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The Hudson River Museum, located in Trevor Park in Yonkers, New York, is the largest museum in Westchester County, [2] and features the only public planetarium in the county. While often considered an art museum due to its extensive collection of Hudson River School paintings, the museum also presents exhibits on the history , science and ...
Hudson River Maritime Museum: Kingston: Ulster Mid-Hudson Maritime History of shipping, boating and industry on the Hudson River and its tributaries; operates the Rondout Light for tours Hudson River Museum: Yonkers: Westchester Lower Hudson Multiple Art, natural history, planetarium Hunting Tavern Museum Andes: Delaware Central Leatherstocking ...
Ever Rest is the home and studio of Jasper F. Cropsey, a painter in the Hudson River School. The historic house museum is located in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York and was built in 1835. Cropsey acquired the property in 1886 and built an artist studio addition which was completed in 1888.
The museum is located in the former Washington Bath House and was founded by Marylou Whitney. It is related to the Saratoga Performing Arts Center and also provides dance classes and master classes through the Lewis A. Swyer School for the Arts, which hosts the New York State Summer School of the Arts during July and August. [3] [4] [5]
Olana State Historic Site is a historic house museum and landscape in Greenport, New York, near the city of Hudson.The estate was home to Frederic Edwin Church (1826–1900), one of the major figures in the Hudson River School of landscape painting.
The museum, which opened in 2003, is situated near the banks of the Hudson River in Beacon, New York. Dia Beacon's facility, the Riggio Galleries, is a former Nabisco box-printing facility that was renovated by Dia with artist Robert Irwin and architects Alan Koch, Lyn Rice, Galia Solomonoff , and Linda Taalman, then of OpenOffice.
Trevor Park was established soon afterwards. The house stood vacant for six years until it was opened as the Museum of Science and Art, [2] with the collection established at Yonkers City Hall in 1919 for future historical use. [18] In 1948 it became the Hudson River Museum, [19] renting the house and the land from the city for $1 a year. [18]
Reviewing "World is Round," a group show at the Hudson River Museum, Vivien Raynor wrote in the New York Times: " Although he believes that panorama in Western art came out of a 'need to paint battles,' Bill Sullivan himself offers a view of the Palisades at sunset, which is no less engaging for being a plain old école de Hudson school landscape."