Jun 19 Thursday
The Norman Rockwell Museum is honored to present a rare series of early twentieth century lighting advertisements by Norman Rockwell and fellow Golden Age illustrators Maxfield Parrish, N.C. Wyeth, Dean Cornwell, Stanley Arthurs, Worth Brehm, and Charles Chambers created for Edison Mazda Lamps, a division of the General Electric Company. These luminous, richly painted works were widely circulated in published advertisements through the 1920s and are on loan to the Museum for the first time through the generosity of GE Aerospace.
“Once a Tree: Continuity, Creativity, and Connection” explores the deep-rooted significance of trees in Haudenosaunee culture, tradition, and creative expression. Featuring the work of 42 artists and more than 100 objects—including decorative and utilitarian baskets, cradleboards, snowshoes, ladles, lacrosse sticks, toys, instruments, carvings, and sleds—this exhibition highlights the important relationship between nature and artistry. Selected from the Museum’s permanent collection, the exhibition was created with guidance from curatorial consultants Terry Chrisjohn III (Oneida), Preston Jacobs (Mohawk), and Sheila Ransom (Mohawk).
"Separated but Unbroken: The Haudenosaunee Boarding School Experience" explores the lasting impact of the Thomas Indian School, once located on the Cattaraugus Reservation south of Buffalo, NY, and The Mohawk Institute near Branford, Ontario. These institutions, which enrolled a significant number of Haudenosaunee students, were part of a larger system that sought to erase Indigenous identities while deeply shaping the lives of those who endured them. Co-curated by Erin Keaton (Mohawk), the exhibition sheds light on Haudenosaunee resilience.
Lake Myosotis Boat Launch
Join Stewardship Garrett Chisholm every Thursday to help tackle the invasive species that threaten the health of the Preserve. Volunteers will learn how to identify and manage a different invasive species every week.
Come make beautiful herbal bouquets in our Herb Garden. Hand pick and clip your own herbs under staff guidance and fill up the provided mason jar. Your home will smell fresh as a meadow!
Each herb in the garden is labelled and specifies what the Shakers would have used the herb for.
If you'd like to pay cash you may do so in the Museum Shop before picking your bouquet.
The Yiddish Book Center is now offering masked tours of Yiddish: A Global Culture, our permanent exhibition. Visitors can experience the incredible story of Yiddish on this 45-minute tour.
Masked tours are scheduled for 11:00 a.m. on:
Monday, May 19Monday, June 30Monday, July 28
The tour guide as well as all guests on the tour will be masked. There is no additional charge for these tours and no advance registration required. If you have any questions about our Masked Tours, please email us at access@yiddishbookcenter.org.
Suggested donation: $12
We also offer tours that do not require masks on Sundays at 11:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.m. and Tuesdays at 1:00 p.m.
Learn more and plan your visit: https://www.yiddishbookcenter.org/events-and-store/plan-your-visit-hours-and-directions
Yiddish Book Center hours:Sunday–Friday, 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Address:1021 West StreetAmherst, MA 01002
Phone number: 413.256.4900
Since 2020, I've started making marker drawings, which took away my ability to erase unwanted lines. I thus started to make a very different kind of drawing, in addition to the ongoing pencil drawings.
For a while in my adolescence, I became fascinated by architecture, and drew everything with rulers. The free, curvilinear drawing on display here was a reaction to that highly-structured method. However, recently, architectural details (stairs, rooflines) have started to re-appear in these biomorphic abstractions.
I read the nature of the lines in my drawings as being abstracted from the human body, as well as the increasingly curvilinear forms of technological products seeking to be more "high-touch”, to somewhat hide the decidedly “no-touch" world of the structure of the machines themselves.
So, in short, you have the environment (designed objects) and inhabitant (human body) together. The rest is a mystery to me, but a compelling one.
Exhibition Dates - May 17 - June 21, 2025Opening Reception - Sat, May 17, 4-6pmGallery Hours - Thurs/Sun - 12-5pm, Fri/Sat - 12-6pm
folds and faults is an exhibition of new work by Kingston based artist Lindsey A. Wolkowicz. Wolkowicz’s dynamic use of figure plays with duality: space and object, surface and form, the corporeal and the psychodynamic. Her distinct mark-making and intersecting planes of color present the viewer with bodies trying to find grounding within the rugged landscape of change. These figures struggle to maintain connection– to each other, to place, to softness, to familiar structures and familial roles – as anchors of belonging within a constant state of transition and uncertainty.
Opening Reception: Sat, May 17, 4-6pm
The Lake George Music Festival is a premier classical music artist retreat held annually in the picturesque town of Lake George, New York. Celebrating its 15th anniversary in 2025, the festival is scheduled from June 8 to 19, marking a shift from its traditional August dates to better accommodate visitors and reduce overcrowding.
Each summer, the festival transforms Lake George into a vibrant cultural destination, offering two weeks of world-class musical entertainment. The repertoire includes both traditional masterworks and contemporary compositions performed by a diverse roster of established professionals and emerging artists. Concerts are primarily held at the historic Carriage House at Fort William Henry, a beautifully renovated 19th-century venue that provides an intimate and acoustically rich setting for performances.
Lake George itself offers a stunning backdrop for the festival, with its crystal-clear waters and scenic mountain views. Visitors can enjoy the area's world-class shopping, dining, and recreational activities, making the festival not only a musical retreat but also a comprehensive cultural and vacation experience.
For more information on the 2025 season schedule, tickets, and artist residencies, visit the official Lake George Music Festival website.
Outdoor Sculpture Garden Tour with trained guide. Works by Dorthy Dehner, John Van Alstine and new exhibition by George Rickey. Join a trained museum guide to explore the outdoor sculptures on the grounds of The Hyde Collection. This early summer exploration will capture the outdoor artwork in beautiful summer light and highlight.Tour begins promptly at 5:30 pm and concludes at 6:30 pm. Art After Hours program opens at 5:00 pm and extends to 8:00 pm to allow for visitors to enjoy and explore the inside exhibitions as well.
The World Premiere of The Victim by Lawrence Goodman runs through July 21 at Shakespeare & Company. Three women, three interconnected monologues: a successful New York doctor (Stephanie Clayman) whose racial diversity training has gone horribly wrong. A health aide grappling with racism during the COVID-19 pandemic (Yvette King). A Holocaust survivor (Annette Miller), facing her own horror and finding her way back to love and healing. Who gets to call herself a victim? Who is the perpetrator? Staged at Shakespeare & Company in 2024 as a reading in the Plays in Process series, The Victim is about identity, our blindness to others, and the human capacity for cruelty and compassion.