Thursday, July 16, 2015

New York State (Day Three) - Bethel, NY (Woodstock Music & Arts Fair) - Vassar College - SUNY at New Platz - Florence Griswold Museum, Old Lyme, CT

Thursday, July 16, 2015 - starting at the Howard Johnson in Binghamton, NY, down to Bethel, NY (Woodstock Music & Arts Fair), over to The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, Vassar College (Poughkeepsie, NY), back to the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art, SUNY at New Platz, NY, then down to 84 and east to the Florence Griswold Museum, Old Lyme, CT, then HOME!!!:

455 miles; 8 hours 20 minutes.

It actually didn't occur to me to visit Bethel, NY until I was heading east towards 84 (well, that and the fact that I was listening to Woodstock Two [2 cds] this morning). Hwy 97 runs along a beautiful river:




The former site of the Woodstock Music & Arts Fair ["Woodstock"] is now called the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, and is a Very Corporate Organization, ranging from the neat and clean parking areas:

to the Offical Merchandise:

to the Schedule of Performing Artists (I'm glad to see that Neil is making a return visit on July 17):


At least the Box Office sign gives a shout-out to days-gone-by:

I didn't go originally - in 1969, at age 16, I was just a year too young. But it is nice to finally make the pilgrimage.

It was an hour-and-a-half to get over to the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, Vassar College (Poughkeepsie, NY). In my app, they have 14 works by 9 artists. They have two lovely rooms for their Hudson River School artists:


Highlights include:
Two by Jasper Francis Cropsey:
"Evening at Paestum", 1856

"Artist Sketching on Greenwood Lake", 1869


Three by Sanford Robinson Gifford:
"Sketch of Gebel Haridi, on the Nile", 1869

"Tappan Zee", 1880

"Sunrise on the Bernese Alps"


John Frederick Kensett, "Berkeley Rock, Newport", 1856


Homer Dodge Martin, "Glen Ellis Falls", 1862


Aaron Shattuck, "Sunset at Lancaster, New Hampshire", 1859


plus lovely paintings by Thomas Cole, Frederic Edwin Church, early George Inness, Asher B. Durand, William Hart, and Worthington Whittredge.

Elsewhere in the museum are works by:
Hubert Robert, "The Octavian Gate and Fish Market", 1784


Jackson Pollock, "Number 10", 1950

I was a little surprised by the vertical orientation - I am used to his work being primarily horizontal.

Of course I had to photograph the stainless steel sculpture (in their Sculpture Garden) - Frank Stella, "Etang d'ambach", 1992


Um, this is the junk metal I pulled out of the Gloucester Woods a week ago!



I have given a lot of space to Loeb Art Center because the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art, although open, had nothing-I-like on display. SUNY at New Platz does have some pretty cool architecture, though:


I got to the Florence Griswold Museum (Old Lyme, CT) by 4. Although they have 7 works by 5 artists I love, none were on display. They did have a nice exhibit - All the Sea Knows: Marine Art from the Museum of the City of New York, with paintings by Edward Moran and Jasper Cropsey (no photos of the exhibit). The Florence Griswold House has a lovely painting by Childe Hassam, "Ten Pound Island", ca. 1896-99:

This was fun to see because Wendy and I went on a Cape Ann cruise last Friday evening, organized by the Thacher Island Association, and we cruised right past (and talked about) Ten Pound Island. Sometimes things all work together!

The Lieutenant River runs right behind the house - Wikipedia says "A number of noted American impressionist artists, including Childe Hassam, painted views of the river while staying at the Florence Griswold House in Old Lyme."


I then headed home - Wendy was coming off the Vineyard, and she wound up 2 cars behind me on 128 North in Danvers!!. Thank you, God, for a great day!

I don't remember the albums I played, but I think The Allman Brothers - Eat A Peach was one of them!

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

New York State (Day Two) - Lorenzo Historic Site - Seward House Museum - Memorial Art Gallery

Wednesday, July 15, 2015 - starting at the Super 8 in East Syracuse, NY, down to the Lorenzo Historic Site (Cazenovia, NY), over to the Seward House Museum (Auburn, NY), west to the Memorial Art Gallery (Rochester, NY), then spend the night down at the Howard Johnson in Binghamton, NY:

276 miles; 4 hours 54 minutes.

The Lorenzo State Historic Site is 30 minutes down the road from my hotel, so I got there a little early for their 10 AM opening:



The Lorenzo State Historic Site has a few wonderful pieces - the best is Sanford Robinson Gifford "La Marina Grande, Capri", 1861, which the Metropolitam Museum of Art had cleaned for their exhibit in 2003/2004:

link to the Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibit page

Although I was not allowed to take photographs of the art, I was allowed to take pictures of the Guide Book pages:



WOW - new pictures are:
Sanford Gifford, "Twilight Mountain", ca. 1860
David Johnson, "Echo Lake, Franconia Notch, N.H.", 1867
Jasper Cropsey, "Greenwood Lake", mid 19th century
plus lovely paintings by Edward Moran and Dwight Williams.

40 miles west, in Auburn, NY, is the Seward House Museum. It was the home of William Henry Seward; he served as Secretary of State in the Lincoln and Johnson administrations, and is primarily known for pushing through legislation enabling the purchase of Alaska from Russia in 1867. It is a lovely home - my primary reason for visiting is Thomas Cole's "Portage Falls on the Genesee", 1839. Although the original is too valuable to display, a museum-quality replica is on display, and, although no photos are allowed, nobody said that I couldn't take a picture of the poster-in-the-bookshop:

and nobody said that I couldn't take a picture of a book!


Another beautiful piece is "Landscape Painting" by William Hart.

There is a room devoted to the Lincoln Assassination, and the conspiracy behind it. I was struck by the picture of Lewis Powell, who had been sent to assassinate (then Secretary of State) Seward - he looks like any young man in his 20s today!



And then another 60 miles west is the Memorial Art Gallery in Rochester, NY:


They have an extensive collection of Hudson River School artists (plus 3 Monet's, 1 Winslow Homer, and 1 engraving by JMW Turner), but they are remodeling, so not everything is on display. Highlights include:

Albert Bierstadt, "The Sierras Near Lake Tahoe, California", 1865


John Frederick Kensett, "A Showery Day, Lake George", ca. 1860


Tiffany Studios, "Sunset Scene", after 1915


Claude Monet, "Waterloo Bridge, Veiled Sun", 1903


and, in a style reminiscent of William Stanley Haseltine, Felix Ziem, "The Yellow Sail"


Hubert Robert, Figures Amidst Ruins", ca. 1775


and a nice Henry Moore in the courtyard: Working Model for Three Piece No. 3: Vertebrae. 1968


I finished the day driving 160 miles (2-and-1/2 hours) down to the Howard Johnson's in Binghamton, NY (part of the Wyndham group, which owns Super 8). Two hours watching "Airplane Repo" on The Discovery Channel (then a good night's sleep). Thank you, God, for a great day!

The main music today was the Woodstock soundtrack - hey, it sounded great, and I'm traveling through New York State!


Tuesday, July 14, 2015

New York State (Day One) - OK Slip Falls - Adirondack Museum

Tuesday, July 14, 2015 - starting at the Super 8 in White River Junction, VT, over to the Adirondack Museum, then spend the night at the Super 8 in East Syracuse, NY:

281 miles; 5 hours 45 minutes.

The swimming pool in White River Junction looks as if it has seen better days:


Glad to see that I'm not the only one picking up scrap metal:


Up in the Adirondacks, the Hudson River runs alongside Route 28:



Since my driving was only going to take 5 hr 45 min, I could easily do some activity for a couple of hours - how about "Waterfalls in Adirondack State Park"? Google "Waterfalls in Adirondack State Park map", and click on the 2nd entry (Waterfalls in New York); scroll down to the "Waterfall Map" section, and zoom-in on the Blue Mountain Lake area (that is the Adirondack Museum):


Clicking on the red icon labels it as "OK Slip Falls" - it is at the end of a new 3-mile Trail, with a parking area right on Route 28 between North River and Indian Lake - the road I'm driving on anyway!!


The trail is very nice


with excellent maintenance through some boggy areas:


And the OK Slip Falls are beautiful!


I'm disappointed that MapMyWalk will not start-up without an internet connection/cell phone reception. I noticed this yesterday at the Lincoln Woods Visitor Center - I had to drive a few miles down the Kancamagus Highway toward Lincoln to get a signal, start MapMyWalk (but don't push "Start Workout"), and return to the parking lot - then "Start Workout" from there. MapMyWalk will keep track of your position (latitude/longitude/elevation) using the iPhone chip, so it is ok when the iPhone loses signal in the woods. Unfortunately, cell phone coverage is very spotty up in the Adirondack Park - these are maps from opensignal.com for North-of-Boston:

and (same scale) Route 28 in Adirondack Park heading toward Blue Mountain Lake:

Maybe something to think about when choosing a vacation home/place to retire?

Anyway, after a few hours hiking, I was back on the road - but it got a little confusing - what direction was I going??


The Adirondack Museum is actually a complex of buildings


and although they have work in their collection by:

Alfred Thompson Bricher
Thomas Cole
Jasper Francis Cropsey
Asher B. Durand
Sanford Robinson Gifford (2)
Winslow Homer (2)
David Johnson (3)
John Frederick Kensett (3)
Edmund Darch Lewis
William Trost Richards (3)
Thomas Worthington Whittredge

none were on display - they had "Weaving a Legacy: Mohawk Basketry Traditions" instead.

At least I had lunch-with-a-nice-view!


and it was beautiful driving southwest on my way to Syracuse:



and I had a great wilderness photograph in my room at the Super 8 in East Syracuse!


Dinner at Friendly's ($5 bacon cheeseburger, plus a chocolate Fribble!), and The Discovery Channel for 2 hours ("Deadliest Catch" and "Land Rush" [four people staking claims to 10-20 acres in Alaska, and building shelters]). Thank you, God, for a great day!

Um, I forget what music I listened to today, but it was GREAT!