Tuesday, December 9, 2014

LAWS OF SYMPATHY
NEW WORKS BY KATARINA RIESING
On View January 10-March 14
Opening Reception Saturday, January 10, 2015 6:00-9:00pm
Gallery Talk with Katarina Riesing Sunday, March 8, 2015 3:00pm

Katarina Riesing is a multi-media artist working in photography, drawing, video and fiber. She holds a BA from Smith College and an MFA from the University of Wisconsin – Madison. Her work has been exhibited in New York, Oregon, Tennessee, Wisconsin, Massachusetts, and Berlin, Germany. Riesing is currently an Assistant Professor in Foundations Art at Alfred University in Alfred, NY. She lives and works in western, NY. 

In celebration of International Women's Day, Katarina Riesing will present a talk on Sunday, March 8th at 3:00pm. Riesing will discuss her process, work, and the parallels she has encountered between Seligmann's work and her own

Presented in Kurt Seligmann's Studio.
katarinariesing.com
Event





MAGICAL EVENTS: A SMALL WORKS EXHIBITION
Exhibition Extended! On View Through Saturday, January 17
Gallery Hours: 10:00am-3:00pm Monday-Friday or by appointment. 
Please call 845.469.9459 before visiting. 
Extended Hours: Thursday, January 15 5:00-8:00pm and Friday, January 16 6:00-8:00pm
Presented in Foyer Gallery, in the Seligmann Home (gray)


Jon Verney, Book no. 13 pgs. 3-4, inkjet transparencies on paper, graphite 9 x 7'', 2014

COMMUNITY POTLUCK SUPPER
Wednesday, February 4, 2015
6:00pm in Kurt Seligmann's Studio

All are invited to a monthly Community Potluck Supper on the first Wednesday of the month, beginning at 6:00pm.  There will be time to eat, meet and visit with people, with casual music and performances beginning around 7:30pm (bring an instrument if you'd like).  This is a family-friendly event and children are welcome.  In addition to a dish to share, please bring your own plates, glasses and utensils.  The Potluck Suppers are a community-building initiative of the Orange County Land Trust, the Orange County Arts Council, and the Orange County Citizens Foundation.  

The Seligmann Center at the Citizens Foundation
23 White Oak Drive, Chester, NY 10918

845.469.9459 seligmanncenter@gmail.com  kurtseligmann.org

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Laws of Sympathy: New Works by Katarina Riesing 
On View Saturday, January 10-Saturday, March 14, 2015 
Opening Reception Saturday, January 10, 6:00-9:00pm 


Katarina Riesing, Arms, Mixed media, 3 x 6', 2012

Katarina Riesing is a multi-media artist working in photography, drawing, video and fiber. She holds a BA from Smith College and an MFA from the University of Wisconsin – Madison. Her work has been exhibited in New York, Oregon, Tennessee, Wisconsin, Massachusetts, and Berlin, Germany. Riesing is currently an Assistant Professor in Foundations Art at Alfred University in Alfred, NY. She lives and works in western, NY. 

katarinariesing.com

Event



The Seligmann Center at the Citizens Foundation

23 White Oak Drive, Chester, NY 10918

845.469.9459 seligmanncenter@gmail.com kurtseligmann.com

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

HENNING TO PRESENT COLLEGE OF POETRY WORKSHOP
Saturday, December 6, 1:00pm
In Seligmann's Studio (Upper Level of Barn)
The Seligmann Center, 23 White Oak Drive, Chester, NY 10918 


BARBARA HENNING is a New York City poet and fiction writer, the author of eight books of poetry, three novels, a series of photo-poem pamphlets, and most recently a collection of interviews, Looking Up Harryette Mullen: Sleeping with the Dictionary and Other Works (Belladonna, 2010).  Her most recent books of poetry and prose are A Swift Passage  (Quale Press, 2013); Cities and Memory (Chax Press, 2010), and a conceptual project, a collection of sonnets composed from 999 passages from 999 books in her collection, entitled My Autobiography  (United Artists Books, 2007).  Her latest novel is 
Thirty Miles to Rosebud (BlazeVOX, 2009). 

  


FINAL POETRY ON THE LOOSE READING FEATURES 
FOUNDER WILLIAM SEATON
Saturday, December 6, 3:30pm
In Seligmann's Studio (Upper Level of Barn)
The Seligmann Center, 23 White Oak Drive, Chester, NY 1091


When Seaton moved to Orange County he had already been active in poetry and performance for decades, participating in what were called happenings at the University of Illinois in the sixties, working with the Cloud House group doing street readings and guerilla poetry events in San Francisco during the seventies, and producing the Poetry in the Air cable television program Iowa City in the eighties.  Finding virtually no public literary scene in Orange County, he began Poetry on the Loose in December of 1993 at the Zukabee Gallery in an old furniture factory on Mill Street in Middletown.  Posting signs around town as publicity, he attracted over fifty people
 to the first reading. 

That night he greeted the audience, saying, “Welcome to Poetry on the Loose.  This is poetry off the printed page, out of the library and the classroom, poetry in the air.”  Anecdotes of that early period are posted on his blog at http://williamseaton.blogspot.com/2011/09/poetry-on-loose.html.   Since then the readings have moved several times, for several years to Warwick and then to the Seligmann Center in Sugar Loaf.  

The original concept was to emphasize multi-media, experimental, and performance-based work, and indeed, poets have included dance, music, and theatrical elements with their words, though readers have frequently presented their work conventionally from behind a lectern.  Over the years a great many local poets have been featured as well as visiting writers from across the country and abroad.  In accordance with the series slogan “The door is open wide,” readers have included men and women, gay and straight, old and young, dropouts and university professors, composers of free verse and of sonnets. 
    
In Seaton’s words, “A reading offers an opportunity for neighbors to share their visions, wit, rants, and lyric moments face to face in an uncommodified setting.  The excitement, refreshment, and enlightenment audiences experience is a far cry from the robotized sensation that arises after watching television.  I don’t mind ending the series now because there are dozens of other poetry venues all through the Hudson Valley.  As I said in the introduction to our short-lived journal The Wawayanda Review,  ‘May the rose bloom and the thistle and the orchid and the dandelion, too!’”
     
Seaton intends to read at other sites and continues to work with the Seligmann Center where he will offer his fifth Surreal Cabaret (co-produced with Steve Roe), an evening of performance art, on January 3.  He maintains a blog at williamseaton.blogspot.com.


PLEASE NOTE: Wednesday, December 3rd Potluck is cancelled. 




Wednesday, November 19, 2014

JAZZ AND FILM COLLABORATION
FEATURING THE HUDSON VALLEY JAZZ PLAYERS
Sunday, November 23, 6:00pm 
Seligmann's Studio
$10

Join us this Sunday for a screening of the Seligmanns' home movies with improvised jazz by the Hudson Valley Jazz Players. The films capture the Seligmanns' time in British Columbia and Paris through Kurt Seligmann's eyes and feature appearances by Yves Tanguy, AndrĂ© Breton, Alberto Magnelli, Wolfgang Paalen, and Benjamin Peret.


23 White Oak Drive, Chester, NY, 10918
845.469.9459
seligmanncenter@gmail.com

Thursday, November 6, 2014

AN UNWRAPPING: THREE SELIGMANN WORKS RETURNED 

Join us Friday, November 7 for a one-night exhibition, reception, and gallery talk by author, curator, and long-time friend of Arlette Seligmann's, Stephen Robeson Miller.

THE STORY
In August 2014, three of Kurt Seligmann's paintings, executed in Paris in the 1930’s, were returned to the Seligmann Center. When the Seligmanns came to New York in 1939 they left the paintings behind in their Paris apartment. Although they planned to eventually return to Paris to live, they never did, instead remaining on their homestead in Sugar Loaf, now home to the Seligmann Center. Over the course of decades many of their friends lived in their Paris apartment, among them Man Ray, Wolfgang Paalen, Isamu Noguchi, and Stanley Cohen. When the apartment faced water damage, Stanley Cohen moved these three works to his friend Alexander Calder’s apartment in Paris, where they remained for some time. Now, decades later, thanks to Stanley Cohen, these works have followed the Seligmanns home.

STEPHEN ROBESON MILLER has written extensively on Kurt Seligmann’s life and career. A curator and scholar specializing in Surrealism, he is co-author and co-curator of “Double Solitaire: The Surreal Worlds of Kay Sage & Yves Tanguy,” in which he examines the intersection of the two artists' lives and work.



Tuesday, October 21, 2014



CLOSING RECEPTION: JUANITA GUCCIONE: DEFIANT ACTS
With Remarks by Djelloul Marbrook, son of Juanita Guccione
Saturday, November 1
5:30-7:00pm
Seligmann's Studio
Free

Juanita Guccione (1904-1999) is one such artist whose work -- and life -- mirrored the radically creative and philosophical underpinnings of Surrealism. Guccione infused social realism, cubism, surrealism and abstraction with her own indefinable and audacious style, creating an independent mythology and challenging social conventions in her art and life. Women populate her canvases in wonderland environments, alongside animals, architecture, and fantastical landscapes, at times hinting to world events, other times mystic explorations. The writer and poet Anais Nin said of Juanita, “Few people can paint the world of our dreams with as much magic, precision and clarity.” Guccione’s work continued to evolve and elude the interpretations of critics worldwide – ultimately to her peril, as her name and art fell into relative obscurity. 

The art critic Michael Welzenbach of the Washington Post writes that Guccione’s “single-minded approach to her work, [her] willingness to follow its development wherever that might lead…locates [her] squarely among the few but formidable ranks of the modernist avant-garde – a group whose integrity and vision will not be seen again in this century.”



Djelloul Marbrook is the author of five books of fiction and three poetry books, Far from Algiers (2008, Kent State University Press, winner of the 2007 Wick Poetry Prize and the 2010 International Book Award in poetry), Brushstrokes and glances (2010, Deerbrook Editions), and Brash Ice (forthcoming late 2014, Leaky Boot Press, UK).  His poems have been published by American Poetry Review, Barrow Street, Taos Poetry Journal, Orbis (UK), From the Fishouse, Oberon, The Same, Reed, Fledgling Rag, Poets Against the War, Poemeleon, Van Gogh's Ear Anthology, Atticus Review, Deep Water Literary Journal, and Daylight Burglary, among others. He lives in the mid-Hudson Valley with his wife Marilyn.





WRITING WORKSHOP WITH TERESA MARTA COSTA
READING WITH LAUREN CAMP
Saturday, November 1
Workshop: 1:00pm, Reading 3:30pm
Seligmann's Studio
Free

Teresa Marta Costa will present a workshop on writing and the avant-garde. Costa is the author of Cosmic OrgasmsCO2- What We breathe Out, and Bon(e) Appetit(e).  Her work has appeared in numerous journals including Mombacchus JournalThe Woodstock TimesChronogramHome Planet News, and Wildflowers; an Woodstock Anthology.  She is also known for her work producing readings in the Hudson Valley, in the past at the Cross St. Gallery and presently at the Bohemian Book Bin.  Her poetic influences include Captain Beefhart and Alice Cooper.

Lauren Camp is the author of two volumes of poetry, most recently The Dailiness, winner of the National Federation of Press Women 2014 Poetry Book Prize and a World Literature Today “Editor’s Pick.”  Her third book, One Hundred Hungers, was selected by David Wojahn for the Dorset Prize, and is forthcoming from Tupelo Press.  She is the winner of the MĂ¡s Tequila Review Margaret Randall Poetry Prize and the 2012 Anna Davidson Rosenberg Poetry Award.  Her work has also appeared in Tinderbox Poetry JournalBeloit Poetry JournalThe Laurel ReviewNimrod and elsewhere.   She hosts Audio Saucepan, a global music/poetry program on Santa Fe Public Radio.  More information is available at www.laurencamp.com.

POTLUCK SUPPER
Wednesday, November 5
7:00pm
Seligmann's Studio
Free

There's a seat for you at the table! Enjoy a good meal with others from the community. Held on the first Wednesday of each month, our Potluck Suppers provide a space for people to meet, eat, and share. Please bring a dish to share along with your own plate and cutlery. All are welcome. 


AN UNWRAPPING: THREE SELIGMANN WORKS RETURNED
& A LECTURE BY STEPHEN ROBESON MILLER
On view for one night only. 
Friday, November 7, 7:00-9:00pm
Seligmann's Studio
Free

In August 2014, three of Seligmann's paintings, executed in Paris, were returned to the Seligmann Center. Join us for a one-night exhibition, reception, and lecture by author, scholar, and curator Stephen Robeson Miller. 


GONG PUJA: AN ALL NIGHT FULL MOON GONG MEDITATION
Saturday, November 8, 9:00pm-6:30am (November 9)
Seligmann's Studio 
$65, Register


Throughout the night and into the early morning, seven gong players will rotate every 45-50 minutes while guests relax and sleep with the vibrations of the gongs. In the early morning, the gongs will become silent and the puja will end. Participants will rise on their own time, before sharing breakfast. Finally, the group will return to the Puja space to review their experiences.



OPENING RECEPTION:MAGICAL EVENTS
Friday, November 14, 7:00pm-9:00pm
Seligmann’s Studio and Foyer Gallery
Free

A national, juried, small-works exhibition featuring works by 27 artists. Exhibited in Seligmann's Studio and Foyer Gallery (located in the Robert Fagan Art Library). 






Thursday, October 2, 2014



Leif Vollebekk spent two years searching for perfect takes. This search took him from his home in Montreal to a studio in Manhattan, from a farmhouse in Woodstock, NY to a mansion outside Paris, and the result is a dusty, polished, new, old record called North Americana.

"I wrote the songs, I found the best band in the world, and then all I had to do was find the right studio, for the right take," he says. "And it took forever."

After his 2010 debut, Vollebekk knew the kind of album he wanted to make next: a record like the ones he loves by Gillian Welch or Ryan Adams, that feel old and familiar even when they're new. But also a record that speaks to the listener through its lyrics, with songs "that can hold up in a storm," that are packed full of perfect little mistakes. So he started writing. Ten new songs, the best he had ever written, with lines about love and the end of love, about journeys and homecoming, about the death of friends and drinking yourself dry. Now Vollebekk laughs: "I thought the record was done when I was finished writing the songs. 'All we need to do is record it!'" But when you're searching for the perfect take, recording is no small task. It happened only piece by piece, session by session, song by song, over the course of seasons.

The players were these: Vollebekk, singing, playing guitar and piano, harmonica, rusty fiddle on "When the Subway Comes Above the Ground"; the jazz musicians Hans Bernhard (bass) and Philippe Melanson (drums). "I wanted to be able to roam with them wherever I go," Vollebekk says. Arcade Fire's Sarah Neufeld played violin, arranging her own parts. Joe Grass played pedal steel, and Adam Kinner played tenor sax.

The heart of the songs were always recorded live, to tape. Old school, spontaneous, one real captured moment. To find these moments, they travelled. To Montreal's legendary Hotel 2 Tango studio, working with Howard Bilerman (Arcade Fire, Coeur de Pirate, Godspeed You! Black Emperor). To New York City, working with Tom Gloady (Ryan Adams, Sigur RĂ³s, Patti Smith). To La Frette studios, in La Frette-sur-Seine, France. And then back to Montreal, for one song at Breakglass studios. Vollebekk even tried recording with John Simon, the producer whose credits include Music from Big Pink and Songs of Leonard Cohen. At his home in upstate New York, Simon listened to "Cairo Blues," then travelled up to Montreal to record it. "There was just not a good take," Vollebekk says. "I ended up doing it a few months later, again at the Hotel, between takes of something else  and that's just how it went." North Americana took years. "All this time," Vollebekk says, "trying to get one take." But the result is a beautiful, alive, human  shambling ballads, noisy folk songs, vivid portraits of a 27-year-old's watercolour life. "I feel like I created a record from 1970something that no one's heard before," Vollebekk says. "I'm haggard and this record is all I got."

http://leifvollebekk.com/

Opener TBA

Doors: 6:30pm
Show: 7:00pm

All ages event. Limited seating available. Call 845.469.9459 to reserve seats.
Get Tickets
Date
Oct 26, 2014 7:00 PM
Admission LevelPriceQuantity
Advance Tickets$15.00 ($16.52 w/service fee)
Seated and Standing
Day of Show$18.00 ($19.62 w/service fee)Sales begin on
Oct 26, 2014 12:00 AM EDT
Delivery
(United States - Change Country)

Wednesday, September 24, 2014




    JOIN THE SELIGMANN CENTER FOR A
 FALL EQUINOX  CELEBRATION

   SATURDAY,SEPTEMBER 27
   BEGINNING AT 4:00PM


  WITH   
THE BREATHERS
OF BROOKLYN, NY
+
MOE AND TOM
OF WARWICK, NY
+ART+VIDEO+FIRE+FOOD


Join us as we welcome autumn with an evening of art, music, good company, and (simple) food and drink. The celebration will feature musical performances by the Breathers (Brooklyn, NY) and Moe and Tom (Warwick, NY) as well as a screening of "Fairfield, Iowa: A Transcendental Dairy" by Nicholas Wynia. Enjoy a second look at our exhibition,  "Juanita Guccione: Defiant Acts," or a studio visit with Olivia Baldwin, then hang around the fire, explore the grounds, and make an evening of it!  All ages event. Free. 


Film still from "Fairfield, Iowa: A Transcendental Dairy" by Nicholas Wynia

    ALL AGES WELCOME. AND IT’S FREE
QUESTIONS? 845.469.9459
    23 WHITE OAK DRIVE, SUGAR LOAF, NY 10918


Wednesday, August 27, 2014

JUANITA GUCCIONE: DEFIANT ACTS
Presented with Weinstein Gallery
On view September 13-November 1, 2014
Opening Reception: Saturday, September 13, 5:00pm-8:00pm
Lecture: Susan Aberth, "Women in Surrealism" Sunday, September 14, 2014 3:00pm
Gallery Hours: Monday-Friday 10:00am-3:00pm, nights and weekends by appointment
In Seligmann's Studio

Juanita Guccione (1904-1999) is one such artist whose work--and life--mirrored the radically creative and philosophical underpinnings of Surrealism. After a childhood in Massachusetts and Brooklyn, Guccione became a fashion model in New York City in the 1920s; rather than falling into the romantic role of 'muse,' she studied at the Art Students League before venturing to France, Italy and Greece, supporting herself through portrait commissions. From there she sailed to Egypt, eventually settling in 1931 in Bou Saada, an artists' colony in Algeria, amongst the Ouled Nail tribe. Traveling among Bedouin nomads in the Sahara, she produced a diverse oeuvre of portraits and landscapes that in1935 would be exhibited at the Brooklyn Museum, alongside works by Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko. After the birth of her son in 1934, Guccione returned to New York, designing murals with David Alfaro-Siqueiros for the Works Progress Administration and studying for seven years with Hans Hofman. Guccione infused social realism, cubism, surrealism and abstraction with her own indefinable and audacious style, creating an independent mythology and challenging social conventions in her art and life. Women populate her canvases in wonderland environments, alongside animals, architecture, and fantastical landscapes, at times hinting to world events, other times mystic explorations. The writer and poet Anais Nin said of Juanita, "Few people can paint the world of our dreams with as much magic, precision and clarity." Guccione's work continued to evolve and elude the interpretations of critics worldwide-- ultimately to her peril, as her name and art fell into relative obscurity. 

The art critic Michael Welzenbach of the Washington Post writes that Guccione's "single-minded approach to her work, (her) willingness to follow its development wherever that might lead...locates (her) squarely among the few but formidable ranks of the modernist avant-garde--a group whose integrity and vision will not be seen again in this century."

LECTURE
Renowned author and art historian, Susan L. Aberth wrote the first monograph on the artist Leonora Carrington, Leonora Carrington: Surrealism, Alchemy and Art (2010), and is currently writing for the upcoming monograph of Juanita Guccione. Susan is recognized for her research in the fields of women artists and the Surrealist movement, as well as all Latin American art. She received her PhD in Art History from the Graduate Center of the City University of New York and is currently an Associate Professor of Art History at Bard College.

The exhibition and lecture are presented in partnership with Weinstein Gallery of San Francisco, California. The exhibition and lecture will be presented in Seligmann's Studio. Admission is free. 





Juanita Guccione, Symphony in Orange, Oil on canvas, 27 x 34", 1937 

Monday, August 11, 2014


CALL FOR ARTISTS
MAGICAL EVENTS: A SMALL WORKS EXHIBITION

The Seligmann Center, welcomes submissions for its upcoming exhibition, Magical Events: A Small Works Exhibition, on view November 14-January 3.  Artists are invited to submit two-dimensional and three-dimensional works of any medium. There is no width restriction, however works may not exceed 10” in height or depth, including frames and peripheral elements.  The exhibition will occupy two galleries on the Seligmann Center property: Seligmann’s Studio and Foyer Gallery, located in the converted barn and farmhouse.  Submission deadline: Friday, October 3. 

ABOUT

The Seligmann Center at the Orange County Citizens Foundation is an artist-run center located on the 50-acre rural homestead of Swiss-American Surrealist Kurt Seligmann (1900-1962) and his wife Arlette (Wildenstein Paraf) Seligmann (1906-1992). The Seligmann Center is committed to presenting readings, concerts, exhibitions, workshops, performances, and interdisciplinary works by emerging and established artists.  Founded in 2010 by the Orange County Citizens Foundation and a group of artists, the Seligmann Center offers several unique exhibition and performance spaces in its converted farmhouse buildings and throughout its grounds. In July 2014 the Center dedicated the Robert Fagan Art Library, the largest public collection of art books in the county.

The Center is located about 50 miles northwest of New York City in a vibrant rural area of Orange County in the village of Sugar Loaf.  The history of the site is palpable—Max Ernst slept in the Guest House; Marcel Duchamp shot five bullets into the barn foundation; Alexander Calder pulled prints from the very same press that is still in use today, and others, including Yves Tanguy, Kay Sage, Peggy Guggenheim, and Meyer Schapiro, spent time on the property.  In its four years the Seligmann Center has presented works by such notable artists as Robert Whitman, Hiroaki Sato, Jacob Kirkegaard, Katinka Fogh Vindelev, Philip Pearlstein, Chaim Gross, Forrest Myers, Cy Twombly, and Lynne Sharon Schwartz.  The Seligmann Center honors the Seligmann’s tradition of bringing people together and welcomes the new, presenting contemporary work that enriches, challenges, and connects.

THE GALLERIES

The Kurt Seligmann Studio is a 19th century dairy barn modified with a full wall of north-facing windows (33 x 16’).  Foyer Gallery is located in the Robert Fagan Library on the second floor of the farmhouse. The gallery consists of four columns of six 2’ x 1’ shelves and two 8 x 8’ walls. In addition to these spaces, the homestead features Guest House Gallery, a cubic space for new media and site-specific work, a bog garden and trails, and expansive grounds for outdoor works.

TERMS

Submissions will be reviewed by an anonymous jury of artists.  Artists will receive notification by Friday, October 24. Selected artists are responsible for the shipment, delivery, and if unsold, return of all work.  Works needn’t be framed, but must arrive ready to be hung or displayed.  Artists may submit up to five images. All submissions must be accompanied by an image list with the title, medium, dimensions, and date of all works. Images must be formatted as jpegs, 72 dpi, with maximum (digital) dimensions of ten inches.

Submission fee: $25 for three submissions, $35 for four submissions, $45 for five submissions, payable through PayPal. The Seligmann Center will receive a 20% commission for all sold works.


SUBMISSIONS

Artists may send up to five images (jpegs, formatted at 72dpi) and an image list (with title, medium, dimensions, and year of all works) to seligmanncentersubmissions@gmail.com and pay the corresponding entry fee via PayPal. Please do not mail submissions—they will not be reviewed. Incomplete submissions will not be considered.  All submissions will be kept on file in the Robert Fagan Art Library.

Questions? Contact us: seligmanncenter@gmail.com

DATES

Submission Deadline: Friday, October 3
Notification by: Friday, October 24
On View: Friday, November 14-Saturday, January 3
Opening Reception: Friday, November 14









ENTRY FEE

Thursday, July 31, 2014






UPCOMING EVENTS 


WRITING WORKSHOP WITH STEVE HIRSCH &
POETRY READING BY MICHAEL GRAVES
Saturday, August 2
Workshop: 1pm, Reading: 3:30pm
Held in Seligmann's Studio
Free 
Steve Hirsch will offer a workshop titled “Capturing The Muse: A Workshop in Radical Imagination," presented by the College of Poetry, followed by a reading by Michael Graves, presented by Poetry on the Loose. 

WORKSHOP

Steve Hirsch is the author of Ramapo 500 Affirmations.  His work has also appeared in such journals as Hunger, Napalm Health Spa Report, For Immediate Release, Pudding, Big Scream, and Hazmat Review.  For many years he has edited Heaven Bone, one of America’s most exciting literary reviews.  He studied writing and theatre at Naropa Institute in Boulder, Colorado where he was a student and apprentice of Allen Ginsberg and Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche. 

READING

Graves is the author of Adam and Cain and Outside St. Jude’s.  He edits the journal Rattapallax and hosts the Phoenix Reading series in Greenwich Village.Interview and reading. 

In partnership with the College of Poetry and Poetry on the Loose, the Seligmann Center offers a free workshop and reading on the first Saturday of each month. 


CONCERT WITH STEVEN FRIEDER GROUP
Presented with the Hudson Valley Jazz Festival
Thursday, August 14, 9pm
Free

Hailing from the Hudson Valley, Steven Frieder has established himself as a versatile, and robust saxophonist, fluent in the styles of jazz, funk, rock, and free improvisation.  Frieder is an alumnus of The New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music, where he was awarded the honor of Valedictorian. Frieder has performed with Joe Lovano, Cameron Brown, Sol Yaged, Harvie S., Jake Hertzog, Jay Azzolina, Dave Gibson, Shunzo Ohno and recorded with Jon Burr, Bob Meyer, John Hart, Neil Alexander and other jazz artists. He is also a member of a number of New York City funk/R&B bands including Massive Brass, Roof Access, and Pete Ayres Band, as well as the Bob Meyer Project. 

Frieder has taught extensively at the Lagond Music School in Elmsford, NY. He is currently the woodwind teacher at the Cortlandt School of Performing Arts in Croton On Hudson, NY. Frieder recently released his debut album with Luke Franco on Guitar, Peter Brendler on Bass and Bob Meyer on the drums and cymbals.

Steven Frieder





GONGS AND HIMALAYAN SINGING BOWL MEDITATION: SERENITY THROUGH SOUND
Led by Lapis Studio
Saturday, August 23, 6:30-8:30pm

Join Lapis Studio (Dean and Kat Baker) for an evening of harmonic energy at the Seligmann Center. With rare Nepalese gongs forged from the 16th, 17th, and 18th century and Himalayan Singing Bowls, Lapis Studio presents a fusion of shamanic and Tibetan traditions to offer a deep physical, and spiritual experience.  

Please dress comfortably and bring a yoga mat, blanket, and pillow. Eye pillows and covers are highly recommended. 


43rd ANNUAL MEETING & PICNIC 
HONORING COMPOSER & MUSICIAN RICHARD KIMBALL WITH THE SELIGMANN CENTER AWARD
Thursday, September 4th, 6pm
On the Seligmann Lawn

Join us in celebrating the end of summer and welcoming the harvest! The event will feature delicious local fare, a preview of our exhibition, Juanita Guccione: Defiant Acts, remarks, and recognition of our 2014 Seligmann Award Winner Richard Kimball. 





LOOKING AHEAD

THE AIR PIRATES RADIO THEATRE: 
SPACE CADET, TAKE ME TO YOUR LENDER

Saturday, September 6, 7:00pm
Seligmann's Studio
$20 

THE SELIGMANN CENTER AND WEINSTEIN GALLERY PARTNER TO PRESENT 
JUANITA GUCCIONE: DEFIANT ACTS
An exhibition on view September 13-November 1
Opening Reception: Saturday, September 13, 5:00pm-8:00pm

LECTURE: "WOMEN IN SURREALISM"
Presented by Susan Aberth, Professor of Art History, Bard College
Sunday, September 14, 3pm
Seligmann's Studio
Free

FALL EQUINOX CELEBRATION
Saturday, September 27
Throughout the Seligmann Grounds


SURREALISM SALON: LOUIS ARAGON
Friday, October 3, 7pm
Seligmann's Studio
Free





VISIT THE ROBERT FAGAN ART LIBRARY

Open Monday-Friday 10:00am-3:00pm, or by appointment

Explore our impressive collection of over 1,000 art books, generously donated by the family of Robert Fagan. The Robert Fagan Art Library is a reference library, equipped with  chairs for reading. The photographs and ephemera of Kurt and Arlette Seligmann are currently on display in the library. 

As we continue to expand the collection, we appreciate your support and donations. Click here to make a donation or contact seligmanncenter@gmail.com to arrange a book drop-off.