Fall for Art draws crowds despite rain

MILLERTON — The clouds opened over the village last Saturday evening, releasing torrents of rain on visitors bustling from shop to shop for the Fall for Art event. If the rain was a deterrent, it didn’t show as throngs of people from all over made the best of it, enjoying the variety of pleasures that each shop had to offer.

It was a village-wide event in the truest sense of the word: More than 30 shops hosted approximately 50 artists, turning the village into a race to see whether anyone could make it to every shop from 5 to 8 p.m. (collecting stickers on your brochure proved it).

While the idea for the event started with Hunter Bee co-owner Jonathan Bee, he was quick to point out that the enormity of the event was the result of the dedication and hard work put in from everyone who was involved.

“I hate to use the cliche, but in this case it really does take a village,� Bee said.

The antique shop owner added that the event, for him, solidified the village’s “percolating movement of being a family� that he has been a part of since Hunter Bee joined the village’s merchants group after setting up shop last year.

More than 1,000 people participated in the event, according to the brochures that were collected at the end of the night, and 300 people attended an after-party held at the Motorworks Garage on South Center Street.

“The arts bring so much economically into an area,� Bee explained. “Fall for Art was a great case in point. Every shop we spoke to made sales, and what everyone was most happy about were the first-time visitors coming into the shops.�

Bee called the event an “elixir� to the gloomy feeling that has been surrounding local merchants around the county since the economic downturn.

“I think people are tired of being gloomy about the depression,� he said. “I think people are ready to say, ‘Let’s have fun.’�

Creative work ranged from the more traditional oils on canvas to some peculiar and unusual works of art. The Rexall pharmacy building, which is currently undergoing construction, was a fitting location to showcase Henry Klimowicz’s corrugated cardboard creations, painstakingly arranged in three-dimensional structures.

“The pieces are very big, so this place made sense,� Klimowicz explained. “And what’s cool is that by Monday, this will go back to being a construction site It’s really nice that this is happening. It’s a good, diverse selection of artists.�

Over at Kate Carty, performance artist and craftsman Ken Butler was playing some unusual handmade guitars and stringed instruments made from axes, hockey sticks and ping-pong paddles, among other things. The event was definitely a crowd-pleaser, as the magnitude and volume of art on display took a few people by surprise.

Leone Young of Falls Village said she certainly wasn’t expecting a crowd of that size when she saw an ad for the event in the paper.

“This is a great idea,� she affirmed, adding that if the event were to happen again there should be more publicity in the surrounding areas outside Millerton because it would be of interest to so many people.

Prizes were donated by each of the stores involved in the event, totaling several thousand dollars. Three gift baskets were created out of the dozens and dozens of items, and Sharon King Hoge (third place), Edith Greenwood (second) and Paul Sweeney (first) ended up being the lucky winners.

Kimberly Brooks, owner of Twisted on Dutchess Avenue, said that despite being set back from the main strip plenty of people were still finding her shop.

“There’s plenty of new people coming in for the first time,� she said, adding that it was on all counts a plus for the artists featured, the shoppers and the store owners. “I would definitely like to participate again.�

“This is so great,� reiterated Rosie Blanco, who hails from New Jersey, but is a regular visitor to the village. “They should have come up with this a long time ago.�

Bee said there would definitely be at least an annual event like Fall for Art. And who knows, if the event needs a clever pun in the title, who wouldn’t want to Spring for Art this coming April?

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