This week's calendar ( 1/3-1/9/21/2022)

 

Art Exhibition Reception: “Some Soft Thoughts” from Becca Van K
On view through Monday, January 3, 2022 • Window On Hudson, 43 South 3rd Street, Hudson • Window On Hudson proudly ends the year with “Some Soft Thoughts” by mixed-media fiber artist Becca Van K. Van K has filled the windows and indoor exhibition space with a large grouping of woven objects including wooden chairs, folding chairs, wall hangings, and much more. These functioning furniture pieces are created with bright neon colored yarns, beads, and fake fur, creating the atmosphere of a late 90’s techno club VIP room heavily which is referencing the Memphis interior design style. • If you can not attend a reception but would like to see the indoor works please contact jeremy@windowonhudson.org.

Westchester County Inauguration Ceremony
Monday, January 3, 2022 • 2 pm •  Virtual Ceremony: Facebook.com/westchestergov

▲ Premiere: A Look Inside Eleanor Roosevelt's Wallet
January 5, 2022, 2pm • Virtual event hosted by the FDR Library • The things a person chooses to carry inside their wallet can offer clues about many different aspects of their life. Explore what the contents of Eleanor Roosevelt's wallet reveals about her with Supervisory Museum Curator Herman Eberhardt • YouTube + Facebook

Women In Science Winter Speaker Series
Wednesday, January 5, 2022 • 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.

The six webinars include:

  • Predicting Sewage Pollution Persistence in the Hudson River Estuary, presented by Elise Mckenna Myers, Ph.D.
    Find out if it is safe to swim in the Hudson River.
    Jan. 5, 3-4 p.m.Learn more and register

  • Demolishing Dams and Stereotypes, with Laura Wildman, P.E.
    Meet the women who are removing dams and restoring our rivers.
    Jan. 26, 3-4 p.m.Learn more and register

  • 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.
    Feb. 2, 3-4 p.m.Learn more and register

  • Field-Based Learning Connects and Empowers Students, with Margie Turrin. Explore how youth on the Hudson and in Greenland are working to bring hands-on, intergenerational learning into their education.
    Feb. 16, 3-4 p.m.Learn more and register

  • Turning Data Into Action, with Tracy Brown. Hear about ways that scientists and advocates are working together to bring about a cleaner environment while letting data tell the story.
    March 2, 3-4 p.m.Learn more and register

  • Reaching Local Communities With Equity, Access, and Inclusion in Environmental Education, with Eli Caref. Learn how bringing more equity and inclusion into the environmental field is the best way to reach our communities.
    March 9, 3-4 p.m.Learn more and register

Clinton's 13th Annual Christmas Tree Bonfire
Saturday, January 8, 2022 • 5:30pm • Bring your Christmas Trees to Frances J. Mark Memorial Park in the Town of Clinton for the Town's 13th Annual Christmas Tree Bon Fire celebration. We will have refreshments and lots of good cheer to ring in the new year.  It's a BYOC - Bring your own chair- event, so come and join in to meet friends and neighbors to gather around the bon fire. Drop off your ornament-free Christmas tree anytime before January 8 at the Clinton Town Highway garage by the wood chip pile in front of the fence. You can also bring your live Christmas tree to the celebration on January 8 • LINK

FW Murnau’s The Last Laugh
Sunday, January 9, 2022 • 2pm • $6 • The Rosendale Theatre, 408 Main Street • Murnau’s silent film The Last Laugh tells the tragic story of a self-confident hotel doorman, brilliantly portrayed by Emil Jannings, who is demoted to lavatory attendant because he is considered 'too old'. Janning’s entire identity is based on his position and especially on his uniform, which symbolizes power and respectability to his lower-middle-class community of family and friends. Proud of his position, responsibilities and uniform, and shocked by his demotion, humiliated, the old man struggles to carry on with his life. The question is: who will have 'the last laugh'? • 845-658-8989.

Richard Haas: Circles in Space
On view through January 9, 2022 • Hudson River Museum, 511 Warburton Ave., Yonkers • Exhibition explores the intersections between abstraction, color theory and the geometry of the universe • hrm.org/richard-haas


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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:

Sermons in Stone: The Stone Walls of New England and New York
Wednesday, January 12, 2022 • 7-8pm • Virtual event hosted by the Putnam History Museum • What do we know about stone walls? About the people who built them, and why? Stone walls are not simply monuments to the skill of Yankee farmers. The historical record makes clear that many were built by enslaved people, Native Americans, indentured servants, and children. Written by Susan Allport, Sermons in Stone is the illuminating history of the walls, a story that begins in the Ice Age and that has been shaped by the fencing dilemmas of the nineteenth century, by conflicts between Native Americans and colonists over land use, by American waves of immigration and suburbanization • LINK

Discovery of a Masterpiece
Wednesday, January 12, 2022 • 7-8pm • Virtual event via Zoom hosted by the Tivoli Free Library, the Staatsburg Library, Morton Memorial Library and the Starr Library • Mallory Mortillaro shares the story of how she uncovered a Rodin masterpiece that had been lost to the art world since the 1930s, becoming one of the biggest art finds in recent history • Register at bit.ly/DiscoveryMasterpiece

Weird Science with Professor Sparks
Saturday, January 15, 2022 • 10:30am • Free • 117 Harry Howard Ave., Hudson • Come spend the morning exploring the science of fire! Professor Sparks and her robot canine companion, Spot 2000, will present an interactive program that is full of surprises! After the program make your own “slime” to take home! Only Professor Sparks can make learning about science this much fun. This hands-on program is appropriate for children ages 5 and up • http://www.fasnyfiremuseum.com/museum-events

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

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.

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

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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This week's calendar (12/27/2021 - 1/2/2022)