This week's calendar (1/17-1/23/2022)

 

Winter of Weird: An Online Exhibition
Starting Monday, January 17 and continuing every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday through mid-February • Join Clermont’s staff via Facebook and Instagram as they highlight unusual, interesting, and quirky things inside the mansion! This curated series of social media posts will showcase objects the public never gets to see – or things they might walk past without a second thought!  • Facebook: Clermont State Historic Site, Instagram: @clermontfriends


The Statewide 2020 Greenway Plan: Progress Reports and Mid-Hudson Projects
Tuesday, January 18, 2022 • 1pm • Virtual roundtable hosted by Winnakee-Dutchess Trails • Discussion on Scenic Hudson’s Truss Bridge Initiative & Dutchess County Trails with Jeff Anzevino, Scenic Hudson & Dutchess County Urban Trail with Matt Dutcavich, DCDPW or Emily Dozier, DCTC followed by a Trails Roundtable Open Forum • Free • https://www.winnakee.org/upcoming-winnakee-events/


2022 Resolutions: The Roosevelts and You
Wednesday, January 19, 2022 • 2pm • Virtual • Keeping those New Year's resolutions can be difficult even in the best of times. Fortify your 2022 resolutions with wisdom and insight from two people who saw this country through some of the worst times of the 20th century, Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt. Hosted by FDR Library Education Specialist Jeffrey Urbin. • YouTube, Facebook, Twitter


"History and Future of Grain Races"
Wednesday, January 19, 2022 • 7pm • Virtual lecture hosted by the Hudson River Maritime Museum • For over 200 years grain was shipped by sailing vessel around the world, and in May we're celebrating by hosting the competitive and climate-friendly Northeast Grain Race. This lecture will share the history of sail freight and what to expect of the race later this year • $7, free for members of the HRMM • LINK


How the Esopus Munsee People Got Through Winter Before Electricity
Wednesday, January 19, 2022 • 7pm • via Zoom • In this illustrated lecture, author Evan Pritchard (Mi’kmaq and Celtic descent) will introduce us to the ancient and icy history of winters long past in the greater Phoenicia area. Evan will focus on the winter life ways of the Esopus Munsee, the Algonquian-speaking people who have long inhabited the Esopus river valley. Using maps, photos, slides, stories, place name interpretations and helpful diagrams, Evan will explore what Munsee village life in Phoenicia must have been like in winter, including travel, fishing, hunting, agriculture, foraging, controlled burning, shelter, stories, cosmologies, vision quest and much more. Q + A to follow. • http://phoenicialibrary.org 


January Nature Night: Wildlife Connections
Thursday, January 20, 5:30 - 7pm • Virtual • Join the Columbia Land Conservancy and wildlife camera specialist Sally Naser of CR Wildlife Cams to learn how trail cameras work, tips on where to set them up and how to get started in your own backyard. Sally will share stories from the field, including beautiful photos and videos of wildlife in western and central Massachusetts. • Register at: https://clctrust.org/event/jannaturenight22/


Art Omi Presents: Borders, Identity and Constructs in Architecture
Thursday, January 20, 2022 • 6:30pm • A virtual conversation with Art Omi: Architecture residency alumni about recent projects, tackling notions of geopolitical identity and systems. Featuring Miguel Braceli (2021), presenting his recent project, Here Lies A Flag; Dream the Combine (Jennifer Newsom and Tom Carruthers, 2018)—presenting their recent project Columbus, Columbia, Colombo, Colón; and BASE Studio (Felipe Sepúlveda, 2019 and Bárbara Barreda, 2018)—presenting their recent project Flocking Tejas. Moderated by Julia van den Hout, Art Omi: Architecture Curator and Program Director • This virtual event is free to attend, but pre-registration is required - register, here.


Print, Gossip & Duel: Alexander Hamilton & the Art of Political Combat
Thursday, January 20, 2022 • 7-8pm • Virtual lecture hosted by the Putnam History Museum • Don't let Alexander Hamilton's polished manners fool you: he was a political brawler at a time when the new nation's survival was at stake. The Founding Fathers didn't have cable tv or social media, but they did have their own battlegrounds and tactics to make sure their vision of the republic won. Dr. David Head explains how early American politicians like Hamilton battled each other in public, in private, and, sometimes, on the dueling ground • LINK


Owl Prowl
Saturday, January 22, 2022 • 7-9pm • Hudson Highland Nature Museum’s Wildlife Education Center, 25 Boulevard, Cornwall-on-Hudson • Children must be age 7 or older to participate • HHNM Members: $10 per person; $15 per non-member with prepaid registration required: Update: SOLD OUT! Link


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ONGOING

House Tours at Olana
Fridays - Sundays from 11am to 3pm • Olana State Historic Site, Hudson • Olana's 250-acres will continue to be open and free to roam every day from 8am - sunset • Visit Olana.org for more information.

Mask up indoors, again
Through February 2022 • Masks are required to be worn in all indoor public places unless businesses or venues implement a vaccine requirement. “This determination is based on the state's weekly seven-day case rate as well as increasing hospitalizations … The new measure brings added layers of mitigation during the holidays when more time is spent indoors shopping, gathering, and visiting holiday-themed destinations,” according to a state press release. The requirement applies to all non-private residences, including office spaces. If a business, office space, or venue does not require proof of vaccination as a condition of entry, everyone must wear masks at all times regardless of vaccination status except when eating, drinking, or alone in an enclosed room • More info

“WinterOver?”
On view through Spring 2022 • Time & Space, Ltd. 434 Columbia Street, Hudson • Featuring the sculpture of Pamela Blum, Jeremy K. Bullis, Nurya Chana, Dan Devine, Mimi Graminski, Chiarra Hughes-Mba, Linda Mussmann, Gelah Penn, and Katharine Umsted. George Spencer, the curator of “WinterOver?”, asked the artists to produce outdoor sculptures that will deteriorate over time. With the pieces standing in the yard of TSL for 6 months they will be exposed to nature’s extreme elements. Heat, wind, rain, snow, insects, mold, and mushrooms will cause the work to bend, crack, warp, fade and dissolve. Spencer uses this deterioration as a metaphor for the destructive changes (like the attempt to overturn the 2020 election, the countless unnecessary deaths resulting from the incompetent response to COVID-19, the attack on the Capitol, and so much more) occurring in the world around us. In the early Spring of 2022 the artists will be asked to revisit their work and assess the damage done during the Winter months. Is their sculpture still standing; do only fragments remain; it is disfigured but still recognizable? (Much like the questions Spencer asks about our Country.) What then is the individual artist’s response to these changes? Do they rebuild; build something new; make repairs; or leave things as they are? (These are the questions we must constantly ask ourselves about life.) • http://timeandspace.org/

What Comes After
On view through March 19, 2022 • Saturdays, noon to 5pm; Third Fridays: 1/21, 2/18, 3/18, 4 to 6pm • Maxon Mills, Wassaic • Curated by Eve Biddle, Bowie Zunino, Jeff Barnett-Winsby, and Will Hutnick,What Comes After, the Wassaic Project’s 2021–2022 winter exhibition, presents ten artists throughout the seven floors of Maxon Mills who are, in one way or another, reflecting on life in the aftermath — no cause, all effect. • LINK

EDITOR’S NOTE: Refresh this link often! Events are added + updated throughout the week, but this link stays the same: hvny.info/calendar/this-week


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COMING UP:

Women In Science Winter Speaker Series: Demolishing Dams and Stereotypes
Wednesday, January 26, 2022 • 3-4 pm • DEC's Hudson River Estuary Program for a virtual Women in Science Winter Speaker Series, six free webinars which take place January - March 2022. Meet and learn from scientists, community leaders, and environmental educators who work at the intersection of research, education, and environmental justice. This webinar features Laura Wildman, P.E., who will discuss the women who are removing dams and restoring our rivers • Learn more and register • Continues Feb. 2, 3-4 p.m. with A Love Affair in STEM, with Shihadah “Shay” Saleem. Learn how a Black woman’s love of marine science blossomed into a holistic passion for STEM education, empowerment, and community elevation for New York City youth. Learn more and register • Field-Based Learning Connects and Empowers Students, Feb. 16, 3-4 p.m., Explore how youth on the Hudson and in Greenland are working to bring hands-on, intergenerational learning into their education with Margie Turrin. Learn more and register • Turning Data Into Action, March 2, 3-4 p.m., Hear about ways that scientists and advocates are working together to bring about a cleaner environment while letting data tell the story with Tracy Brown. Learn more and register • Reaching Local Communities With Equity, Access, and Inclusion in Environmental Education, with Eli Caref, March 9, 3-4 p.m. Learn how bringing more equity and inclusion into the environmental field is the best way to reach our communities. Learn more and register.

Germantown History Talk: Reformed Cemetery on Main Street
Thursday, January 27, 2022 • 6:30-8pm • Virtual event via Zoom • Free • LINK

Call for Seeds for National Seed Swap Day
The Morton Seed Library is planning a virtual seed swap for Saturday, January 29, 2022 (National Seed Swap Day). Did "your garden grow"? Did you save seeds? Would you like to share? Please contact sandy@mortonrhinecliff.org with your inventory by January 15 and it will be added to the master list before the swap on the 29.

Bald Eagle Viewing
Saturdays, February 5 and 12, 2022 • $6-$12, free for healthcare workers, members, library pass holders, and children under age 5 • Birding experts from the Constitution Marsh and the Putnam Highlands Audubon Society will be at Boscobel’s Belvedere, high above the Hudson River to help you spot soaring and roosting bald eagles. BYO binoculars or scopes • Tickets and more details available at https://boscobel.org/events/eagle-viewing/

Hudson Valley Hard Cider Virtual Talk & Tasting
Saturday, February 5, 2022 • 5 - 6 pm • Love cider? New to cider? Or just curious about apples and cider history & heritage? Then this event will satisfy all of your curiosity! Featuring Dutchess County authors Dan Pucci & Craig Cavallo, and ciders from Metal House Cider, Esopus NY. All proceeds from this event support the Putnam History Museum. • Tickets are available from $15 - $100, with or without cider. • For more information & registration: Link

In Conversation with Gary Shteyngart
Sunday, February 6, 2022 • 2:30 - 3:30pm • Boardman Road Branch Library, Poughkeepsie •Free with registration required • Best-selling author Gary Shteyngart brings his unique humor and satirical perspectives to this casual library gathering. Copies of his new novel set in the Hudson Valley, Our Country Friends, will be available for purchase and signing. This program will not be recorded. Please note that masks will be required for all attendees, regardless of vaccination status. • Register here

“Lost Amusement Parks of the Hudson Valley”
Wednesday, February 9, 2021 • 7pm • Virtual event hosted by the Hudson River Maritime Museum • local historians Wes & Barbara Gottlock, authors of the book Lost Amusement Parks of the Hudson Valley, will highlight some of the impactful parks that reigned as recreation meccas for millions of people for over 50 years • $7, free for HRMM members • LINK

HUDSON JAZZ FESTIVAL 2022
February 10-13 & February 17-20, 2022 • Hudson Hall, 327 Warren Street, Hudson • Expanded, two-weekend festival features performers The Baylor Project, Alexis Morrast, Daniel J. Watts, Warren Wolf, Jazzmeia Horn, and Jimmy Greene; film, visual art, and spoken word/music partnership with Louis Armstrong House Museum & Archives • Single event tickets start at $25, Weekend Festival Passes (Valentine's Weekend or President's Weekend) start at $68. Tickets and information at hudsonhall.org or by phone (518) 822-1438.


Friday Night Film Series: “The Wedding Singer” (1998)
Friday, February 11, 2021 • Bardavon, Poughkeepsie • Followed by “Akeelah and the Bee” (2006) February 25 at UPAC, “A League of Their Own” (1992) March 18 at the Bardavon, “Monterey Pop” (1968) on April 8 at UPAC • $6 all seats, free for members • https://bit.ly/BardavonFridays2021

D’Arcy Simpson Art Works Presents: Looking Up
Saturday, February 12, 2022 • 5 - 8pm • Free • D'Arcy Simpson Art Works, 409 Warren Street, Hudson • D’Arcy Simpson Art Works is pleased to feature new work by Jeremy Bullis and Michael Larry Simpson in Looking Up, opening on Saturday, February 12th, 2022. The large scale color field paintings by Simpson shown alongside Bullis’ ethereal kinetic mobiles fashions an immersive atmosphere of movement filling this intimate gallery with music for the eyes. In this exhibition, each artist explores ideas of movement, balance, tension and harmony within their own practices of composition and construction • https://www.darcysimpsonartworks.com/

Oh Deer! How Deer Shape Forests in the Catskills & Beyond
Wednesday, February 16, 2022 • 7pm • Free • Virtual event hosted by the Cary Institute • Explore the history of deer in the Catskills, how deer influence the composition and health of our regional forests, and strategies to mitigate deer impacts • Link

The Silent Film Shorts of Laurel and Hardy
Sunday, March 6, 2022 • 2pm • $6 • Rosendale Theatre, 408 Main Street, Rosendale • Live piano accompaniment by Marta Waterman • rosendaletheatre.org

REFRESH: This link is updated with new events, change of dates + cancellations. The link’s always the same: hvny.info/calendar/this-week + Submit your event. It’s free: hvny.info/share-your-event

 

As always, and especially with COVID, event info may change – make sure to check with the venue before you go.


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Deadline for HVNY’s weekly newsletter is 5pm on Fridays at least a week before your event. Email press releases and story ideas to hello@hvny.info.


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Information for everyday living in the Hudson Valley, New York • hvny.info

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This week's calendar ( 1/24 - 1/30/2022)

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This week's calendar ( 1/10-1/16/21/2022)