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Cupboards and Roses

Turkana Odyssey

Berkshire Property Agents

Filler - No Boundaries

Seven Salon Spa

Travel Essentials

Amtrak Empire Service between Albany, Hudson or Rhinecliff, NY and Penn Station, NYC

Amtrak 449 Lake Shore Limited between Pittsfield and South Station, Boston

Bonanza Bus Lines between Williamstown, Lee, Stockbridge, Great Barrington, MA, or Canaan, CT and Port Authority Bus Terminal, NYC

Mega-bus between Albany and Ridgewood, N.J. and Penn Station, NYC

Metro-North Railroad between Wassaic, Dover Plains, or Poughkeepsie, NY and Harlem (125th Street)  or Grand Central Station, NYC

Peter Pan Bus Lines between *Albany, Great Barrington, *Lee, Lenox, *Pittsfield, Stockbridge, Williamstown and Boston South Station and Boston Logan Airport  (*greater frequency, better fares)

Weather Underground
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Gas Prices
The price of gas at many of the stations in your zip code and those immediately surrounding it. 

Historic Homes, Museums & Gardens

Adams, MA
Susan B. Anthony Birthplace & Museum

Annandale-on-Hudson, NY
Rural Intelligence Road Trips
Montgomery Place
A 434-acre intact Hudson River Valley estate

Athens, NY

Howard Hall Farm a laboratory for restoration training

Austerlitz, NY

Old Austerlitz

Catskill, NY

Cedar Grove home of Hudson River School founder, painter Thomas Cole

Germantown, NY

Clermont an early Hudson River estate

Rural Intelligence Road Trips
Olana home of Hudson River School painter Frederic Church

Hudson, NY

The American Museum of Firefighting

Hyde Park, NY

Rural Intelligence Road Trips
Home of U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt

Rural Intelligence Road Trips
The Vanderbilt Mansion relic of the Gilded Age

Kent, CT

Sloane Stanley Museum artist’s studio and tool collection

Kinderhook, NY

U. S. President Martin Van Buren house

Lenox, MA

Rural Intelligence Road Trips
The Mount Edith Wharton’s estate and gardens

Frelinghuysen Morris House & Studio Cubist paintings in a Modernist house

Ventfort Hall the Gilded Age Museum

Old Chatham, NY

Shaker Museum and Library

Pittsfield, MA

Hancock Shaker Village

Arrowhead home of Herman Melville.

Rhinebeck, NY

Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome aircraft and auto museum; air shows

Wilderstein Historic Site elaborate Queen-Anne style house of the Suckleys. 

Poughkeepsie, NY

Locust Grove home of Samuel F.B. Morse

Sheffield, MA

Ashley House c. 1735 house; oldest in Berkshire County

Staatsburgh, NY

Rural Intelligence Road Trips
Mills Mansion house remodeled in Beaux Arts style by McKim, Mead & White

Stockbridge, MA

Chesterwood Estate & Museum home of Lincoln memorial sculptor Daniel Chester French

Mission House 1739 house with Colonial Revival garden

Rural Intelligence Road Trips
Naumkeag McKim, Mead & White summer cottage and gardens

Williamstown, MA

The Folly at Field Farm Modernist house and sculpture garden

[See more Excursion articles]

The Civil War: Frederic Church Makes a Statement

Rural Intelligence Road Tripsby Betsy Miller

Before cameras were common, the cognoscenti learned about the physical world from paintings.  Salons and art openings weren’t just for creative contemplation, they were opportunities to be educated.  And the paintings of Frederic Edwin Church, among the country’s premier artists, were each received by an eager public as though they were breaking news.

So it made headlines when Church changed the title of his 1861 New York City gallery show from The Icebergs to The North, a statement of support for troops heading off to battle the South.  The Union’s tattered red, white and blue, a result of the bombardment of Fort Sumter, had just been displayed at a rally in Manhattan’s Union Square.  Along with the rest of the crowd, Church was outraged.

All wars are controversial.  And the Civil War was one that engendered exceptionally strong feelings on both sides.  Well known figures of the period used their notoriety to publicize their positions.  Church was no different.  He was one of the most famous men in America – a 19th century rock star, so he made a point of creating a painting that stated his position – clearly.

Rural Intelligence Road TripsRally ‘Round the Flag, a new exhibition at Olana, traces both a nation’s journey and an artist’s moral stand.  When Church looked out the windows of his hilltop home, not only did he see his beloved Catskills, he saw a broken nation.  Using paint as a photo-journalist uses silver nitrate, Church created compelling images that enraged some, uplifted others.  This exhibition reflects his talent as a propagandist – his interpretation of the shock and awe found on the battlefield.  The centerpiece of the current show: Church’s 1861 oil, Our Banner in the Sky, is a tattered flag against a background of the Catskills.  What might seem jingoistic today was so resonant at the time, that it was used on a widely disseminated patriotic poster.

The presentation, assembled with advice from Dr. Kevin J. Avery, senior research scholar at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and an expert on Church, also includes the work of a young artist friend of Church’s.  John S. Jameson died at the age of 22, his final days spent in the infamous prison at Andersonville, GA.  The exhibition’s curators have located all six paintings Jameson was known to have completed.  They are presented together for the first time.  One of them, Landscape, completed in 1860, was sent to Church by Jameson’s mother after her son’s death.

Rally ‘Round the Flag:
Frederic Edwin Church and the Civil War

Olana State Historic Site
Hudson
May 26 - October 30, 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.

Related event:

Free at Last
A dramatic reading of a true story told
to Mark Twain by his cook, a freed slave,
followed by a discussion.
Hudson Opera House
Sunday, May 29, 3 p.m.

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Posted by Marilyn Bethany on 05/21/11 at 05:33 PM • Permalink