WEIR
FARM VISITING ARTISTS 2005
September
12 through November 4, 2005
Opening Reception
September 15, 2005 5:30 - 7:00 pm
The
Weir Farm Trust is pleased to return to the Housatonic Museum of
Art with its 2005 Visiting Artists exhibition. It features five regional
artists who have spent the past year exploring the bucolic setting
of Weir Farm National Historic Site, located in the towns of Wilton
and Ridgefield, CT. In its 14th year, the Visiting Artists Program
is one component of the Weir Farm Trust’s Visual Artists Program.
Through a rigorous application process, five regional artists are
selected each year to create a cohesive body of work based on their
personal experiences of Weir Farm. The site’s natural beauty
and its extraordinary legacy of art history originated from J. Alden
Weir, the American Impressionist painter who owned the farm from
1882 until his death in 1919. Used as a rural retreat from New York
City, Weir and his colleagues such as Childe Hassam, John Twachtman,
and John Singer Sargent, all who visited the farm often, were equally
inspired by the exquisite landscape and tranquility that was manifest
so strikingly in their paintings done at the farm.
The opening of the exhibition is September
15, 2005 from 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm and will include an artists’ discussion
at 6:00 pm. This is a opportunity to hear directly from the
artists about their artwork and how it evolved over the past year
during their visits to the site; each artist reacted differently
to the landscape and history of Weir Farm, incorporating their own
individual styles and mediums to create visual responses that when
viewed as a group reveal the remarkable depth of subject matter.
The five artists are Bob Keating, Rob Loebell, Jane
Miller, and Eve Stockton from Connecticut,
and Pat Brentano, from New Jersey.
The Weir Farm Trust was founded in
1989 as a non-profit arts organization that works in partnership
with the National Park Service at the Weir Farm National Historic
Site (designated in 1990), located in Wilton, Connecticut. It
is one of only two sites within the National Park System that focuses
on American art. Remarkably, the home, studio, farm buildings
and landscape central to J. Alden Weir’s creative vision have
survived intact, making it the finest remaining site associated with
American Impressionism.
Through innovative visual arts programs
and community activities, the Weir Farm Trust serves to broaden awareness
of the Site’s extraordinary legacy. The mission is to
promote public awareness of the Farm’s history and artistic
tradition, facilitate its use by contemporary artists, provide educational
opportunities, and preserve the Farm’s unique environment.
For more information about the Weir
Farm Trust and the Visual Artists Program please call 203-761-9945.

Chris, Eve Stockton (Artist) and Tony Kirk, Director of the Center
for Contemporary Printmaking.
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