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SENTENCE IN DRUNK DRIVING CASE

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 5/27/24 | 5/27/24

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DELHI – Amy Kille, 42, of Walton, New York, appeared in Delaware County Court on May 20, 2024, before the Honorable Judge John Hubbard, for sentencing. Ms. Kille had previously pled guilty to one count of Driving While Intoxicated, 1st Offense, an Unclassified Misdemeanor in violation of section 1192 (3) of the Vehicle and Traffic Law of the State of New York and one count of Aggravated Unlicensed Operation of a Motor Vehicle in the First Degree, a Class E Felony, in violation of Section 511 (3) (A) (i) of the Vehicle and Traffic Law of the State of New York. 

The charges stem from events that occurred on August 30, 2023, in the Town of Walton. Deputy Justin Mohr of the Delaware County Sheriff’s Office observed a vehicle repeatedly swerving in and out of the lanes of traffic. After conducting a traffic stop, Deputy Mohr identified the driver as Amy Kille. After running her license information, Deputy Mohr determined that Ms. Kille’s license had been revoked for a prior Driving While Intoxicated offense. Deputy Mohr also detected the odor of alcohol emanating from Ms. Kille. Chemical testing later on revealed her blood alcohol content (BAC) to be .25%. The legal limit in the State of New York is .08 percent.

On May 20, 2024, Judge John Hubbard sentenced Ms. Kille to a five-year term of probation supervision subject to the successful completion of Adult Treatment Court.  Judge Hubbard also revoked Ms. Kille’s license and ordered her to install an ignition interlock device in any vehicle she owns or operates.  

First Assistant District Attorney Schuyler Konior Kinneman prosecuted the case.

District Attorney Shawn Smith commended Deputy Justin Mohr and Deputy Zachary Finch for their work on this case.  Smith stated, "This defendant was provided with a great opportunity to participate in the Delaware County Adult Treatment Court Program.  If the defendant does not complete the program, she will be sentenced to 1 and 1/3 to 4 years in state prison.”



Shawn J. Smith

District Attorney

Delaware County



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Record Numbers for Delaware County Art Grants


By Robert Brune

ROXBURY — Roxbury Arts Group (RAG) Delaware County Arts Grant awards ceremony happened on Thursday, May 16th. There were more than twice as many grantees for 2024 over the previous year of twelve individuals or groups. With twenty-five individuals and organizations being awarded, this is yet another significant sign that the arts are contributing to the great landscape of growth seen on almost all levels of our economy and culture here in Delaware County. 

Jenny Rosenzweig the executive director of RAG opened up the ceremony speaking about the board of directors of RAG, “Roxbury Arts Group’s stewardship is led by the board (of directors), once again are all volunteers,… They are setting a course for this organization for the next forty-five years to make sure that this organization remains a resource for the community for years to come.” Rosenzweig went on to explain that the Delaware County Arts Council is a regrant program funded by the New York State Council on the Arts (NYSCA), “This is essentially tax dollars being reinvested back into your community. We are thrilled that is being used for the arts, how amazing is that? Somewhere someone said the arts are important and we should fund them. We are proud partners with the New York Council on the Arts to deliver this service to Delaware County.” 

Prior to the Creative Opportunities Coordinator Ursula Hudak announcing the twenty-five recipient grantees, Rosenzweig announced that there were two hundred thousand dollars in grant applications but there had been only enough for eighty thousand dollars in grants for this year of 2024. 

The list of grantees for this year (In order of the announcement presentation by Hudak): The Book of Awe (Andes), On and About Main Street Margaretville, Catskills Old-Time Music in the Mountains (Andes), 3rd Annual H&R Vaudville Variety Show (Fleischmanns), Vintage Robots – Humanoid Visions of the Future (Margaretville), Maintenance of Species (Delhi), Weaving Club (Delhi), Stamford Zine Workshops (Stamford), Birdhouse Dance Residency and Workshops (Delhi), Allegory of Justice (Franklin), AMR Open Studios Tour (Including 8 towns from Bovina – Fleischmanns), Co-Creations on the Farm with the Vegetal Landscape (Delhi), Mountain Madness (Roxbury), Amy Randall (Hamden), Ballad Tree (Roxbury), Creating Games and Crafts from the Past (Downsville), Into the Dyepot (Hamden), Ecoscape (Sidney), Folk Art and Fiber (Delhi), Tritown Theaters production of ‘Beauty and the Beast’ (Sidney), Caregiver (Hobart), Ethan Fox (Roxbury), The Hobart Rotary Sausage and Brew Festival, and Amy Masters (Arkville)

The Mountain Eagle is looking forward to covering these events in more detail as they pop up on the calendar. 

For more information on each of the grantees see www.roxburyartsgroup.org 


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Local School Districts Approve Budgets

DELAWARE COUNTY — Despite a trying year of developing budgets for local rural school districts, voters turned out on Tuesday to support local budget proposals. Some districts will see new faces on the Board of Education. Stamford Central seated Stacey Vasta and Lucas Flachs as new members to the school board.

Charlotte Valley Superintendent Eric Whipple thanked the community for its support of the district's programs.

Charlotte Valley Central School

The Charlotte Valley Central School community voters approved the annual school district budget proposal by a vote of 89-24.   Proposition #1 (Vehicle Purchase) was passed with a vote of 93-20.   In addition, voters elected Joe Ballard to another three-year term to the Board of Education.    

  "We would like to thank our community for supporting our district programs for another year.   This approval allows our students to continue to engage in high-level academic, extra-curricular and social learning that will help them to  'prepare to conquer the challenges of tomorrow'.," stated school Superintendent Eric Whipple.

"We look forward to continuing to provide our students with a strong education at Charlotte Valley, as well as engaging with our supportive community.  "  

South Kortright

Voters of the South Kortright Central School District passed the proposed $11,473, 774 budget by a 96-18 margin. They also approved the proposition to purchase a new 65-passenger school bus by a 100-14 margin and they re-elected Terri Chichester to another term on the school's Board of Education. She received 97 votes. There were also three write-in votes for Nathan Kanarek and two for Paula Nissen.

Budget passed n96-18

Stamford Central School

Voters in the Stamford Central School District approved the proposed  $10,999,975 budget a vote of  170 to 130 on Tuesday. 

Voters also approved the bus purchase, 204 to 96, and the technology purchase, 223 to 79.

Voters of the district elected two new members to the school's board of education: Stacey Vasta, 166 votes; Lucas Flachs, 145 votes; Cathleen Cannon, 142 votes and Katy Graves, 105 votes.


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Second Annual Pink Street Festival June 2

BOVINA CENTER — Join us for the second annual Pink Street Festival for children and families hosted by Bovina Center Montessori School  and KidSkill Fund on Sunday June 2nd between 10am - 4pm.

The Pink Street Festival celebrates much of what Delaware County has to offer: food, music, agriculture, environmental awareness & work, education, small business vendors, farming, families, and arts!

We will have activities for families of all ages including a large play area on the school’s great lawn with a student-made obstacle course, bouncy house, sing along led by Miss Pam from Community Music Network, a scavenger hunt organized by the Catskill Mountain Club, Paint-the-man with Putt Putt Van Winkle, horseback rides with Mountaintop Horselove Ranch, a free photo booth with pictures taken by professional photographer Lindsay Nolin, soil art and worm composting led by the Catskills Agrarian Alliance, backyard bass - casting practice led by NYC DEP Bureau of Water Supply, inflatable archery brought by the Leatherstocking Council of the Boy Scouts of America, costume workshop with the West Kortright Center, Linda Lutz' Chalk Bus, tours of the classrooms for interested families, and much more! In addition to local organizations, artisans, and craft vendors, families can enjoy food by our growing list of food vendors including Catskill Momos, Ty’s Tacoria, Health on Wheels LL, Sas Squash Food Truck, Russell’s Store and Babysmoker NYC.

Admission to the Festival is by donation. Suggested donation $20/family. All proceeds will go towards enrichment and educational opportunities for children through the KidSkill Fund, a locally based, 501(c)3 non-profit organization. 

Bovina Center Montessori School,  2121 County Highway 5 (aka Pink Street), Bovina Center, NY 13740. Email Becky Manning at becky@bovinamontessori.com with any questions. 


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Children’s Book Author/Illustrators Discuss Their Work


2024 Maurice Sendak Foundation Fellows in Conversation

Join The Lost Bookshop in a lively conversation with contemporary children's book author/illustrators from around the world. Charlotte Ager (England), Rocío Araya (France), and Cozbi A. Cabrera  (USA) will discuss their experiences with creating children's books, and their processes for pairing words and art. Moderated by Doug Salati, (winner of the 2023 Caldecott Medal).

Location: The Lost Bookshop, 120 Main St. Delhi

Date: Saturday, June 1

Time: 5-6:30pm

Cost: free, RSVP is encouraged

Seats are limited, RSVP for free at https://bit.ly/sendakfellows

The Sendak Fellowship, a core Program of The Maurice Sendak Foundation, is a residency that encourages, teaches and supports artists who tell stories with illustration. The fellows are in residence in South Kortright.

The Lost Bookshop is an independent bookstore located at 120 Main St. Delhi, NY. Opened  on Main Street in 2023, it sells a range of new books and gifts, and hosts regular community events.


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Draw-along with Graphic Novel Author in Delhi


Tim Probert, author/illustrator of Lightfall series, visits The Lost Bookshop

Follow Tim Probert as he draws characters from the Lightfall series and answers your questions. Bring your sketchbooks and learn to draw them yourselves!

Location: The Lost Bookshop, 120 Main St. Delhi

Date: Sunday, June 9

Time: 4-5:30pm

Cost: free, RSVP is encouraged

LIghtfall is a children’s graphic novel series, the third book of which was published in April of this year. For fans of Amulet and middle grade readers who love sweeping worlds like Star Wars, the Lightfall series follows Bea and Cad, two unlikely friends who get swept up in an epic quest to save their world from falling into eternal darkness.

Seats are limited, RSVP for free at https://bit.ly/drawalongwithtim

Tim Probert is the author and illustrator of the Lightfall graphic novel series. He has also illustrated D&D: Dungeon Academy, the Rip & Red series, Pickle, and other books.

The Lost Bookshop is an independent bookstore located at 120 Main St. Delhi, NY. Opened  on Main Street in 2023, it sells a range of new books and gifts, and hosts regular community events.


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National Bank of Coxsackie donates to Trinity Alliance of the Capital Region

Written By Editor on 5/20/24 | 5/20/24

Velma McAdoo, Trinity Alliance’s Human Resources Director ; Ellen Donovan, Tinity Alliance’s Director of Development ; Nicole Bliss, NBC’s Chief Administrative Officer, Marcus Pryor, Community Leader, Harris Oberlander, Trinity Alliance’s Chief Executive Officer ; Michael Kelly, Trinity Alliance’s Chief Operating Officer ; and Charlene Slemp, NBC’s Chief Lending Officer.



Latham, NY – The National Bank of Coxsackie (“NBC”) presented Trinity Alliance of the Capital Region with a $7,500 donation to aid in their mission to promote services to the community that will support and promote healthy families, adults, and children. The funds were secured through the Federal Home Loan Bank of New York Small Business Recovery Grant Program. NBC is a member of the Federal Home Loan Bank of New York and applied for the funds made available through this special program.


“We are proud to be able to offer support to Trinity Alliance and their efforts” John Balli, NBC Chief Executive Officer said.  “The impact they have to the local communities they operate in, and the wide range of services they are able to provide is remarkable.”


Trinity Alliance of the Capital Region was founded in 1912 and aims to empower families and stabilize neighborhoods. Their agency is dedicated to improving the neighborhood as a setting for family life, contributing to health and well-being, and promoting education and employment as a means of self-development. Using a comprehensive approach to community support, Trinity Alliance offers a wide range of services tailored to meet the needs of their local communities.


“We are extremely grateful to the National Bank of Coxsackie for its generous support of our mission” said Hariss Oberlander, Chief Executive Officer of Trinity Alliance of the Capital Region. “As we embark on a much-needed building campaign, investments from our corporate partners are critical to achieve our vision.” Overlander added, “On behalf of our clients and our community, thank you National Bank of Coxsackie.”



Since 1852, The National Bank of Coxsackie has been the premier bank of choice for thousands of customers. With eight branch locations ranging from Coxsackie to Glenmont, including their commercial loan production and administrative office in Latham, the bank serves the greater Capital Region. National Bank of Coxsackie is committed to supporting their communities they operate within. The bank is a wholly-owned subsidiary of NBC Bancorp, Inc. (OTCPK:NCXS).



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Prepare for a Magical Journey with Orpheus Theatre's "Anastasia the Musical Youth Edition"


Oneonta, NY — Orpheus Theatre's Starstruck Players youth troupe invites you to immerse yourself in the enchanting world of "Anastasia the Musical Youth Edition." Get ready to be captivated by mystery, adventure, and self-discovery as we transport you from the twilight of the Russian Empire to the vibrant streets of 1920s Paris.

Follow our brave heroine, Anya, as she embarks on a quest to uncover the truth about her identity, pursued by a relentless Soviet officer. With the help of a charming con man and a delightful ex-aristocrat, Anya's journey for home, love, and family will sweep you off your feet.

Our youth from all over the area, including Walton, Oneonta, Cooperstown, Schenevus, Richmondville, and Unadilla, not only shine on stage but also work tirelessly behind the scenes, infusing this production with their passion and dedication.

Directors Courtney Murphy and Emily Gorton are delighted to bring this production to the stage, stating, "Directing Anastasia has been such a full circle moment for us. We have been friends for over two decades and spent much of that time performing together. The two of us have always dreamed of producing youth theatre together so this has really been a dream come true for us and we could not have hoped for a more talented group of young folks on and off stage to bring Anastasia to life."

Save the dates for this unforgettable experience! Join us at the mainstage of the Foothills Performing Arts Center on Market Street in Oneonta on June 7th and 8th at 7:30 PM, and June 9th at 3 PM.

Secure your RESERVED SEATING tickets online at www.OrpheusTheatre.org. Adult tickets are $15, while seniors (65+) and students (17-) can enjoy this magical journey for just $10.

For those who prefer to purchase tickets at the door, remaining seats will be available for sale starting 1 hour prior to showtime. To ensure you don't miss out, arrive early, as ticket sales will cease 5 minutes before the curtain rises.

Step into the magic of the past, embrace the adventure of the present, and let "Anastasia the Musical Youth Edition" ignite the spark of wonder within your soul. We eagerly await your presence in the audience for this extraordinary journey!

For online seat selection, please use a computer rather than a mobile device. For inquiries or assistance, including the purchase of accessible seating, contact us via email at orpheus@orpheustheatre.org or leave a voicemail at 607-432-1800.

"Anastasia" is presented by arrangement with Concord Theatricals. www.concordtheatricals.com

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Contact: Orpheus Theatre Email: orpheus@orpheustheatre.org Phone: 607-432-1800 Website: www.OrpheusTheatre.org



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Artworks by Music Legend Bob Dylan Featured This Summer at Fenimore Art Museum

Written By Editor on 5/15/24 | 5/15/24


 

 

 

New exhibition:

Bob Dylan Remastered: Drawings from the Road

May 25–September 15, 2024

Fenimore Art Museum, Cooperstown, NY

 

  

COOPERSTOWN, NY  A new exhibition at Fenimore Art Museum in Cooperstown, New York celebrates another impressive aspect of music legend Bob Dylan’s creativity: his talents in visual art. Bob Dylan Remastered: Drawings from the Road features ninety-two unique, original signed works. The exhibition is on view May 25–September 15, 2024.

 

A dedicated performer, Dylan started what is known as his “Never Ending Tour” in 1988; between 1989 and 1992, as he traveled through North America, Europe, and Asia, he began sketching glimpses of his life on the road. The resultant pencil and charcoal drawings were a way to “refocus a restless mind,” as Dylan claimed, providing him a new outlet to celebrate the comings and goings of everyday life.

 

“This exhibition allows everyone, including Dylan’s fans, to experience another aspect of the range of talents possessed by this music legend,” said Chris Rossi, Director of Exhibitions at Fenimore Art Museum. “We all recognize him as an accomplished singer/songwriter and visitors will be equally amazed when discovering his work as a visual artist.”

 

Dylan made three different collections out of the original drawings by “remastering” these works, adding vivid watercolor and gouache to digital enlargements of the drawings to create a new, special edition set entitled The Drawn Blank Series, which is the focus of Fenimore’s exhibition.

 

All three series were first seen in public during an exhibition at the prestigious Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz Museum in Germany in 2007. After one additional show in Helsinki, the works returned to Dylan. Today, The Drawn Blank Series is owned by a private collector while the other two sets were sold to a private gallery. Dylan’s work has been compared to modern masters such as Henri Matisse and Ernst Ludwig Kirchner. His skills as a draughtsman, in keeping with his talents as a songwriter, lie with his ability to tell an engrossing tale through the simplest and most evocative means.

 

The exhibition is sponsored in part by The Clark Foundation and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas O. Putnam.

 

This exhibition was provided by PAN Art Connections.

 

Visit FenimoreArt.org for more information.

 

 

 

RELATED PROGRAMS

For information on upcoming programs, visit FenimoreArt.org.

 

 

ABOUT BOB DYLAN

One of the most iconic and prolific musicians of our time, singer-songwriter Bob Dylan has been chronicling modern life, note by note, for nearly sixty years. Equally influential and indomitable, Dylan’s songs helped redefine folk, pop, blues, country, and rock music, all while providing a soundtrack to America’s civil rights and anti-war movements. The power and breadth of his artistry, however, has only been fully recognized recently: in 2016 his work creating “new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition” was honored with a Nobel Prize for Literature.

 

ABOUT FENIMORE ART MUSEUM

Fenimore Art Museum, located on the shores of Otsego Lake—James Fenimore Cooper’s “Glimmerglass”—in historic Cooperstown, New York, offers visitors the opportunity to experience a wide variety of world-class art in an idyllic, small-town setting. The museum 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.

 

 

 

ADDITIONAL SUMMER EXHIBITIONS at FENIMORE

Banksy: The Haight Street Rat 
May 18–September 8, 2024

Marc Hom: Re-Framed 
May 25–September 2, 2024

American Masterworks 
through December 29, 2024

As They Saw It: Women Artists Then & Now 
through September 2, 2024

 

 


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The Thomas Cole National Historic Site Announces the Opening of the Exhibition “Native Prospects: Indigeneity and Landscape”

Written By Editor on 5/13/24 | 5/13/24


 

The Exhibition of Historic and Contemporary Art and Cultural Artifacts Juxtaposes an Indigenous Approach to the Articulation of Land with the American Landscape Paintings of Thomas Cole

 

Native Prospects: Indigeneity and Landscape

May 4–October 27, 2024: Thomas Cole National Historic Site, Catskill, NY

 

Catskill, NY – May 8, 2024 – The Thomas Cole National Historic Site announced today the opening of a new exhibition titled “Native Prospects: Indigeneity and Landscape,” curated by Scott Manning Stevens, PhD / Karoniaktatsie (Akwesasne Mohawk). The exhibition juxtaposes an Indigenous approach to the articulation of their homelands and the environment with the American landscape paintings of Thomas Cole, which are rooted in European tradition. Cole’s influence led him to be recognized as founder of the 19th-century American art movement now known as the Hudson River School of landscape painting.

 

The exhibition’s curator, Scott Manning Stevens, PhD / Karoniaktatsie (Akwesasne Mohawk), is Associate Professor of Native American Studies and English at Syracuse University, where he is also Director of the Native American and Indigenous Studies Program and Founding Director of the Center for Global Indigenous Cultures and Environmental Justice. The exhibition and the accompanying publication are organized by the Thomas Cole National Historic Site.

 

The Indigenous approach to land underscores a mutual relationship of nurturing and caretaking. As Dr. Stevens writes, “For many Indigenous peoples, including the Haudenosaunee, it is our relationship with the land that is of paramount importance. That relationship teaches us the ethics on which our societies are built.” He continues, “any abstract portrayal of the land and its features in our visual culture is meant to call to mind those relationships—relationships that we have a sacred duty to remember and maintain.” The approach to nature exemplified by Cole’s one-point perspective landscape paintings is rooted in a European tradition that reflects a perceived right to dominate and rule over nature, as seen for example in an oft-quoted passage from Genesis: “Be fruitful and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth.”

 

“Native Prospects: Indigeneity and Landscape” presents 19th-century paintings by Thomas Cole featuring Native figures, in context with Indigenous works of historic and cultural value, and artworks by contemporary Indigenous artists: Teresa Baker (Mandan/Hidatsa), Brandon Lazore (Onondaga, Snipe Clan)Truman T. Lowe (Ho-Chunk), Alan Michelson (Mohawk member of the Six Nations of the Grand River), and Kay WalkingStick (Cherokee). Bringing the 19th century into conversation with our present moment, this cross-cultural exhibition offers profound interpretations of American art and land, expands conventional definitions of “land” and “landscape,” and highlights Indigenous artistic creation.

 

Much of the critique of 19th-century American landscape painting has focused on the absence of communities of the original inhabitants of the land. Yet communities of Native peoples had lived throughout these regions for millennia, constructing villages and clearing woods for agricultural fields, as they supported their communities from the resources of the land and its waterways.

Unlike most of his artistic circle, Thomas Cole included Native figures in many of his landscape paintings, though most often alone. Dr. Stevens interprets these figures as what art historians refer to as “staffage.” In Cole’s case, these figures served to provide a sense of scale, geographic location, and arguably time period. Scale was often related to the sublime aspects of certain natural features such as a waterfall or mountain, while identifying a figure as Native American placed the viewer in an American locale, and finally, having a lone Native figure in the landscape, dressed in a stereotypically Indigenous manner, pointed to the country’s past, with the implicit and harmful presumption that Native Americans were no longer present in this region. Cole’s Native figures demonstrate no ethnographic acuity on the artist’s part, beyond romanticized stereotype.

 

“Native Prospects” reflects this aspect of the landscape painting tradition while examining representations of land by Native peoples, both in the distant past and today. While Indigenous societies in North America did not have a tradition of representational landscape art, the land was featured abstractly as it related to Native communities in various designs, some decorative and others mnemonic. Contemporary Native visual artists have inherited a variety of legacies of representing the land, a fraught subject for many Native artists because of the dispossession of Indigenous peoples from the land and the peril facing the land historically and today.

 

“Indigenous societies flourish when we recognize that our relationship to the land is as much determined by responsibilities as it is by rights,” said exhibition curator Scott Manning Stevens, PhD. “We maintain our collective right to protect the land and all that’s on it, and we do so with our custodial duties toward the environment in mind. For many Indigenous peoples the European landscape tradition in art presents viewers with a false sense that North America was an uninhabited wilderness waiting to be settled or that the beauty of nature can be depicted with a sense of nostalgia or in an elegiac light, given the inevitability of the presumed advance of ‘civilization’ with its towns, cities, and industries. Contemporary Native artists have inherited this tradition but feel compelled to respond from their own perspectives and be mindful of their traditions. For some that is delivered as a critique and for others it is a prompt to revisit the ancestral views of their people.”

 

“We are excited to present this important exhibition that re-examines the way Cole has portrayed Native American people in his paintings, most often as a lone warrior in the woods – a stereotype that has been firmly imprinted in our consciousness for over two centuries,” said Elizabeth B. Jacks, Executive Director of the Thomas Cole National Historic Site. “This exhibition and publication are a major expansion of our commitment to bring forward a much longer history of the land and landscape. We are so grateful to Dr. Stevens for bringing his superb scholarship to the Thomas Cole Site and to the contemporary Indigenous artists for sharing their visionary work with our audiences." 

 

The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue with original essays by the curator and such other scholars as Gabrielle Tayac, PhD, (Piscataway) and Joseph Mizhakiiyaasige Zordan (Bad River Ojibwe). Additionally, the publication features writing and plates by featured artists Teresa Baker (Mandan/Hidatsa), Brandon Lazore (Onondaga, Snipe Clan), and Kay WalkingStick (Cherokee), as well as texts on Alan Michelson (Mohawk member of the Six Nations of the Grand River), by Clémence White, and Truman T. Lowe (Ho-Chunk), by Patricia Marroquin Norby, PhD, (Purépecha), Associate Curator of Native American Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

 

Native Prospects: Indigeneity and Landscape is made possible through support from the Terra Foundation for American Art.

 

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Major support is provided by David Bury & The Bay and Paul Foundations and the Warner Foundation.

 

The exhibition and publication are also supported by The Cranshaw Corporation, National Endowment for the Arts, Wyeth Foundation for American Art, Maurice D. Hinchey Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area, New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, Becky Gochman, Patti Hanson, Greene County Cultural Fund, Kristin Gamble, National Trust Insurance Services, LLC, Bank of Greene County Charitable Fund, and the Kindred Spirits Society of the Thomas Cole National Historic Site.

 

This project is supported by a Market New York grant awarded to the Thomas Cole National Historic Site from Empire State Development and I LOVE NY/New York State's Division of Tourism through the Regional Economic Development Council initiative.

 

 


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