Kingston’s 1st Block Party in Celebration of Diversity

May 28th, 2013

Music, comedy, children’s fun, food on the Rondout

Kingston’s first Block Party in Celebration of Diversity will feature music, dance, comedy, children’s activities, food and drinks at T.R. Gallo West Strand Park from 1 to 5 p.m. June 9.

Reher Bakery

Reher Bakery

The free, “family friendly” event — hosted by the Reher Center for Immigrant Culture and History and featuring at least 12 community organizations — will celebrate Kingston’s rich cultural heritage, Reher Center Chairman Geoff Miller said.

“The Rondout area has always been rimmed by distinct ethnic neighborhoods,” Miller said. “But these enclaves all came together for generations to frequent the many businesses that once lined both sides of lower Broadway and East and West Strand. Who didn’t buy their shoes at Yallum’s or savor a fresh roll from the Reher Bakery after church on Sunday?” ”That cross-cultural connection is what the block party is about — bringing people together from all over Kingston, no matter what their cultural background, to celebrate ethnic diversity and just have a good time,” Miller said.

Participating groups sharing their customs and ways of life include the Ancient Order of Hibernians, the Bruderhof Communities, Chabad of Ulster County, Faith Church of God, Friends of Historic Kingston, the Hellenic Youth Dance Group, Humanamente, the Irish Cultural Center, the Jewish Federation of Ulster County, La Voz magazine, the New Progressive Baptist Church, Somos la Llave and Sons of Norway.

The groups represent Kingston’s African-American, Greek-American, Irish-American, Jewish-American, Latino-American and Norwegian-American cultures. Other groups are invited to join.

A wide variety of ethnic foods will be available for purchase, as will “all-American” foods such as hamburgers and hot dogs. Children’s activities will include arts and crafts, games, singing and storytelling.

We’re excited so many different groups said they would participate,” Miller said, calling cultural diversity a “gift” and the block party “an opportunity for sharing and building relationships cross-culturally.”

The event will he held, rain or shine. Seating is informal, so please bring blankets or folding chairs, Miller said.

This year’s party is a featured event in the state’s June 8-9 Heritage Weekend, part of New York’s Path Through History initiative (paththroughhistory.ny.gov) showcasing the state’s history and cultural significance.

For more information about the block party, go to the Reher Center’s Facebook page,facebook.com/ReherBakery, or contact Geoff Miller at 845-332-0258 or at gwm2230@yahoo.com.

 

 

 

 

 

Fred J. Johnston House for the Holidays

October 20th, 2012

Kingston’s Fred J. Johnston House is getting a holiday makeover, courtesy of one of America’s top interior designers.

New York designer Brian McCarthy, with help from area artists and stylemakers, will reinvigorate the Johnston House for the holidays by bringing his contemporary perspective to the 1812 Federal-style house’s period interiors and celebrated collection of American and European antiques.

The transformed rooms can be viewed 5 to 8 p.m. Friday, Dec. 7; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 8; and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays, from Dec. 14 through Dec. 22.  Admission is $10 for all dates except Dec. 7 and Dec. 8, which are designated “Community Days,” with free admission.  Visits can also be arranged by appointment by contacting fhkevents@yahoo.com.

The Johnston House, at Wall and Main streets uptown, is administered by the Friends of Historic Kingston (www.fohk.org), which has traditionally displayed the rooms as antiques dealer Fred J. Johnston originally decorated them.

“It’s a pleasure to combine my love for Ulster County and Kingston with my talents as a decorator, and an honor to be able to put my personal stamp on the Johnston House interiors,” said McCarthy, who has a home near Kingston.  “These are rooms that symbolize Hudson Valley furnishings for so many people.”

Known for his skill at juxtaposing 18th, 19th and 20th century antiques with contemporary art, McCarthy participated in the 2012 Kips Bay Decorator Show House in New York City and was commissioned in 2005 to redecorate the State Rooms and private quarters of Winfield House, the American ambassador’s residence in London.  McCarthy was also the first designer since 1913 to redesign a room in the Frick Collection in New York City.

With his own unique spin, he brings high-style traditionalism into the 21st century,” the editors of Veranda magazine recently wrote of McCarthy.

As part of the Johnston House’s new holiday look, McCarthy will be installing original work by two of Kingston’s most important artists of the past 20 years, Nancy Graves and Judy Pfaff.

Leading artisans and craftspeople from the region will also create holiday décor, including a series of holiday table settings and interior vignettes inspired by the Fred J. Johnston collection.

The table settings display, sponsored by Sav-On Party Center, will be designed by retailers High Falls Mercantile and Spruce, both of High Falls; Accord antiques dealer Ron Sharkey; design author Linda O’Keeffe; Grand and Water  Antiques of Stonington, CT; and Haynes Llewellyn Associates.

Additional decorations for the Johnston House will be created by the Stockade, Ulster and Hillside garden clubs; designers David Cavallaro, Dan Giessinger and Steven Keith; food stylist Roscoe Betsill; Brian Lynch of Botanical Design, and Victoria St. John Gilligan.

 

The holiday events at the Johnston House are sponsored by Floyd Lattin, Adam and Renate Soyer, Brian McCarthy and Daniel Sager, and Haynes Llewellyn and Gary Swenson.

The Fred J. Johnston House was opened to the public in 1997 and is located in the heart of the 1658 Stockade National Register Historic District.  Its restorer and last private owner Fred J. Johnston (1912-1993) was a nationally renowned antiques scholar and dealer whose clients included Henry F. du Pont, the founder of Delaware’s Winterthur Museum, and Richard Jenrette, the financier and preservationist.

 

APPLE CIDER, HOT DONUTS, and TROLLEY RIDES …. at the third Kingston Night Market

October 17th, 2012

Come celebrate Fall with fresh cider donuts, seasonal fruit, and hot cider from the Stone Ridge Orchards. Catch a historic walking tour hosted by the Reher Center for Immigrant Culture and History.  Or hop on an authentic historic trolley operated by the Trolley Museum.  Trolley Car #358 will be running from 5pm to sundown betweendowntown Kingston and Kingston Point Park.  Just listen for their new whistle!

On Friday October 19th,  the shops and galleries on Lower Broadway look forward to entertaining visitors with various food and drink, numerous art openings, music events, vintage and antique collectibles, outdoor movies, and off-beat music.

Studio Stu will bring his Studivarious, a single string, virtuosic, ten-ply maple, washtub bass to the street.  His solo act is pure entertainment combining his original jazz style and unique Brooklyn humor.  Add to that a willingness to navigate uncharted paths through the improvisational wilderness; he is ‘el ultimo hombre del lounge’.

View the Storefront Gallery’s show of Rita Sherry’s show titled, Evocations: prints, sculptures and paintings of birds, bears, monkeys, little people, and ensembles.  While there, join the family in posing for a fun holiday greeting card at the vintage-inspired Photo Booth.

Mid-block, cruise through the Parisian style antiques market set up outside At Home Antiques and Mezzanine Antiques.  Shop for interesting furniture, art, toys and assorted “collectibles”.  A few steps away at Karmabee, some of its Hudson Valley artisans will show off their unique crafts, a perfect place to pick up handmade gifts for the holidays.  At 7:30pm, Pam and Jorge, well-known for their popular dance classes, will offer free salsa-dancing lessons outside Karmabee. Come give it a try!

Local artist Chris Gonyea returns with his Tekki-Torch art and his one-man outdoor theatre of vintage movies.  Pat’s Tats will host an open house to introduce her new location.  And the newest Rondout shop TheGreenSpace puts New York-made food products front and center.   Last but not least, catch the many facets of the moods, feelings and personalities of the feminine figure in nude form at Agustsson Gallery ‘s sculpture show “The Feminine Mystique”.

So come down to the Kingston waterfront.  Catch some up-beat music. Shop early for the holidays.  The Night Market runs from 6 PM to 10PM, on Lower Broadway between McEntee & West Union Streets. Rain date: Oct. 26th.

 

For more info, contact B.C. Gee at  845-339-6925

 

Essential and Stylish: Kingston’s Factories Transformed– an FHK Industrial Tour

July 30th, 2012

Tour on October 6th Uncovers Secrets of Kingston’s Industrial Past

Midtown Neighborhood Being Transformed by Lofts and Arts-Related Businesses

 

One of Kingston, New York’s historic neighborhoods, where thousands of the city’s residents earned a living, is being rediscovered. The city’s industrial district, located in Midtown, is now the home of stylish residential lofts, professional offices, and workshops making art supplies and design items coveted by artists, architects and decorators across the country. The Friends of Historic Kingston is offering a glimpse inside these spaces during a special guided tour of the industrial district on Saturday, October 6, from 1:00-5:30 p.m. Participants will traverse Midtown on Kingston Trolleys, on special loan for the event courtesy of Mayor Shane Gallo. The tour, which the Friends are calling Essential and Stylish: Kingston’s Factories Transformed, will conclude with a reception in a beautiful residential loft onRailroad Avenue. The reception will feature refreshments, live jazz and historic photos of Kingston’s industrial past.

Ticket price for Essential and Stylish: Kingston’s Factories Transformed is $50.00 per person for the tour and the reception or $25.00 per person for each event.  The proceeds will benefit the Friends and its work in preserving Kingston’s architecture and history. Tickets go on sale on August 6, 2012. For reservations and information, please contact the Friends of Historic Kingston at FHKINDUSTRIALTOUR@yahoo.com.

Among the stops on the Essential and Stylish tour will be:

  • a strikingly beautiful architectural office in a former cigar factory;
  • an airy residential loft in a former wholesale food distribution company;
  • a firm that does custom millwork and cabinetry in a former shirt factory;
  • a company specializing in limited edition sculptural objects, furniture and kitchen items operating out of an old brush factory;
  • one of the country’s leading manufacturers of handmade paints, which also exhibits important contemporary art;
  • the future site of 55 live/work artist studios in a massive former lace curtain factory.

 

Kingston’s economy was initially fueled by shipping, mining, brick-making and shipbuilding. It was in 1883, with the completion of the West Shore Railroad, that large factory buildings were constructed close to the railroad tracks in Midtown Kingston. These factories provided jobs for thousands of local residents, many of whom were from immigrant families who had recently arrived in the city. Some manufacturing businesses remained open until a generation or two ago, while others continue operations today.

The Essential and Stylish tour will allow participants to discover why Midtown Kingston is being touted as one ofKingston’s coolest places to live and work.

The Friends of Historic Kingston (www.fohk.org) supports and protects the architectural, historical and cultural heritage of the City of Kingston through programs of advocacy, education and preservation. FHK has taken the lead in advocating for the city’s involvement in historic preservation and the designation of four local and National Register districts and individual listings. It sponsors regular walking tours of historic districts and education programs for schools and adults. The Friends is located on the corner of Wall and Main Streets in the 1658 Stockade National Historic District. Its 1812 Fred J. Johnston House is maintained as a historic house museum and the adjacent Friends of Historic Kingston Museum provides gallery space for changing exhibitions. The current exhibition is “Save the Best to Last: The Fred J. Johnston Story.”  The Friends’ museums are open to the public from May-October, Friday-Saturday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., or by appointment.

 

Hudson River Day

July 16th, 2012

Clearwater and HRMM Partner for “Hudson River Day” on July 21, 2012


Hudson River Day” is a special day designated to collectively celebrate the Hudson River and its tributaries along with the vibrant and diverse communities of the Hudson Valley region.
Come down to the historic Rondout waterfront in downtown Kingston for our own “Hudson River Day” event, Saturday, July 21, from 11:00 am – 6:00 pm.

Lighthouse tours:
Both the Rondout and the Esopus-Meadows Lighthouses will be offering guided tours.
Rondout will be at 10:00 and 11:30 am; Esopus-Meadows will be at 1:00 pm. Fees and reservations apply for each.
12:30 Official Groundbreaking:
The highlight of Saturday’s celebration will be the official groundbreaking ceremony at 12:30 pm for the much anticipated “Kingston Home Port and Education Center” which will serve as the winter home for the sloop Clearwater. It is built in partnership with the museum on the grounds of the Hudson River Maritime Museum.

Discounted admission:
The museum is offering “discounted admission” to tour the exhibits. Free admission is offered to the museum’s courtyard, informational booths, musical performances, deck tours, and children’s art show and activities unless otherwise noted. Charges for other activities, such as tours of the Rondout and Esopus-Meadows lighthouses; photo booth; model boat building; and food vendors, will be posted.

Clearwater Public Sail: Clearwater Sunset Sail and Music Jam:
6:00 – 8:00 pm – Passengers are invited to bring musical instruments and join in a pick up jam aboard Clearwater. For registration and tickets, contact Catherine Stankowski, 845.265.8080, ext. 7107, Sched@Clearwater.org or to register online click here.
Related activities continue on Sunday, July 22

Tour “The Face of Work TODAY in the Hudson Valley” exhibit, sponsored by Ulster Savings Bank, with the co-curators, Russell and Allynne Lange at 3:30 pm; then from5:00 – 7:00 pm, take a public sail on the Clearwater and listen to a lively onboard presentation by Lisa Berger, Ulster County Tourism, about the impact of cultural tourism in Ulster County and New York State. For registration and tickets, contact Catherine Stankowski, 845.265.8080, ext. 7107, Sched@Clearwater.org or to register online click here.
Clam & Jam! Fundraiser on the Pennsy 399 Barge
Join with the Pennsy Barge Collective for their 2nd “Clam & Jam” Fundraiser from 5:00 – 8:00 pm featuring “clams and beer for your belly and music for your soul”. The Ivory Brothers Band will provide the rhythm. Keegan Ales beer will sell for $5; $10 will get you clams, corn and potatoes. For more info about the historic covered railroad barge and its restoration efforts, visit www.pennsy399.org.
For more information about “Hudson River Day”, please visit www.hrmm.org and click on “Upcoming Events”.

HUDSON RIVER MARITIME MUSEUM OPENS 2012 SEASON MAY 5

May 2nd, 2012

Looking across the East Gallery

The Hudson River Maritime Museum, located at 50 Rondout Landing, opens its doors on Saturday, May 5, 11:00 am – 5:00 pm, and will remain open for the 2012 season until November 4.  Beginning Wednesday, June 6, the museum will be open on Wednesday evenings “late ‘til 8:00 pm” for those who want to “rendezvous on the Rondout” — enjoy dinner, take a creekside stroll and visit the museum and gift shop.

Staff and volunteers are inviting everyone to come downtown to the historic waterfront district of Kingston, and tour the museum’s enhanced exhibit

installations and the three featured exhibitions for this season:

“The Face of Work TODAY in the Hudson Valley”, sponsored by Ulster Savings Bank, presents a continuation of last year’s exhibit with the addition of thought-provoking themes and images of work spanning into the 21st century.  By examining seven different segments of the economy:  manufacturing, natural resources, agriculture, energy, healthcare, tourism, transportation and shipping – a more specific understanding of how our economy has evolved in the past century is revealed.

A view of the TUGS! exhibition in the East Gallery at the Hudson River Maritime Museum

“TUGS!”, a mini-exhibition, takes advantage of some of the museum’s archival boat models and photographs depicting the tug industry and  “Fishing the Hudson” presents fishing equipment, archival photographs and information on the declining shad population.

Visitors to the museum will notice several other cosmetic changes:  new windows and carpet as well as freshly painted walls in the museum’s popular Gift Shop where one will find new merchandise and interesting books focused on the Hudson River and its history. Outside, the docks have been reinstalled, the window boxes have been planted and the courtyard garden has been freshly pruned and mulched by dedicated volunteers.

The 2012 season promises to be full of lectures, events and special offerings to the community.  Visit our web site often for schedule updates and additional information – www.hrmm.org or call 845.338.0071.

HUDSON RIVER MARITIME MUSEUM LAUNCHES NEW EDUCATION PROGRAM

January 31st, 2012

The Hudson River Maritime Museum has hired an education director to develop an innovative education program for the 2012 season focusing on the Rondout Lighthouse. Sarah Wassberg, originally from the Midwest, has worked in museum education and program development in the Hudson Valley since 2009, specifically at Historic Huguenot Street and Museum Village. She will receive her Master’s degree in Public History at the University at Albany in May.

The Museum’s partnership with the Clearwater, an extended season and expanded open hours have spurred the museum to evaluate programs, creating innovative methods to teach regional history, better serving schools and the general public.

“The lighthouses are key to understanding our history,” explained Wassberg. “Not only do they provide insight into the everyday lives of working families in the last century, but they tie together the history of commerce, industry, navigation, and ecology.”

The museum is actively recruiting volunteers for this program and others.

“Traditionally, the Maritime Museum counts on volunteers for everything from exhibit design and development to dock management and gift shop sales,” says executive director Kate Mitchell. “A huge part of local history education is working with the community. Volunteers are the frontline learners, the information carriers. Growing our volunteer program is the best way to reach out into the community.”

The Hudson River Maritime Museum is seeking volunteers to help with many aspects of the museum’s work, including tours and educational programs, gift shop and admissions, events, historical research, office work, and construction of the new Clearwater boat barn.

Volunteer interest and orientation meetings will be held on Wednesday, February 15th from 10 AM to 12 PM and Saturday, February 18th from 1 PM to 3 PM at the Hudson River Maritime Museum located at 50 Rondout Landing, Kingston, NY.

Those interested may respond via e-mail to Education Director Sarah Wassberg at swassberg@hrmm.org or call 845-338-0071 ext. 16.
The Hudson River Maritime Museum, a 501©(3) non-profit organization, was established in 1980 to collect, preserve, research, exhibit and interpret a collection of historical artifacts related to the preservation of the maritime heritage of the Hudson River and its tributaries. For more information please visit  http://www.hrmm.org/.

Uptown’s Double Dose of Attractions

May 31st, 2011

The high season kicked off in Uptown with the opening of the Kingston Farmers’ Market at 9 am on May 28. The major role the market plays in promoting local agriculture, bringing people together, and establishing Kingston as a great city to visit or live in was underlined by the cutting of the ceremonial vine by Congressman Maurice Hinchey, Ulster County Clerk Nina Postupack, and a host of other officials that morning.

This year’s market features 33 vendors, with five newcomers: Super Food Citizen, a gluten-free bakery based in Tivoli; Twisted Foods, a pretzel maker out of New Paltz; Luigi’s Infused olive Oils, from Highland; Reginato’s, a restaurant based in Lake Katrine, which offers packaged foods to go; and South Pine Street Farm, Kingston’s own green quarter acre, which also supplies The Queen’s Galley.

 

Kingston City Farmer - Jesica Clark

“Right now we’re at capacity,” said Joe Fitzgerald, president of the Kingston Farmers’ Market Board, which presides over the nonprofit organization. “We try to offer enough variety to the customers. While there’s some competition among the vendors, we don’t need ten vendors with tomatoes, corn and zucchini. That’s what’s made this market viable: we’ve protected the vendors so they can make some money.”

The fee for a booth is $360 in advance (otherwise $400). Fitzgerald said last year the market attracted between 1,500 to 2,000 people a week. This season the Healthy Eating series will continue, with special cooking demonstrations by Lysa Ingalsbe, RN, and Noel Conklin focusing on berries, corn, tomatoes and other foods held the second and fourth Saturday of each month. Also returning is the Storytelling Series on every third Saturday, which is organized by City of Kingston Story Laureate Karen Pillsworth. Crafts on John Street, located around the corner, will be held the first and third Saturdays.

Sean Griffin making crepes

The Kingston Farmers’ Market also brings customers to neighboring stores and restaurants. One vendor, Uptown Twist, with a booth will be directing customers to the ice cream kiosk on Fair Street, opposite Le Canard Enchaine. Proprietor Sean Griffin and his wife, Julie, will be doing crepes and shaved ice, in addition to soft ice cream.

“A lot of our initial p.r. was devoted to making the public aware of the value of our local produce and local farms,” said Fitzgerald. “Now it’s in the public domain. It’s a narrative we don’t have to enforce so much anymore.” The Kingston Farmers’ Market is open from 9 am to 2 pm through November 19.

Working in tandem with the Farmers’ Market is the county-owned Matthewis Persen House, located a block away (it’s part of the famous crossroads that has a stone house on every corner).  This is its fourth year, and the house is open, free of charge, through Labor Day. Once inside the dark, surprisingly large interior, which was built in five stages over three centuries, visitors can get a tour by one of the docents. The house offers a fascinating lesson in local history and building techniques and easily merits an hour. One can get a glimpse of a fragment of original 18th-century roof, as well as a reconstructed brick Dutch-style fireplace, a post hole from the original stockade, and exhibits of artifacts dug up from the site, including Native American arrowheads, fragments of Dutch clay pipes, and an early 19th-century shoe.

The Mattewis Persen House

As it turns out, this is just the kind of attraction that brings well-heeled travelers to the area. In Ulster County in particular, cultural tourism is becoming a significant part of the economy, according to the Dyson Foundation’s Community Profiles report. The report notes that Ulster County earns more on tourism per capita than any other in the region–$2,320 per resident in 2009, compared to $1,490 in Dutchess and $975 in Orange. Historic sites and local culture are sited by 61 percent of all visitors surveyed as the main reason for their trip, according to the study.

That means the Persen House is a true economic asset, according to Jennifer Schwartz-Berky, deputy director at the Ulster County Planning Department. She noted that “the much untapped heritage tourism market…represents the highest income segment and largest portion of travelers, especially from New York City.” Schwartz-Berky cited The Cultural & Heritage Traveler Study, issued by Mandala Research in 2009, which found that heritage tourists represent 78 percent of all leisure travelers (a market of 118 million out of 152 million people). They spend an average of $994 per trip, versus $611 for other tourists. “There is great potential in cross-promoting heritage and agro-tourism/farmer’s markets,” she said.

The Persen House got a boost with the recent awarding of a Museum Assessment Program grant from the American Association of Museums, which will enable the County Clerk’s Office, which administers the site, to further develop the attraction as a Cultural Heritage Center. “It gives us a museum designation, which will allow us grant funding from other sources,” noted Ulster County Clerk Nina Postupack.

Postupack said the grant will include a peer review, in which a museum expert will visit the site later in the summer. “She’ll meet with us to discuss the museum evolution and challenges and help us manage our expectations and how we can market ourselves in the community,” said Postupack.

The Persen House will also continue to collaborate with numerous local historical societies this summer, as it did last year. Each participating organization is based at the Persen House for a Saturday, hosting various activities open to the public. Last year there were ten partner organizations, most memorably the British Brigade/16th Queen’s Light Dragoons, whose red-coated re-enactors, glittering swords hanging at their sides, were a handsome addition to the stone house—and provided a premonition of Uptown’s Williamsburg-like potential.     -Lynn Woods

 

ASK’s Mission: Arts for Everyone

February 28th, 2011

The Arts Society of Kingston started as an organization representing visual artists, but in recent years, following its acquisition and renovation of the handsome, former Jewish community center building on Lower Broadway, it’s greatly expanded its reach. In any given month, ASK is hosting readings of new plays in development, showing films, and offering improv and youth acting classes, poetry jams, and concerts.   At these events and especially, during the First Saturday gallery opening,  ASK brings hundreds of people to the Rondout, filling local restaurants and bars. (It’s a symbiotic relationship: Ship to Shore often donates the food for the opening.)

The group’s activities aren’t limited to the building. It shows large reproductions of a few member artists’ watercolors in the Hudson Valley Mall and hosts the Kingston Sculpture Biennial (this year, it will be curated by Robert Johnson, a graphic designer who teachers at SUNY-Ulster; the sculptures will be placed on the median of lower Broadway and along the Rondout waterfront). The organization serves not just the city but the entire region, drawing in artists from as far away as Newburgh and Red Hook.

Board President, Lewis Gardiner

President of the board Lewis Gardner, who resides in Woodstock, said his initial attraction to the organization was its accessibility. “There’s no automatic nay-saying. Anyone with a good proposal can get an open hearing.” Gardner added the limited amount of space—consisting of two galleries, one quite large—is the main barrier to doing more.

There is room to expand, with a large, open space on the second floor. Gardner noted that the raw space should be available on a limited basis this summer, given that the funds have been raised to replace the not-to-code fire escape with an external staircase. Eventually, ASK hopes to renovate the former social hall, transforming the small stage into a sound and light booth and erecting terraced platforms for audience seating, which would face a designated performance area on the floor, Gardner said.

Once the building can offer this bona fide professional performance space, the sky’s the limit in terms of programming. In the meantime, ASK offers an impressive cultural menu, particularly in the drama department. The Playwrights Lab that Gardner started at SUNY-Ulster moved to ASK three years ago, providing playwrights, actors and directors with a workshop in which they can assess and get feedback on new work. “It’s a chance for a writer to hear his work,” Gardner said, noting that both experienced playwrights and novices can participate. “ASK serves the entire community of artists, both skilled professionals and people just starting out.”

Yet it also strives to offer quality art to the public. For that reason, in the summer months the staged readings are of selected work by more seasoned playwrights. The performing arts committee also can host a production, as is the case with With or Without, a play by an Emmy-nominated playwright that’s currently being presented. “This is a writer who wanted to become part of the Hudson Valley community,” Gardner said, noting the contact was made through the suggestion of a local actor.

Gardner said ASK also has partnered with other organizations to better serve the community. For example, in April it’ll be showing works by 20 or so artists at the Hudson Valley Mall, each of whom will have a table. The mall already displays and sells banners based on watercolors by local artists. ASK planned to have the artists set up in the corridor where the banners are displayed, but “the owners said why don’t we use the whole mall,” so the tables will be located throughout the facility. ASK will also be hosting a history day on April 9, with presentations, music and children’s activities.

Of course, ASK continues its commitment to the visual arts, with 24 exhibits on the roster each year. Currently there’s also life-drawing sessions, a class on the Sedona method, which is a way of fostering creativity, and Photoshop classes.

Executive director Vindora Wixom noted that yet another appeal of ASK is its health insurance program, which is open to freelancers. Wixom added that the ASK monthly gallery openings are always a big smash. Last month’s opening—featuring a show of Chronogram covers and a member’s exhibition linked to Valentine’s Day—attracted 600 people, despite a snowstorm. ASK has approximately 450 members. The annual membership is $60 for individuals and $100 for couples. —Lynn Woods

Kingston’s Thriving Maritime Museum—and New Partner Clearwater

January 31st, 2011

The Hudson River Maritime Museum, located on the Rondout Creek in Kingston’s Rondout district, has a world-class collection of photos, artifacts, paintings, prints, and other material that comprises the world’s most comprehensive archive preserving the maritime history of the Hudson River. However, for years it languished; underappreciated and under-funded, it had an inferiority complex that almost proved fatal, when a private owner offered to buy it. That was a turning point that instead marked the beginning of an impressive comeback, under the leadership of Russell Lange, a former IBM executive who’s married to curator Allynn Lange and has served as executive director for the past five years on a volunteer basis. Now he’s stepping aside—although he will still play an active role in formulating strategy–with the hiring of Kate Mitchell as paid executive director.

Stephen Digilio, Kate Mitchell & Russell Lange

Stephen Digilio, President, Kate Mitchell, new Executive Director & Russell Lange, Acting Executive Director.

The arrival of Mitchell, a museum professional—she was formerly executive director of the Museum Village in Orange County and before that, development director at Clearwater—signifies the progress the HRMM has made under Lange, its strengthening position and ambitious plans to expand and add programs. “Our river port strategy is to become a full-year museum”—currently, it’s open May through October—“and we have grants to help move us in that direction,” Lange said.

Among many other accomplishments, Lange and his staff obtained a $500,000 matching grant (up to $250,000 in state money is available for every dollar matched), of which $100,000 has been spent renovating the grounds, including stabilization of Mathilda, the large tug displayed on the property. The money also helped fund new walkways and repair to the bulkhead, which has become a favorite berth for a fascinating array of historic vessels. One of those vessels, the Clearwater—the iconic Hudson River sloop with the massive main sail that’s been the most compelling symbol of the restoration of the Hudson River since it was founded by Pete Seeger back in the 1970s–plans to make the dock at the HRMM its permanent winter home, starting next year.

Besides being a big boost for tourism in Kingston, the arrival of the Clearwater will have other positive repercussions for the city. Lange said both Clearwater and the HRMM would like to create a boat building and maintenance facility, which would include a boat-building program for youth; the structure would be either built new on the western end of the grounds or possibly be expanded to the building now occupied by Rosita’s Restaurant. (Discussions are underway with the owner of the building, formerly a bar that was one of the last links to Kingston’s dockside culture. If Rosita’s were to be acquired, the grounds of the museum would be converted to a public park.)  

Clearwater would also like to facilitate its green cities initiative, with a pilot program planned for the Rondout, according to Lange. “They would like to take the Clearwater message that we have to live in a sustainable way,” he said. “In introducing this landside, they’ve concluded the river cities are best placed to demonstrate this.”

The proposed new building would function as an education center in part dedicated to this goal. It would be shared by the museum and Clearwater. The partnership “is a great fit. We have a dock and they have a boat. In many ways we both tell a similar story.”

Russell Lange

Lange said besides working with Clearwater, another short-term goal of the museum is to raise more of the matching grant money to fund winterizing the museum building, which will include a green component, such as installation of solar panels or a geothermal system. The museum also plans to transform the Mathilda from “a big black hole” into a unique exhibition, with a cutaway window in the hull revealing the working steam engines, Lange said.

Meanwhile staff is in the throes of putting together the 2011 exhibition, which is themed around the nature of work in the Hudson Valley. The show will include historic photos from the museum’s collection of workers in the industries that once enlivened the waterfront as well as a contemporary juried show of photos depicting the face of work today. The show opens on April 29. Another big event is River Day, on June 4, which will include an evening party on the waterfront with music, square dancing, and food and a parade of historic boats. Don’t miss it!