Community Day Celebrating Bennington Collects
On Saturday, May 12 from 10 am to 5 pm admission to the Bennington Museum is free for all visitors. Join us for a day of Celebrating Bennington Collects. Among the activities planned for you is a visit by the Vermont Arts Exchange Art Bus where you can become creative with arts and crafts. Stepping into the Museum, art and history are all around, and "creative collisions" can be found around almost every corner.
Meet Artist Edward Koren
Join us at 3:00 pm to welcome Vermont artist Edward Koren as he opens his exhibition Thinking About Extinction and Other Droll Things: Recent Prints and Drawings by Edward Koren. This exhibition features recent etchings and lithographs by Edward Koren, who is best known for his iconic cartoons of furry humans published in The New Yorker magazine.
Museum ABCs: Trail Tale with Anne Hunter
Walk the George Aiken Wildflower Trail while Anne reads us her newest story about our friend, Possum
Bennington Historical Society
Exploring Bennington's "Other" Cemeteries Meet at 2:00 PM in front of the Bennington Museum. The cost is $15. This tour is re-scheduled from April 15. Please call Bill Morgan at 802-440-8075 to make your reservation or confirm one you have already made. There are still a few seats available.
National Trail Days – Take a Hike in The Shires!
National Trail Days, Take a hike in The Shires. June 2, 2018
Old Vermont Sheet Music: A Parlor Song Performance
From the earliest published song, ‘Green Mountain Farmer” (1798), though 1850 temperance ballads, Civil War era songs to those about Vermonters Calvin Coolidge, Thomas Dewey, and Jim Fiske, singer and researcher Linda Radtke joined by pianist Arthur Zorn bring Vermont history to life.
Meet Vermont Artist Bill Botzow
Join us at 3:00 pm to welcome Vermont artist and state representative Bill Botzow as he opens his exhibition CAMBIUM (Into the Woods): Works by Bill Botzow. This opening is free and open to the public. Talk to the artist and hear his perspective on "...attention, noticing, touching, gathering, ordering, responding and how it has led to sculptures and drawings that I hope in some way honor that liveliest, hidden place where the creative grows.”
The Moses Mission: Join in the fun!
It's time. The Moses Mission, if you choose to accept it, will bring you and your teammates to a total of 7 regional sites, significant to the life story of the artist, Anna Mary Robertson "Grandma" Moses.
Thinking About Extinction
Presented by Berkshire Country author Elizabeth Kolbert and Vermont Artist and contributor to The New Yorker, Edward Koren THINKING ABOUT EXTINCTION explores her book "The Sixth Extinction" and its impact on Koren’s work in creating curious skeletal creatures in a landscape of ruined Gothic and Classical architecture.
Vermont Arts Exchange (VAE) comes to Bennington Museum
Vermont Arts Exchange (VAE) and Bennington Museum have combined forces to bring two VAE camps to the beautiful Hadwen Woods and George Aiken Wildflower Trail of the Museum.
Gimme Shelter VAE Camp at Bennington Museum
Campers utilize the beautiful Hadwen Woods to explore, design, and create dwellings and shelters.
Digging Deep into the New Deal in Vermont
Join Curator of Bennington Museum Jamie Franklin for a Gallery Talk on "Crash to Creativity: The New Deal In Vermont." Learn how the years 1934-1944 were not only some of the darkest days in Vermont (and our Country), but also a time of immense creativity and innovation in the Green Mountain State. Artists, architects, writers, construction workers, and civil employees, whose work was funded through Federal New Deal programs, helped to document the state’s history, record the conditions of contemporary life during the Depression and recovery, and build infrastructure that continues to benefit us today.
Woody Guthrie: “Dustbowl Balladeer” a presentation by Mark Greenberg
In his music and his writing, Woody Guthrie chronicled the devastation of the 1930s dust storms and the Great Depression, championing the dispossessed as well as economic and social injustice. Many of his songs such as “This Land is Your Land” have become American classics, and he has influenced subsequent songwriters, among them Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen.
Working Out, A conversation with the Artist and the Curator
In conjunction with his current exhibition CAMBIUM (Into the Woods): Works by Bill Botzow, artist and sculptor Bill Botzow and Bennington Museum’s curator Jamie Franklin present Working Out, a conversation about Botzow’s outdoor sculptural installations, his traveling drawing projects, and his way of working. Audience participation in the conversation is encouraged. It is free and includes admission to the Regional Artists Gallery where many of Botzow’s works are on view.
Bennington Historical Society
“What We Could Build: Bennington Architecture as Technology” Presented by Jane Radocchia
Community Day – Art, History, Nature, and More
On Saturday, September 22 from 10 am to 5 pm admission to the Bennington Museum is free for all visitors. Join us for a day of Celebrating our new fall exhibitions including the 1863 Jane Stickle Quilt, Where did You Come From Anyway?: Works by Pat Musick, and the opening of WWI - Bennington and The First Great War.
Meet Vermont Artist Pat Musick
Meet artist Pat Musick at an opening reception in the Works on Paper Gallery of the Museum as we celebrate her exhibition Where Did You Come From Anyway?, a retrospective of work from Musick’s entire career spanning 55 years. This reception is free and open to the public. The exhibition will be on view September 15 through December 30. Pat is an American artist who lives in Manchester Center, Vermont.
What’s New About Jane Stickle and Her Quilt
Pamela Weeks: What’s New About Jane Stickle and Her Quilt? Pamela Weeks, Binney Family Curator of the New England Quilt Museum, shares information about the famous 1863 Jane Stickle Quilt and its maker. Weeks physically examined and conducted extensive research on the quilt in 2013, on the 150th anniversary of its making. With contributions from Bennington Museum staff and Stickle family members, Weeks was able to shed new light on the life of the Vermont farm wife who made an incredible quilt. Click on Find Out More to follow the link to purchase your tickets through the online store.
Art and Architecture of the New Deal in Vermont
Join Devin Colman, State Architectural Historian at the Vermont Division of Historic Preservation in Montpelier as he presents Art & Architecture of the New Deal in Vermont. His illustrated talk explores the New Deal art and building programs of the 1930s, with an emphasis on projects undertaken in Vermont. A graduate of Colby College, Colman earned his MS in Historic Preservation at the University of Vermont. This presentation is free and includes admission to the Museum's summer exhibition Crash to Creativity: The New Deal in Vermont.