Troopers respond and locate missing elderly woman in Delaware County
Written By Editor on 8/22/22 | 8/22/22
Tractor Trailer Rollover Closes Part of I-88
Sharon Historical Society Program August 22nd: Tracing Your Home's History
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Awards Presented at Fenimore Art Museum's 2022 Art by the Lake Event
Written By Editor on 8/17/22 | 8/17/22
Cooperstown, New York – The Fenimore Art Museum hosted its fifteenth annual Art by the Lake juried art invitational on Saturday, August 13. Eight awards were presented including the prestigious Fenimore Award which represents “best of show”–won by artist David (R.C.) Oster of Utica, New York.
Art by the Lake 2022 award winners:
Fenimore Award (best in show) – David (R.C.) Oster (Utica)
Photography Award – Kathryn DeZur (Niskayuna)
The Painting Award – Kevin McKrell (Saratoga Springs)
2D/Mixed Media Award – Sonoka Gozelski (West Edmeston)
Sculpture/3D Award – John Jackson (Jefferson)
Painter's Award (best use of color) – Olivia Weaver (Richfield Springs)
Sponsored by Golden Artist Colors
Judges's Award (best painting technique) – Alex Roediger (Brooklyn)
Sponsored by Golden Artist Colors
Viewer’s Choice Award – Megan Joubert (Fultonham)
About Fenimore Art Museum
Fenimore Art Museum, located on the shores of Otsego Lake—James Fenimore Cooper’s “Glimmerglass”—in historic Cooperstown, New York, features a wide-ranging collection of American art including folk art; important American 18th- and 19th-century landscape, genre, and portrait paintings; more than 125,000 historic photographs representing the technical developments made in photography and providing extensive visual documentation of the region’s unique history; and the renowned Eugene and Clare Thaw Collection of American Indian Art comprised of nearly 900 art objects representative of a broad geographic range of North American Indian cultures, from the Northwest Coast, Eastern Woodlands, Plains, Southwest, Great Lakes, and Prairie regions. Fenimore Art Museum is located at 5798 State Route 80, less than one mile from the center of Cooperstown. For more information visit FenimoreArt.org.
Guitarist JIJI and Violinist Danbi Um to Perform at Cooperstown Summer Music Festival August 22
Guitarist JIJI and violinist Danbi Um, both celebrated young virtuosos on their respective instruments, will present a duo performance at the Otesaga Resort Hotel on Monday, August 22 at 7:00pm, part of the Cooperstown Summer Music Festival’s 24th season.
The duo will present a genre-spanning program of works by Corelli, Paganini, Piazzolla, and Ella Fitzgerald, in a performance that will expand the audience’s conception of the capabilities of each instrument.
In addition to the wide-ranging program, Festival Founder and Artistic Director Linda Chesis says this performance offers something else: the rare opportunity to see these two superlative musicians join forces.
“These are two powerhouse performers taking the stage as a duo, which is an incredibly intimate format,” says Chesis. “You will get to see a side of these two that you won’t see anywhere else.”
EVENT DETAILS:
Danbi Um, violin and JIJI, guitar
Monday, August 22, 2022, 7:00-9:00pm, Otesaga Resort Hotel
Celebrated young virtuosos Danbi Um and JIJI will join forces for a genre-spanning program including works by Corelli, Paganini, Piazzolla, and Ella Fitzgerald.
TICKET INFORMATION:
Tickets are $30 for adults and $15 for students and children. Tickets for all events must be purchased in advance either online from www.cooperstownmusicfest.org or over the phone by calling Purplepass Tickets at 800-316-8559 and selecting Option 1. Please note there is a $2 service fee per phone order.
For all events, audience members must show proof of vaccination, including a required booster shot for those who are eligible.
ABOUT THE COOPERSTOWN SUMMER MUSIC FESTIVAL:
Founded in 1999 by flutist Linda Chesis, the Cooperstown Summer Music Festival has been bringing world-class chamber music performances to the Cooperstown area for 24 years. The festival has featured performances by the American, Juilliard, St. Lawrence, Jupiter and Jasper String Quartets, Stefon Harris, Bill Charlap, Kurt Elling, Simone Dinnerstein, Mark O’Connor, John Pizzarelli, the Sonia Olla Flamenco Dance Company, and many more. Concerts are held in venues across Cooperstown, including the grand Otesaga Hotel, The Farmers’ Museum and Christ Church (the church of author James Fenimore Cooper).
The Cooperstown Summer Music Festival is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature.
The Institute for Rural Vitality at SUNY Cobleskill Welcomes Three New Members to its Team
COBLESKILL, N.Y. – The Institute for Rural Vitality at SUNY Cobleskill welcomes three new members to its team, allowing the Institute to expand its reach and further extend the resources offered.
Mary B. Cool, Food Science Program Coordinator, obtained her Bachelor's degree in Food Science from Cornell University and has over 30 years of experience in the industry. Her expertise lies predominantly in new food product development, and she has managed both internal and outsourced new product food production with Life Savers Inc, WhiteWave Foods, and Beech Nut Nutrition.
Katerina Weingarten, Program Administrator, is an alumna of SUNY Cobleskill’s Agricultural Business Management program and went on to receive her Master's degree at Oklahoma State University in Agricultural Communications. She worked for Oklahoma State University's Department of Brand Management for two years and has been an independent marketing and communication consultant since August 2020. Growing up, Weingarten was active in 4-H and FFA, showing livestock locally, and was a member of Block and Bridle, the National Agri-Marketing Association Club, and the Livestock Judging Team while attending SUNY Cobleskill.
Melissa Struckle, Program Coordinator for the Mohawk Valley Farm and Food Program, is an Agricultural Business Management graduate of SUNY Cobleskill with more than a dozen years of program coordination experience in higher education. Struckle has completed graduate work focused on food and agribusiness, and brings a lifetime of agricultural experience, growing up on a dairy operation, showing dairy cattle at the local and national level, and active in 4-H and the Dairy Ambassador Program. Today, Struckle remains connected to agriculture by operating a small farm where she raises goats, cattle, and miniature donkeys.
Additionally, The Institute for Rural Vitality has had two interns for the summer. Josephin Colon has been providing program support for the Mohawk Valley Farm and Food Program. Bennett Ashely has been creating a series of workshops to benefit small businesses, people looking to create businesses, and business professionals hoping to reaffirm their skills.
The Institute for Rural Vitality team is excited to increase assistance to farm and food entrepreneurs throughout the Mohawk Valley with these additional resources.
Since its inception in 2018, the Institute has served 578 farms and food businesses and has assisted 21 beginning farmers in entering the local and regional food market. Through this support, entrepreneurs have been assisted in the development of 46 unique business plans and 60 distinctive marketing plans.
The Institute for Rural Vitality addresses the region’s most pressing issues to develop and enact sustainable solutions to enhance community and economic vitality in rural New York. The Institute supports research opportunities for faculty and students as well as internships and applied learning opportunities.
Through a new Farm and Food Business Accelerator program, the Agriculture Innovation Center will provide educational and practical knowledge, hands-on experience, development and consultation services.
Participants can access product development and co-working facilities on the SUNY Cobleskill campus through the Institute for Rural Vitality. Incubator and Accelerator participants receive product, process, and business development support from SUNY Cobleskill faculty and staff, including food science and food specialists, as well as dedicated staff expertise and resources from the Institute for Rural Vitality partners, including the Center for Agricultural Development and Entrepreneurship and FuzeHub. Assistance includes training, workshops, and one-on-one business planning and marketing advice.
Virtual Symposium Hosted by Fenimore Art Museum Explores the Unique Issues Affecting Venice
Experts from the U.S. and Europe will speak on climate change, art conservation, and the impact of tourism.
The symposium is associated with the Museum’s current exhibition Unmasking Venice: American Artists and the City of Water.
Virtual Symposium on Venice: Where Art, Science, and Activism Meet
Saturday, August 27, 2022 • 10:00 AM – 1:00 PM EST
Live via Zoom • Free to the public • Registration is required; visit FenimoreArt.org.
Cooperstown, New York – Fenimore Art Museum in Cooperstown, New York, hosts the Virtual Symposium on Venice: Where Art, Science, and Activism Meet on Saturday, August 27, 2022, from 10:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. EST. The program offers experts in various fields the opportunity to discuss the impact of Venice on the world and how the world is now impacting the future of this historic city. Presenters representing a broad spectrum of expertise will touch on areas such as climate change, art conservation, and the impact of tourism. Each speaks out with a common goal of protecting and preserving a city that has dramatically shaped many facets of Western culture. The symposium is free to the public. Registration is required; please visit FenimoreArt.org for more information.
“Fenimore Art Museum is most closely associated with American art. We are excited to go beyond our borders, exploring how artistic influences can cross oceans with dramatic effects,” said Danielle Henrici, Fenimore Art Museum’s Director of Education. “The broad range of speakers participating in this symposium are leading experts in their respective fields. I am confident attendees will find themselves well-informed and deeply inspired to take action to preserve our globally shared cultural heritage.”
The Symposium begins with remarks by Dr. Frederick Ilchman (Curator of Paintings, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston). Presenters include Melissa Conn, Director of the Venice Office of Save Venice (The Art and Science of Saving Venice: Highlights of 50 Years of Save Venice's Conservation Work); Jane da Mosto, Executive Director, We are here Venice (Venice NOW: How We Got Here and Where We Might Be Going); Davide Zanchettin, Associate Professor, University Ca'Foscari of Venice (Sea Level Variations in Venice in the Context of Global Climate Changes); and Fabio Carrera, Director, Venice Project Center (Repopulating Venice: The Mission of SerenDPT). Afterwards, audience members will take part in a Q&A session.
This project is made possible with the generous support of Art Bridges.
The symposium is associated with Fenimore Art Museum’s current exhibition Unmasking Venice: American Artists and the City of Water which features paintings, etchings, and 3-dimensional objects that explore the two Venetian worlds depicted by American artists during the late 19th, early 20th and 21st centuries. The “picturesque” demonstrates the attraction to Venice felt by American tourists, while the “realistic” depicts the grittier realism of an everyday Venetian’s life. The exhibition is on view through September 5, 2022. This is one in a series of American art exhibitions created through a multi-year, multi-institutional partnership formed by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, as part of the Art Bridges Initiative. Visit FenimoreArt.org for more information.
About the Presenters and Talk Descriptions:
Moderator: Dr. Frederick Ilchman
As specialist in the art of Renaissance Venice, Frederick Ilchman is Chair, Art of Europe, and the Mrs. Russell W. Baker Curator of Paintings at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. He holds an A.B. from Princeton University and a Ph.D. from Columbia University, both in art history. Frederick he has curated or co-curated such exhibitions as Titian, Tintoretto, Veronese: Rivals in Renaissance Venice (MFA and Musée du Louvre, 2009), Goya: Order and Disorder (MFA, 2014), Casanova’s Europe (Kimbell Art Museum, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, and MFA, 2017), and Tintoretto: Painter of Renaissance Venice (Palazzo Ducale and National Gallery of Art, Washington, 2018). He also serves as the Chairman of the Board of Save Venice Inc., the largest private organization devoted to art conservation in Venice.
Melissa Conn, Director of the Venice Office of Save Venice
Melissa Conn is the Director of the Venice office of Save Venice, an American non-profit organization dedicated to preserving the artistic heritage of Venice. A long-time resident of Venice with thirty-three years of experience working for Save Venice in the field of Venetian art history and conservation, Conn coordinates Save Venice's art restoration projects and oversee the Rosand Library and Study Center at Save Venice. In addition, she is the director of the restoration track of Save Venice's Women Artists of Venice program, launched in March 2021. Conn is a frequent lecturer in Italy and the United States on the preservation of Venetian art. Born and raised in Salem, Ohio, Melissa Conn has a degree in art history from Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. She is married to Venetian architect Fabrizio Tibolla and has two sons, Sebastiano (22) and Lorenzo (18).
- Presentation: The Art and Science of Saving Venice: Highlights of 50 Years of Save Venice's Conservation Work
The presentation will be an overview of Save Venice's art conservation projects since the organization's founding in 1971. Melissa Conn will discuss the problems of art conservation in the harsh Venetian climate and use examples of our conservation projects including mosaics, frescoes, paintings, sculptures, and building facades.
Jane da Mosto, Co-Founder and Executive Director of We are here Venice (WahV)
Jane da Mosto (MA University of Oxford, MSc Imperial College London) is an environmental scientist and activist based in Venice, co-founder of the NGO We are here Venice. Operating across many different disciplines, WahV has a mission to change the future of the city, highlighting the need to protect the lagoon and rebuild a more resilient resident population. Jane’s books include: The Science of Saving Venice (Umberto Allemandi, 2004), The Venice Report (Cambridge University Press, 2010) and Acqua in Piazza (Linea d’acqua 2016). Contributions include “Making Time for Conversations of Resistance” in Feminist Futures of Spatial Practice (Spurbuch, M. Schalk et al, 2017), “Practicing Civic Ecology: Venice and the Lagoon” in Care and Repair (MIT Press, Angelika Fitz et al, 2019), “The Venice Paradox” in Aroop special edition on Failure (Raza Foundation, 2020). Alongside WahV specific projects, Jane is active in the community and is President of Pan di Zenzero, a pedagogical project for early childhood. In 2017 she was honoured with the Osella d’Oro by the city of Venice and in 2021 she received the Fondazione Masi prize for “vision and courage.”
- Presentation: Venice NOW: How We Got Here and Where We Might Be Going
The mission of We are here Venice is to ensure that Venice remains a living city. This depends on analysis and actions regarding the human dimension of the city and the current imbalance between falling numbers of residents versus growing mass tourism as well as the interrelationship between the built fabric and the encircling lagoon system. Jane da Mosto’s talk will cover some of the causes and effects of major changes over time and what can still be done to revive Venice as an example of sustainability and prosperity.
Davide Zanchettin, Associate Professor at the Ca'Foscari University of Venice
Davide Zanchettin is associate professor at the Ca'Foscari University of Venice, where he currently teaches classes on various topics of the geophysics at the Master and PhD levels. He is also affiliated with the Euro-Mediterranean Center for Climate Change and the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology. Among his research interests are the study of decadal climate variability and predictability, particularly for the North Italian region, and the study of marine circulation in the Mediterranean Sea and the Lagoon of Venice by means of numerical models. He has coauthored more than seventy papers on international peer-reviewed scientific journals and coauthored an award-winning book on climate change in 2010. He is currently coordinating scientific research to define future climate change scenarios for Venice.
- Presentation: Sea Level Variations in Venice in the Context of Global Climate Changes
Venice and its lagoon symbolize "the people’s victorious struggle against the elements as they managed to master a hostile nature" (UNESCO, 1987). Indeed, Venice has been preserved practically unaltered for centuries in an unstable equilibrium maintained by subjecting the ecotone to a series of anthropic interventions to contrast its natural evolution. The frailty of the site is clearly evidenced by the flooding events, named "acqua alta,” that periodically afflict Venice. The increase of the impacts of flooding events in Venice during the 20th century and in the last two decades has stimulated the development of predictive tools and the search for adequate protective measures. The storm surge event of November 12, 2019, reaching a peak water height of 189 cm (only surpassed by the record event of 1966), has awakened the public perception about the vulnerability of the site toward the "irreversible natural and climatic changes" already mentioned by UNESCO. A substantial future increase of the mean relative sea level in Venice, as a consequence of global warming, may cause very serious damages to the site, both in terms of degradation of the historical center and destruction of the lagoonal ecosystem. This talk will illustrate the many geodynamical and meteo-climatic factors that contribute to sea level variations in Venice, along a narrative thread that connects past, present, and possible future scenarios for this world heritage site.
Fabio Carrera, Director of the WPI Venice Project Center and Founder of SerenDPT
Fabio Carrera was born in Venice and has been a professor at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) since 1988, when he founded the WPI Venice Project Center. He also founded and directs the Santa Fe Project Center, which is dedicated to Indigenous issues. In 2017, Fabio founded SerenDPT (Serenissima Development and Preservation through Technology), a benefit company with the mission of repopulating the historic city of Venice by fostering the creation of innovative, non-extractive jobs for young people of all ages and Venetians of any origin. SerenDPT operates the H3 Factory, a startup incubator in the ex-church of Saints Cosmas and Damian on the Giudecca island in Venice. SerenDPT is the lead organization for the Venice Case Study of the EU Horizon research project called SmartDest, investigating the exlusion of residents due to the overreliance on the tourism economy. In 2022, SerenDPT launched the MITdesignX program, where MIT faculty will accompany 10 startups from ideation to launch every year at the H3 Factory.
- Presentation: Repopulating Venice: The Mission of SerenDPT
Fabio Carrera presents the work of SerenDPT (SERENissima Development and Preservation through Technology) which includes the Venice
About Fenimore Art Museum
Fenimore Art Museum, located on the shores of Otsego Lake—James Fenimore Cooper’s “Glimmerglass”—in historic Cooperstown, New York, features a wide-ranging collection of American art including folk art; important American 18th- and 19th-century landscape, genre, and portrait paintings; more than 125,000 historic photographs representing the technical developments made in photography and providing extensive visual documentation of the region’s unique history; and the renowned Eugene and Clare Thaw Collection of American Indian Art comprised of nearly 900 art objects representative of a broad geographic range of North American Indian cultures, from the Northwest Coast, Eastern Woodlands, Plains, Southwest, Great Lakes, and Prairie regions. Visit FenimoreArt.org.
Institute for Rural Vitality at SUNY Cobleskill to Host Small Business Workshop Series
Written By Editor on 8/15/22 | 8/15/22
COBLESKILL – The Institute for Rural Vitality at SUNY Cobleskill is hosting a four-part workshop series designed to assist small business owners, and individuals interested in starting their own business, in a variety of topic areas. The series will take place on the SUNY Cobleskill campus, with a virtual option available. The workshops will run from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on each of the following dates:
September 16: Business Planning Workshop
September 30: Strategic Management Workshop
October 14: "Doing Business in New York" Workshop
October 28: "Human Resources for Today" Workshop
The cost for the full series is $399.99 and $149.99 per individual workshop. Each day will include six unique sessions and a keynote speaker during lunch (lunch is included in the workshop fee). Keynote speakers include Albany Business Review Publisher Walter Thorne, Polaris CFO Bob Mack, and others to be announced soon.
Individual sessions will cover topics such as starting a business, forming an LLC, branding basics, research and development, accessing capital, performance management, understanding your business model, recruiting, onboarding and retention, and more. Visit www.cobleskill.edu/institute for more information and to register.
SUNY Cobleskill Temporarily Closes Pool Facility for Critical Repairs
COBLESKILL, N.Y. – SUNY Cobleskill’s Athletics Department has announced the temporary closure of its campus pool due to the need for critical repairs. The pool will be offline for all recreational and competition events for at least the full 2022-2023 academic year.
Earlier this summer, the main water line to the pool fractured, and an emergency repair was completed. This event revealed other mechanical and structural issues within and around the pool. Due to these issues, the pool must be drained, and a full assessment of the facility conducted.
“The safety of our student-athletes and community members who use the pool always comes first, and we will work as fast as we can to address the issues with our facility and reopen to pool for use as soon as we can,” said SUNY Cobleskill Athletic Director Marie Curran-Headley. “It was our hope that we could find alternative means to have our Men’s and Women’s swim teams continue practicing and competing this year, but, unfortunately, we’ve exhausted all options in this regard and will have to temporarily suspend team activities until our pool is back online.”
Following the facility’s assessment, a timeline for repairs will be established along with an anticipated time of completion.
About SUNY Cobleskill:
The State University of New York College of Agriculture and Technology at Cobleskill is an accredited, baccalaureate, residential college with a rich academic tradition spanning more than 100 years. With an emphasis on experiential education, SUNY Cobleskill prepares students for successful careers, advanced studies, and engaged citizenship. Our founding principle that students “learn by doing” was formalized in 2016 with the SUNY system’s first applied learning requirement, guaranteeing that every student graduates with real-world experience in their field of study. Learn more at www.cobleskill.edu.
“A Crossing Situation”, with David Brooks, Ed. Director at Schoharie Crossing State Historic Site
On Thursday, August 18, 7 p.m. the 2022 Summer Lecture Series will continue with “A Crossing Situation”, presented by David Brooks, Education Director at Schoharie Crossing State Historic Site at Lasell Hall.
The presentation explains how the Schoharie Creek was actually an impediment to the Erie Canal before the artificial river was opened and how Erie Canal engineers and builders determined how to cross the waters of the Schoharie, from the earliest dams to the incredible John B Jervis-designed Schoharie Creek Aqueduct, and what that meant for the success of the Erie Canal.
Admission to all of the 2022 Summer Lecture Series events is $5. Admission for Schoharie County Historical Society members is free.