A force of nature: Works by the late Thomas Locker on view in New Paltz
Thomas Locker was so prolific that it felt like he could have an entire art-and-literature column dedicated solely to his
Thomas Locker was so prolific that it felt like he could have an entire art-and-literature column dedicated solely to his
Lenny Kislin had long been a fan of the art of Marshall Baer, the late artist known for his sculptures
Some of the greatest cultural events that I’ve witnessed have come via Vermont’s Bread & Puppet Theater. Its Washerwomen Cantata,
The last time we went through the Woodstock Day School campus, at summer’s end, all eyes were on the new
As the world was still pondering a decade’s passage since 9/11 and our own region was assessing the damage from
When photographer John Dugdale addresses the students at his John Dugdale School of 19th-Century Photography and Aesthetics, located in a
Back when Dean Gitter first envisioned, then opened the world’s largest kaleidoscope in what was then Catskill Corners and is
Prince, when he hit it big with Purple Rain – which plays at the Ulster Performing Arts Center (UPAC) in
When I commented to Portia Munson about the number of artists listed on the invitation for the new “Water” show
Okay, there’s Gwen Ifill. There’s Katie Couric. There are Barbara Walters and Diane Sawyer. And Oprah… Questions about sexism in