• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

The Inside Press

Magazines serving the communities of Northern Westchester

  • Home
  • Advertise
    • Advertise in One or All of our Magazines
    • Advertising Payment Form
  • Digital Subscription
    • Subscribe
    • Subscriber Login
  • Print Subscription
  • Contact Us

Bruce Museum

Coming March 15 and 16–Creative Arts Therapy Workshops

February 9, 2018 by The Inside Press

Creative Arts Therapy Workshops
EXPERIENCING THE ART WITHIN YOU

Thursday and Friday, March 15 and 16

“Focus on the journey, not the destination.
Joy is found not in finishing an activity, but in doing it.”
Greg Anderson, Author

Join us as we celebrate National Creative Arts Therapy Week. Come and explore the artist within as we share our
experience of dance/movement, art, drama and music.
The Greens at Greenwich Creative Arts Therapists are partnering
with the Bruce Museum for two exciting workshops.

Art and Music Therapy

Thursday, March 15, 5:30 to 7:30 pm
Facilitated by Deborah Shaw-Appel, Art Therapist
and Kimberly Williams, Music Therapist

Dance/Movement and Drama Therapy

Friday, March 16, 5:30 to 7:30pm
Facilitated by Beth Liebowitz, Dance/Movement Therapist
and Maria Scaros, Drama Therapist, Executive Director, The Greens

Workshops will be held at the Bruce Museum
1 Museum Drive, Greenwich

RSVP »

March 15 & 16 Thursday & Friday

Please Join Us! Appreciate how the arts awaken joy and discovery through the creative process of music, dance/movement, drama and art.

Space is limited. Register now. You may attend both workshops or one of them.

Call 203.531.5500
Email mscaros@thegreensatgreenwich.com

Filed Under: Sponsor News! Tagged With: Art and Music Therapy, Bruce Museum, Event, greenwich, music, The Greens

Art Shows in Armonk & Beyond

October 21, 2016 by Marianne Campolongo

Autumn is a great time to see art close to home. From legendary French artists to some of your very own neighbors, there is much to enjoy in the local art scene this fall.

Rosalind Oesterle, an Armonk Outdoor Art Show participant since moving to Armonk the 1970s, with some of her paintings on display, on September 24, 2016. Photo © 2016 Marianne A. Campolongo.
Rosalind Oesterle, an Armonk Outdoor Art Show participant since moving to Armonk the 1970s, with some of her paintings on display, on September 24, 2016. Photo © 2016 Marianne A. Campolongo.

Armonk Outdoor Art Show

Perfect fall weather greeted the 55th annual Armonk Outdoor Art Show, a two-day juried event featuring paintings, drawings, sculpture, printmaking, photography, ceramics, jewelry, and other tactile arts by 185 artists. Ranked among the top art shows nationally, the event draws established and emerging artists from across the country. In recent years, the show has hosted a tent for local high school artists, who, like other participating artists, must be juried into the show, giving them a glimpse of the professional art world.

Painter Rosalind Oesterle has participated since moving to Armonk the 1970s. Her paintings have changed over the years from delicate florals to pastel and jewel-toned nonrepresentational paintings, winning her the nod each year from the jury, since even long-time participants must re-apply and have their work evaluated each year.

Award-winning artist and Armonk resident Judi Offenberg returned to show her luxuriously colored silk paintings this year for the fifth time at the Armonk Outdoor Art Show, on September 24, 2016. Photo © 2016 Marianne A. Campolongo.
Award-winning artist and Armonk resident Judi Offenberg returned to show her luxuriously colored silk paintings this year for the fifth time at the Armonk Outdoor Art Show, on September 24, 2016. Photo © 2016 Marianne A. Campolongo.

Oesterle, a member of the American Watercolor Society and a veteran of countless art shows across the country says her favorite is close to home. “The [Armonk] show is fabulous. It’s the best show.”

Armonk resident Judi Offenberg returned to show her luxuriously-colored silk paintings this year. Originally a textile designer, she fell in love with silk painting when her daughter Melissa did a high school project. She “bought supplies, read books, and taught myself,” she said. Her work has been exhibited widely, but “winning a prize at the show two years ago, was the biggest honor of my life,” she said.

Armonk resident Lana Sidoti, who exhibited her bold and beautiful enameled jewelry and wall pieces for the fourth time this year, and Luis Perez, a longtime show volunteer who entered his watercolors and drawings for the first time, are both members of the Northern Westchester Artists Guild (NWAG), which has been an important catalyst for many local artists to begin showing their work.

Long time Armonk Outdoor Art Show volunteer and Armonk resident Luis Perez showed his drawings for the first time at the Armonk Outdoor Art Show, on September 24, 2016. Photo © 2016 Marianne A. Campolongo.
Long time Armonk Outdoor Art Show volunteer and Armonk resident Luis Perez showed his drawings for the first time at the Armonk Outdoor Art Show, on September 24, 2016. Photo © 2016 Marianne A. Campolongo.

The winner of this year’s first $1,000 Sylvia Rogers Best New Artist prize at the show is another NWAG member, Natalya Aikens from Pleasantville. Her amazing quilts based on her photographs use reclaimed fabric and repurposed plastic bags to make a beautiful environmental statement. Debra Graham, an NWAG member from Scarsdale, won 3rd prize in the Printmaking, Drawing and Pastels category, the second time she has won a prize for her intricately detailed drawings.

Northern Westchester Artists Guild

The Northern Westchester Artists Guild (NWAG), has several treats in store locally. Their show collective expressions at Art and Sound Gallery in Greenwich, Conn. runs through the end of October. When that show ends, the Guild will also be sponsoring a pop-up show at Art and Sound Gallery featuring drawings, paintings, mixed media, and photography on the walls as well as tactile art. It is scheduled for November 12 through December 23, Tuesday through Sunday and by appointment. Check the website artandsound.com for more information.

Byram Hills High School seniors (l to r) Juliana Zepf, a ceramicist and paper sculptor, Gabrielle Kleinberg, painter, and Allegra Samsen, photographer, hold up some of their art on display at the Armonk Outdoor Art Show outside a tent dedicated to the work of 24 student artists primarily from Armonk but also from surrounding towns, whose work was juried into the show, on September 24, 2016. Photo © 2016 Marianne A. Campolongo
Byram Hills High School seniors (l to r) Juliana Zepf, a ceramicist and paper sculptor, Gabrielle Kleinberg, painter, and Allegra Samsen, photographer, hold up some of their art on display at the Armonk Outdoor Art Show outside a tent dedicated to the work of 24 student artists primarily from Armonk but also from surrounding towns, whose work was juried into the show, on September 24, 2016. Photo © 2016 Marianne A. Campolongo

Art In Rye: Armonk artist Perez and prize winner Aikens are among the 16 Guild artists exhibiting their work at a unique show sponsored by the Strong Oestriech team from the Armonk Real Estate office of Douglas Elliman. Each artist will showcase their work in a separate room of a spectacular new $7 million home coming on the market at 135 Highland Road, Rye. The show opens October 28 with morning (8:30-11 a.m.) and evening (6-8 p.m.) receptions and continues October 29-30, 2-5 p.m.  A portion of the proceeds benefit Rye-ACT, which helps battle underage drinking and drug use.

Katonah Museum of Art

Matisse Drawings: Curated by Ellsworth Kelly from The Pierre and Tana Matisse Foundation Collection opens at the Katonah Museum of Art, October 23. The exhibition features 45 drawings by legendary French artist Henri Matisse, curated by Ellsworth Kelly before his death in 2015. Works from Kelly’s own large-scale Suite of Plant Lithographs (1965-66) accompany the show. Kelly earned an international reputation by the early 1950s as one of the most important Minimalist artists in the United States.

“There are many ways to look at and appreciate art, but seeing through the eyes of one artist onto another can be both transformative and illuminating,” says Museum Executive Director Darsie Alexander. The show, organized by the American Federation of Arts and the Mount Holyoke College Art Museum in collaboration with the Matisse Foundation, runs through January 29, 2017.

Kenyan Wangechi Mutu’s untitled work, on display at the Bruce Museum in Greenwich. Photo Courtesy of the Bruce Museum
Kenyan Wangechi Mutu’s untitled work, on display at the Bruce Museum in Greenwich. Photo Courtesy of the Bruce Museum

Bruce Museum

Her Crowd: New Art by Women from Our Neighbors’ Private Collections, which opened at the Bruce Museum in Greenwich, Conn.` in September and runs through Jan. 2, offers a singular opportunity to view art from the walls of some of America’s most influential contemporary art collectors living in Fairfield and Westchester Counties. Themes specific to women such as motherhood, beauty, gender, and sexuality are in evidence, as are works from both established artists such as Yayoi Kusama and Tara Donovan, and up-and-coming artists. Kenneth E. Silver, Mia Laufer and Zvi Grunberg curated the exhibition.

A film series and lectures by scholars and show artists Alessandra Expósito and Margaret Lee compliment the exhibition. See www.brucemuseum.org for the schedule.

ArtsWestchester

Armonk resident Lana Sidoti returned to the Armonk Outdoor Art Show for a fourth year to exhibit her bold and beautiful enameled jewelry and wall pieces, seen here on September 24, 2016. Photo © 2016 Marianne A. Campolongo.
Armonk resident Lana Sidoti returned to the Armonk Outdoor Art Show for a fourth year to exhibit her bold and beautiful enameled jewelry and wall pieces, seen here on September 24, 2016. Photo © 2016 Marianne A. Campolongo.

Remedy, which looks at the healing power of art, opened at ArtsWestchester in White Plains this month and runs through Jan. 14. “The artists in this exhibition engage with the relationship between arts and healing on a number of levels,” says Gallery Director Kathleen Reckling. “Some are inspired by the methods, instruments, and institutions that diagnose and treat our ailments. Others remind us that art is a remedy in and of itself.” The artists from across the country work in many media. “The work is provocative, it is humorous, and it is also poignant,” says Reckling. For example, works such as Laura Splan’s “Prozac, Thorazine, Zoloft,” oversized “pill-ows,” soft and welcoming, offer a humorous take on the comfort provided by the prescriptions they represent while “Asylum,” haunting photographs by Christopher Payne, document abandoned mental institutions across the country.

Gallery hours: Tuesday-Friday 12-5 p.m., Saturday 12-6 p.m. Free events during the show’s run include a Healing Drum Circle, Saturday, October 22, 1 p.m.

Marianne Campolongo is a professional photographer and freelance writer from Chappaqua. A member of the Northern Westchester Artists Guild and other arts oriented organizations, she enjoys exploring new ways to use Photoshop and other digital magic to see where her imagination can take her photographs.

MARIANNE A. CAMPOLONGO PHOTOS

Filed Under: Armonk Cover Stories Tagged With: Armonk Outdoor Art Show, Art, Art Shows, ArtsWestchester, Bruce Museum, Katonah Museum of Art, Marianne Campolongo, Northern Westchester Artists Guild

Primary Sidebar

Please Visit

William Raveis – Armonk
William Raveis – Chappaqua
White Plains Hospital
Houlihan Lawrence – Armonk
Houlihan Lawrence – Briarcliff
Houlihan Lawrence – Chappaqua
NYOMIS – Dr. Andrew Horowitz
Raveis: Lisa Koh and Allison Coviello
Purple Plains
Compass: Miller-Goldenberg Team
Korth & Shannahan
Douglas Elliman: Chappaqua
Roamfurther Athletics
Houlihan Lawrence: Harriet Libov
Wonder food hall
Beecher Flooks Funeral Home
David Visconti Painting & Contracting
Pinksky Studio
New Castle Physical Therapy
King Street Creatives

Follow our Social Media

The Inside Press

Our Latest Issues

For a full reading of our current edition, or to obtain a copy or subscription, please contact us.

Inside Armonk Inside Chappaqua and Millwood Inside Pleasantville and Briarcliff Manor

Join Our Mailing List


Search Inside Press

Links

  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Digital Subscription
  • Print Subscription

Publisher’s Note Regarding Our Valued Sponsors

Inside Press is not responsible for and does not necessarily endorse or not endorse any advertisers, products or resources referenced in either sponsor-driven stories or in advertisements appearing in this publication. The Inside Press shall not be liable to any party as a result of any information, services or resources made available through this publication.The Inside Press is published in good faith and cannot be held responsible for any inaccuracies in advertising or sponsor driven stories that appear in this publication. The views of advertisers and contributors are not necessarily those of the publisher’s.

Opinions and information presented in all Inside Press articles, such as in the arena of health and medicine, strictly reflect the experiences, expertise and/or views of those interviewed, and are not necessarily recommended or endorsed by the Inside Press. Please consult your own doctor for diagnosis and/or treatment.

Footer

Support The Inside Press

Advertising

Print Subscription

Digital Subscription

Categories

Archives

Subscribe

Did you know you can subscribe anytime to our print editions?

Voluntary subscriptions are most welcome, if you've moved outside the area, or a subscription is a great present idea for an elderly parent, for a neighbor who is moving or for your graduating high school student or any college student who may enjoy keeping up with hometown stories.

Subscribe Today

Copyright © 2025 The Inside Press, Inc. · Log in