
Out of This World: Shaker Design Past, Present, and Future
Thursday, March 13, 2008 - Sunday, June 15, 2008
Simple Gifts: Tracing the Shaker Influence
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Music reverberated throughout Shaker culture and religious experience. From the late 18th through the 20th centuries, Shaker brethren and sisters composed thousands of songs and hymns, some of which are among the most lyrical and tuneful in American music. Songs received through inspiration were considered revelations, or spiritual “gifts,” and were preserved in notation by scribes. They were aware that so many songs could not be retained only through oral tradition. Singing amidst Shaker gift drawings on exhibition at the BGC, and continuing at DOROT, the Phoenix Quartet will perform a selection of traditional Shaker songs, as well as works by more recent American composers, including Aaron Copland and Richard Pearson Thomas, who were inspired by this rich musical legacy.
$25 general $20 seniors and students
The Shaker Legacy: A Personal Perspective
Thursday, May 29, 2008
During the past 200 years, the United Society of Believers in Christ’s Second Appearing, commonly called Shakers, has contributed to diverse professions and social-justice movements, including agriculture, medicine, mechanical invention and improvement, music, craft, furniture design, women’s rights, and racial and religious equality. The nation’s most industrialized Shaker community, Canterbury Shaker Village in New Hampshire, has outlived all of its sister colonies except the Sabbathday Lake community, still active in Maine. Canterbury has always been an economic and intellectual force, and a center of reform, within the Shaker world. In this lecture, historian Darryl Thompson introduces the influential achievements of the Shakers, with particular emphasis on those of the Canterbury Shakers. Thompson will also discuss his own experiences as a 31-year resident of Canterbury.
$20 general $15 seniors and students
COMMUNITY DAY The Making of an Oval Box
Saturday, May 31, 2008
The oval box is one of the most valued Shaker handicrafts, appreciated for its utilitarian simplicity and refined form. Traditionally made from cherry wood fastened with copper tacks, oval boxes served as versatile containers for food, supplies, and tools. In this interactive demonstration, craftsman Michael French will make an oval box, discussing the preparation of his materials and showing the process by which wood is bent and joined with an overlapping joinery technique. A tour of the exhibition with BGC gallery outreach coordinator Laura Rau, a performance of Shaker songs by the Phoenix Quartet, and hands-on artmaking activities will also be offered.
$3 adults and children over 12 Free to children under 12
COMMUNITY DAY The Making of an Oval Box
Saturday, May 31, 2008
The oval box is one of the most valued Shaker handicrafts, appreciated for its utilitarian simplicity and refined form. Traditionally made from cherry wood fastened with copper tacks, oval boxes served as versatile containers for food, supplies, and tools. In this interactive demonstration, craftsman Michael French will make an oval box, discussing the preparation of his materials and showing the process by which wood is bent and joined with an overlapping joinery technique. A tour of the exhibition with BGC gallery outreach coordinator Laura Rau, a performance of Shaker songs by the Phoenix Quartet, and hands-on artmaking activities will also be offered.
$3 adults and children over 12 Free to children under 12
Visions Made Tangible: Shaker Gift Drawings
Thursday, June 5, 2008
Although early Shaker tradition eschewed the display of pictures, the creation of gift drawings attests to the Believers’ acceptance of images of the celestial world. For the Shakers, “gifts” in the form of drawings revealed the actual presence of divinity. Most of these drawings were made by a small group of Shaker women during the Era of Manifestations, a period of spiritual revival in the mid-19th century. For this study day, Shaker specialist Gerard C. Wertkin will present an illustrated lecture on gift drawings, followed by a tour of the BGC exhibition. After lunch at the BGC, participants will visit the American Society for Psychical Research, the oldest psychical research organization in the United States, where director Patrice Keane will give a tour of the society’s library and discuss Shaker manuscripts from its collection.
$100 general $75 seniors and students
Thomas Hope: Regency Designer
Thursday, July 17, 2008 - Sunday, November 16, 2008
| Location: | Bard Graduate Center, 18 West 86th St, NY, NY | | Sponsor: | Bard Graduate Center | | Phone: | 212-501-3023 | | Website: | View |
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'Twixt Art and Nature: English Embroidery from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1580-1700
Thursday, December 11, 2008 - Sunday, March 15, 2009
| Location: | Bard Graduate Center, 18 West 86th St, NY, NY | | Sponsor: | Bard Graduate Center | | Phone: | 212-501-3023 | | Website: | View |
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