Hold Your Horses! – Glenview Mansion, Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, New York

2014


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16 Nov 2014

222 visits

Hold Your Horses! – Glenview Mansion, Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, New York

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16 Nov 2014

250 visits

Insert Guinevere – Glenview Mansion, Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, New York

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16 Nov 2014

290 visits

Not Cutting Any Corners – Glenview Mansion, Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, New York

The Hudson River Museum, located in Trevor Park in Yonkers, New York, is the largest museum in Westchester County. Central to its history is the Glenview Mansion, a house built in 1877, once the home of John Bond Trevor an American financier and Wall Street pioneer. Home of the museum for 45 years from 1929, the house now forms a large part of the Hudson River Museum. It contains six period rooms displaying furniture and decor from that era. In 1972 it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

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16 Nov 2014

263 visits

The Inside Story – Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, New York

Red Grooms’ dazzling installation was originally created in 1979 as a working gift shop for the Hudson River Museum. After extensive restoration in 2007 by Tom Burckhardt, this beloved Westchester landmark has been reinstalled in its own gallery. The Bookstore incorporates many of the themes that run through Grooms’ best work: the marriage of art and commerce, the clash of high and low, colorful New York characters, and an inviting three-dimensional space that envelops and transports the viewer. The Bookstore deftly joins into a work of art two of the favorite haunts of New York City book lover – the Isaac Mendoza [second-hand] Book Company, long a fixture of lower Manhattan’s Ann Street and which closed its doors in February, 1990 – and the Pierpont Morgan Library. In terms of materials, The Bookstore was one of a limited number of pieces in which Grooms incorporated vinyl figures. The figures are painted from the inside, a technique inspired by medieval glass-painting techniques, and then are stuffed and sewn. Tens of thousands of visitors passed through The Bookstore, and, embraced by its environment, it inevitably began to suffer ravages caused by its popularity. Accordingly, plans were developed to restore the work and Grooms enthusiastically approved the conservation efforts and changes, which include altering the position of the two entrances to fit the new gallery space, the creation of a central island that incorporated the original vinyl patrons, and the design of a painted floor. Grooms remains cautious of making too many changes to a piece that reflects a vision of New York in the 1970s, already passing into history. "An artist can overwork a thing – you can ruin the delicacy of a past moment very easily …I think it’s better to keep it like it was – primitive in that way."

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16 Nov 2014

302 visits

The Upper Storey – Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, New York

Red Grooms’ dazzling installation was originally created in 1979 as a working gift shop for the Hudson River Museum. After extensive restoration in 2007 by Tom Burckhardt, this beloved Westchester landmark has been reinstalled in its own gallery. The Bookstore incorporates many of the themes that run through Grooms’ best work: the marriage of art and commerce, the clash of high and low, colorful New York characters, and an inviting three-dimensional space that envelops and transports the viewer. The Bookstore deftly joins into a work of art two of the favorite haunts of New York City book lover – the Isaac Mendoza [second-hand] Book Company, long a fixture of lower Manhattan’s Ann Street and which closed its doors in February, 1990 – and the Pierpont Morgan Library. In terms of materials, The Bookstore was one of a limited number of pieces in which Grooms incorporated vinyl figures. The figures are painted from the inside, a technique inspired by medieval glass-painting techniques, and then are stuffed and sewn. Tens of thousands of visitors passed through The Bookstore, and, embraced by its environment, it inevitably began to suffer ravages caused by its popularity. Accordingly, plans were developed to restore the work and Grooms enthusiastically approved the conservation efforts and changes, which include altering the position of the two entrances to fit the new gallery space, the creation of a central island that incorporated the original vinyl patrons, and the design of a painted floor. Grooms remains cautious of making too many changes to a piece that reflects a vision of New York in the 1970s, already passing into history. "An artist can overwork a thing – you can ruin the delicacy of a past moment very easily …I think it’s better to keep it like it was – primitive in that way."

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16 Nov 2014

266 visits

"The Book Store" – Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, New York

Red Grooms’ dazzling installation was originally created in 1979 as a working gift shop for the Hudson River Museum. After extensive restoration in 2007 by Tom Burckhardt, this beloved Westchester landmark has been reinstalled in its own gallery. The Bookstore incorporates many of the themes that run through Grooms’ best work: the marriage of art and commerce, the clash of high and low, colorful New York characters, and an inviting three-dimensional space that envelops and transports the viewer. The Bookstore deftly joins into a work of art two of the favorite haunts of New York City book lover – the Isaac Mendoza [second-hand] Book Company, long a fixture of lower Manhattan’s Ann Street and which closed its doors in February, 1990 – and the Pierpont Morgan Library. In terms of materials, The Bookstore was one of a limited number of pieces in which Grooms incorporated vinyl figures. The figures are painted from the inside, a technique inspired by medieval glass-painting techniques, and then are stuffed and sewn. Tens of thousands of visitors passed through The Bookstore, and, embraced by its environment, it inevitably began to suffer ravages caused by its popularity. Accordingly, plans were developed to restore the work and Grooms enthusiastically approved the conservation efforts and changes, which include altering the position of the two entrances to fit the new gallery space, the creation of a central island that incorporated the original vinyl patrons, and the design of a painted floor. Grooms remains cautious of making too many changes to a piece that reflects a vision of New York in the 1970s, already passing into history. "An artist can overwork a thing – you can ruin the delicacy of a past moment very easily …I think it’s better to keep it like it was – primitive in that way."

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16 Nov 2014

252 visits

Stuffed Bird – Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, New York

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16 Nov 2014

235 visits

High Wire Act – Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, New York

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14 Nov 2014

1 favorite

249 visits

"My Dog Has Fleas" #2 – Grounds for Sculpture, Hamilton Township, Trenton, New Jersey

World-renowned American artist, Seward Johnson recreates life in vividly realistic bronze. With more than 350 of his bronze figures featured in private collections and museums in the U.S., Canada, Europe and Asia, Johnson is well-known for the many sculptures located in public places, including Rockefeller Center, Pacific Place, Hong Kong, Les Halles in Paris, and Via Condotti in Rome. These sculptures depict people engaged in everyday activities. This "Celebrating the Familiar" sculpture series has brought a unique voice to the world of public art, encouraging conversation and turning heads wherever they appear. In the artists’ words, "What I’m trying to do is draw attention to the simple pleasures, to show how much fun life is. That’s why there are so many humorous details in my work." My Dog Has Fleas, a sardonic look at a folk singer, is a life-size bronze sculpture cast by Seward Johnson in 1996.
556 items in total