Moving Art, Moving Audiences: Nineteenth-Century Traveling Exhibitions and the Matter of Abolition

Register for this virtual webinar hosted by the Olana Partnership.

In the mid-nineteenth century, Americans faced a new way to encounter art: the traveling exhibition. Sculptures, panoramas, and paintings crisscrossed the country, appearing at venues that included exhibition and entertainment halls, galleries, reform societies, and fairs. During this virtual webinar, Caitlin Meehye Beach will explore the phenomenon of traveling exhibitions as they intersected a pressing concern of the day: the abolition of slavery. Following the publication of her 2022 book, Sculpture at the Ends of Slavery, this presentation focuses on three works in particular: Hiram Powers The Greek Slave, Henry “Box” Brown’s The Mirror of Slavery, and Frederic Edwin Church’s The Icebergs. Tune in to consider the mobilization of images to abolish slavery, and the regimes of race, sentiment, and spectacle that would be confronted in so doing.

Caitlin Meehye Beach is an Assistant Professor of Art History and Affiliated Faculty in African & African American Studies at Fordham University. Her teaching and research focus on transatlantic art histories of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, with special attention to the enduring effects of colonialism, slavery, migration, and racial capitalism. Published by University of California Press, Sculpture at the Ends of Slavery is her first book and a recipient of The Phillips Collection Book Prize.

Film Screening “Do The Right Thing” (in person)

Film: Do the Right Thing (1989)

FILM: DO THE RIGHT THING (1989)
A special Black History Month screening of the 1989 Spike Lee classic
Screening simultaneously at both Bardavon & UPAC. Tickets are $6 and can be purchased online or at the box office.

Director Spike Lee uses biting humor in his seminal exploration of race and violence in a Brooklyn neighborhood anchored by Sal’s Pizzeria on the hottest day of the year. Featuring Spike Lee, Martin Lawrence, Ossie Davis, Samuel L. Jackson, Giancarlo Esposito, Danny Aiello, Ruby Dee, Bill Nunn, John Savage, John Turturro and Rosie Perez.

“As relevant now as it was over 30 years ago” – NY Times

The Bardavon/UPAC film series is sponsored by Marshall & Sterling Insurance.

Mini concerts at the Bardavon with Juan Cardona, Jr. on the Mighty Wurlitzer Organ take place 30 minutes before each film and are made possible by the New York Theatre Organ Society (NYTOS).

Masks are optional.

Main & Main: At the Intersection of Imperative and Opportunity (in person & virtual)

Join the Future of Small Cities Institute for The Third Annual FoSCI Winter Dialogue featuring renowned urbanist and dynamic speaker DAVID DIXON, who will lay out the future of North America’s communities for the next two decades, an era of unprecedented imperative and opportunity. Mr. Dixon says one of the keys to inclusive development is creating and enhancing mixed-use, walkable places. Welcome to the new Main Street! nt

 

Mr. Dixon will discuss how growing our local—and regional—economies starts with attracting and retaining “talent”, the educated and skilled workforce which in turn attracts and retains jobs and investment. This talent—whether formally educated at a major university or brought into the workforce and provided marketable skills by local nonprofits—seeks mixed-use environments to live and work. Jobs and investment follow. At the same time, housing represents two-thirds of our real estate economy and dramatic demographic changes will increasingly support the strongest demand for housing in mixed-used, walkable places since at least World War II. These are equal opportunity trends. Even in regions with slow or no population growth, demographic churn supports Main Street investment and a global talent shortage means jobs and investment will follow. How do communities unlock their opportunity to meet this imperative? Start planning now and start with Main Street.

DAVID DIXON is a Vice President and Urban Places Fellow at Stantec. Residential Architecture Magazine named David to their Hall of Fame as “the person we call to ask about cities.” In recent years he’s led planning in post-Katrina New Orleans, transformed strip malls into new suburban downtowns, and initiated a broad reappraisal of the role of density in building more livable, resilient, and equitable communities. A sought-after expert in urban planning and design, David is well known for helping create new, mixed-use urban districts (in both cities and suburbs) and the planning, revitalization, and redevelopment of downtowns. His current and recent work focuses on urban transformations, including the reemergence of the long-depressed East Franklinton neighborhood in Columbus, Ohio, as an arts/innovation district; creation of a master plan for the nine-million-square-foot, mixed-use Water Street District adjacent to downtown Tampa; and market-driven redevelopment of a public housing site into One Charlestown—a 3,200-unit, mixed-income neighborhood with no displacement in one of Boston’s most historic neighborhoods. David’s impact hasn’t gone unnoticed—he’s won dozens of awards from the likes of the American Institute of Architects, the American Planning Association, the Congress for the New Urbanism, and the International Downtown Association. A Fellow of the AIA, David was honored with their Thomas Jefferson Medal for “a lifetime of creating livable neighborhoods, vibrant civic spaces, and vital downtowns.”

Rhinebeck Fine Art Exhibition Opening Reception (in person)

May be art of text that says 'RHINEBECK FINE ART F”buy 3-26, 2023 Reception: Saturday February 4, 5-7pm 7pm GALLERY 40 Cannon Street, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601 gallery40pok.com @gallery40pok'ery

Gallery 40 is hosting a Rhinebeck Fine Art exhibition in the month of February 2023. Rhinebeck Fine Art represents a group of talented artists from Rhinebeck and its surrounding areas. The collective was formed in 2020 by artist Thomas Cale in an effort to give fellow creatives a platform to showcase their work through a virtual online gallery. Since inception, the group has expanded, and in addition to maintaining ongoing digital presence, Rhinebeck Fine Art has worked with local galleries to host art openings and exhibits at various physical locations throughout Dutchess County. The group meets regularly to exchange ideas, collaborate, and contribute to the art community.

Featured Artists: Joyce Arons Beymer, Jennifer Axinn-Weiss, Sean Bowen, Thomas Cale, Tarryl Gabel, Rosemary Hanson, Pat Hart, Betsy Jacaruso, Kate Kester, Nansi Lent, Ann Moring, Harvey L. Silver, Julia VanDevelder, Lisa Winika

Gallery 40, 40 Cannon, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601
Opening Reception: Saturday, February 4, 2023 5-7 pm
On display through February 26, 2023

Local Waterfront Revitalization Project – Public Hearing (in person)

The city of Poughkeepsie is in the final stages of updating its Local Waterfront Revitalization Program (LWRP). The Updated LWRP reflects changes that have occurred in the Waterfront Revitalization Area since the City last adopted an LWRP in 1999, incorporate recommendations of recent planning efforts, and address resilience to flooding and sea level rise, principles of sustainable planning and smart growth, and strategies to support economic development for the City.

The Common Council has set a public hearing for 6 p.m. Monday, December 19th, to hear comments on the proposed November 18, 2022 draft. You can find out more about the LWRP update process here.

The final draft and memorandum outlining the most recent changes can be found here,

Mesier Homestead Open House & Market (in person)

Stop in to see the beautifully decorated downstairs rooms of the 1741 Mesier Homestead, complete with candlelight, greenery, ribbons and bows. Self-guided. A docent will be available to welcome you and answer your questions about the Homestead. Free admission. Mesier Homestead, 2 Spring Street, Wappingers Falls, NY, USA