Saugerties galleries plan a month of sculpture
This year, the town is throwing itself into International Sculpture Day— not just on the official day of April 24, but all month.
This year, the town is throwing itself into International Sculpture Day— not just on the official day of April 24, but all month.
“Love for Sale: The Commercialism of the Counterculture,” will be display at the Special Exhibit Gallery at Bethel Woods through December 31.
Including: Robert Sarazin Blake at Rocket Number Nine in Kingston, Irish accordionist Máirtín O’Connor and trio at St. Paul’s Church Hall in Red Hook, James McMurtry at Helsinki in Hudson, The Dream of Gerontius performed at Bard, JBM Trio at Gomen Kudasi in New Paltz, Munich Philharmonic String Quartet at St. George’s Church in Newburgh, Homage to Louis Moreau Gottschalk at Fisher Center, and acoustic blues workshop and concert with Ari Eisinger at A.I.R Studio
4/8: Some of Sam Tufnell’s resin “power gnomes” are already testing their footing on what’s soon to be Gnome Mountain
4/8: Fifteen-time Grammy-winner and serial collaborator Béla Fleck is one of the least predictable mavericks of modern Americana.
4/8: The program features Become Ocean by the Pulitzer Prizewinning composer John Luther Adams and radical, Grammy-winning composer Tan Dun’s Passacaglia: Secret of Wind and Birds, a piece in which the audience may participate by downloading an app that produces bird sounds.
After the first date sold out in less than 24 hours, Bardavon announced a second show for Bob Dylan and his Band at the Hutton Brickyards.
“Kingston’s Stockade: New Netherlands’ Third City” is the first major change in exhibitry in the main building at the site in many years
4/8: Frampton Comes Alive, with its full-face cover, was ubiquitous. In terms of sales, it keeps company with Rumours, Thriller and a tiny handful of others.
Barbara Pickhardt, music director of Ars Choralis, has a knack for presenting ambitious theme programs which often really teach us something as they entertain us.