Shostakovich Cello Competition which resulted in his Lincoln Center debut.\nMr. Gaisford’s recordings can be found at the iTunes store and on his website\, as well as many other online music vendors.\nGaisford has an online cello class of talented students and professionals and is currently in video and recording projects soon to be released.\n____________\nVIOLINIST FILLIP POGADY\nPogády has performed in some of the most renowned concert venues in the world including Lincoln Center (New York)\, Rudolphinum (Prague)\, Konzerthaus (Vienna)\, Tel Aviv Opera House\, Lotte Hall (Seoul)\, and Seoul Arts Center.\nHe also makes TV appearances\, including guest starring on Louis CK’s “Louie”.\nAs a firm believer that music should be available to everyone\, Pogády joined Yehudi Menuhin’s “Live Music NOW!” Foundation\, which is dedicated to bringing music to orphanages\, nursing homes\, prisons and hospitals. Pogády has played over 30 recitals for “Live Music NOW!”. Pogády decided to take this concept to the next level and has been performing the Sonatas and Partitas by J.S. Bach in the New York City subway throughout his studies at the Manhattan School of Music until present. “Most of these people have never heard this kind of music before\, and yet it touches them on a basic human level\, because this music is just SO good\,” he says.\nPogády gave his solo debut with orchestra at age 11 at the Wiener Konzerthaus in Vienna after winning the 1st prize at the Tsusuki Violin Competition as the youngest contestant.\nHe participated three times at Austria’s nationwide music competition “Prima La Musica” and won the 1st prize each time. He was also honored with special prizes by the Austrian String Society and the Raiffeisen Bank for extraordinary results at this competition.\nPogády earned his Master’s Degree in Violin Performance under the tutelage of Maestro Pinchas Zukerman at the Manhattan School of Music\, where he was awarded a full scholarship.\nBorn in Bratislava (Slovakia)\, Pogády moved with his family to Austria as a child and began his violin studies at age 7. Just one year later he was admitted to the Bruckner Conservatory Pre-college in Linz. He gave his first recital at age 10.\nPogády resides in New York City.\n____________\nOXANA MIKHAILOFF\nOxana Mikhailoff was hailed in a recent review by Jon Sobel as “a titan of the Romantic Piano Literature.” Of her playing\, Vladimir Feltsman said “…(Oxana Mikhailoff) is a mature and accomplished musician…Her playing has character\, imagination\, and is poetic. She has a strong personality and stage presence.”\nOxana has performed throughout Russia and Europe as a recitalist\, concert soloist and chamber musician. Her United States debut took place at Carnegie Hall in 1999. She later returned to Carnegie Hall to play an all-Chopin recital on the 150th anniversary of the composer’s death.\nOxana maintains an active teaching studio in Westchester County less than one-half hour from New York City. Along with Vassily Primakov\, Oxana is co-Artistic Director of the Sparkill Concert Series and the Midland Music Series in Bronxville\, NY.\n_____________\nVASSILY PRIMAKOV\nIn recent years\, Vassily Primakov has been hailed as a pianist of world class importance. In 1999\, as a teen-aged prizewinner of the Cleveland International Piano Competition\, Primakov was praised by Donald Rosenberg of the Cleveland Plain Dealer: “How many pianists can make a line sing as the Moscow native did on this occasion? Every poignant phrase took ethereal wing. Elsewhere the music soared with all of the turbulence and poetic vibrancy it possesses. We will be hearing much from this remarkable musician.”\nVassily Primakov has released numerous recordings for Bridge Records that include works by Bach\, Mozart\, Beethoven\, Schubert\, Schumann\, Mendelssohn\, Brahms\, Chopin\, Dvorak\, Debussy\, Tchaikovsky\, Scriabin\, Rachmaninoff\, Philip Glass\, Arlene Sierra and Poul Ruders.\nIn 2011\, Mr. Primakov\, along with Natalia Lavrova established a new and vibrant record company\, L.P. Classics\, Inc. Their first release was Anton Arensky: Four Suites for Two Pianos. Most recently\, they released Primakov’s Live in Concert Album that includes works by Medtner\, Schumann\, Brahms’ Handel Variations and Ravel’s La Valse. www.lpclassics.net\nIn March 2012 Vassily Primakov became a Yamaha Artist.\nVassily Primakov is Artistic Director of Sparkill Concert Series since 2018 together with Oxana Mikhailoff.
URL:https://www.hudsonriver.com/hhrt/event/sparkill-concert-series-presents-all-rachmaninov-program/
LOCATION:The Union Arts Center 2 Union Street Sparkill\, NY 10976
CATEGORIES:Live-Music
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ORGANIZER;CN="Sparkill Concert Series":MAILTO:info@uacny.com
END:VEVENT
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