Modern Sculpture At Chesterwood

Chesterwood, the one-time home of noted American sculptor Daniel Chester French, celebrates 40 years of contemporary outdoor sculpture with its current anniversary show. French is best known as the sculptor of the statue of Abraham Lincoln that resides inside the Lincoln Memorial and he created many public and monumental works during his life. It is fitting, then, that his former home has hosted both notable and emerging artists working in outdoor and public sculpture over the last four decades. This summer’s show features a number of well-known names including Alexander Calder, Mary Ann Unger and George Rickey. 

Rickey, who has two pieces in the show, was featured in Chesterwood’s first contemporary sculpture exhibit in 1978. His “Open Trapezoids Excentric, One Up One Down, Variation V,” from 1984 moves with a quiet and and mesmerizing grace, light skipping across the angles of the work’s stainless steel frame as it shifts and bends. The 40 - year anniversary show, co-curated, by Maxwell Davidson III and Charles C. Davidson of the Maxwell Davidson Gallery, highlights kinetic works. “Untitled” by the West Stockbridge based Pedro S. de Movellán is gorgeously nestled into the landscape near the main house’s front hedge, while Lin Emery’s “Octet,” appears like an elegant, futuristic tree behind the Barn Gallery, its round aluminum pieces twisting in the wind. 

Mary Ann Unger’s static sculptures are a terrific fit for the shade of one of the property’s woodland walks where they have been settled. “Unfurling” (1986) appears like a large, silver nautilus shell slowly coming undone. Next to it, the orange-painted aluminum and geometric lines of “Beehive Temple” (1987) play against the essential curved shape of the hive. A small field near the parking area hosts Stephen M. Day’s “Triple Column Twist,” a tumbling series of red steel blocks. Day, a collaborator of Rickey’s, was also featured in Chesterwood’s inaugural contemporary sculptures show. There is an appealing ability to both look back and look forward that the show hits upon, which matches well with the setting and the continuing relevance of French’s own work.

Alongside the sculpture, there is plenty more to see. Informative docents lead brief highlight tours that include the residence. The Barn Gallery features a small, but very good exhibit about French’s life and work, as well as a just-opened, climate-controlled exhibition space highlighting the Chesterwood art collection. French’s marvelous studio, with its beautiful northern light, might well be worth a visit in its own right. Built in 1898, it still holds a number of the sculptor’s working plaster models, including two versions of “Seated Lincoln,” as well as the marble sculpture, “Andromeda,” that was unfinished at the time of his death. “Contemporary Sculpture at Chesterwood: 40 Yrs,” offers one more reason to visit—and linger.

 

“Contemporary Sculpture at Chesterwood: 40 Years” runs through October 8 at 4 Williamsville Road, Stockbridge, Mass. Chesterwood is open seven days a week through October 8. Tour of the exhibition are available on Fridays in July & August at 2 pm. For further information call 413-298-3579 or go to www.chesterwood.org.

Latest News

Winter sports season approaches at HVRHS

Mohawk Mountain was making snow the first week of December. The slopes host practices and meets for the HVRHS ski team.

By Riley Klein

FALLS VILLAGE — After concluding a successful autumn of athletics, Housatonic Valley Regional High School is set to field teams in five sports this winter.

Basketball

Keep ReadingShow less
Bears headline DEEP forum in Sharon; attendees call for coexistence, not hunting

A mother bear and her cubs move through a backyard in northwest Connecticut, where residents told DEEP that bear litters are now appearing more frequently.

By James H. Clark

SHARON — About 40 people filled the Sharon Audubon Center on Wednesday, Dec. 3, to discuss black bears — and most attendees made clear that they welcome the animals’ presence. Even as they traded practical advice on how to keep bears out of garages, porches and trash cans, residents repeatedly emphasized that they want the bears to stay and that the real problem lies with people, not wildlife.

The Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) convened the meeting as the first in a series of regional Bear Management Listening Sessions, held at a time when Connecticut is increasingly divided over whether the state should authorize a limited bear hunt. Anticipating the potential for heated exchanges, DEEP opened the evening with strict ground rules designed to prevent confrontations: speakers were limited to three minutes, directed to address only the panel of DEEP officials, and warned that interruptions or personal attacks would not be tolerated.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kent unveils two new 'smart bins' to boost composting efforts

Rick Osborne, manager of the Kent Transfer Station, deposits the first bag of food scraps into a new organics “smart bin.” HRRA Executive Director Jennifer Heaton-Jones stands at right, with Transfer Station staff member Rob Hayes at left.

By Ruth Epstein

KENT — Residents now have access to around-the-clock food-scrap composting thanks to two newly installed organics “smart bins,” unveiled during a ribbon-cutting ceremony Monday morning, Dec. 1.

Rick Osborne, manager of the Kent Transfer Station, placed the first bag of food scraps into the smart bin located at 3 Railroad St. A second bin has been installed outside the Transfer Station gate, allowing 24/7 public access even when the facility is closed.

Keep ReadingShow less
Cornwall selectmen prioritize housing, healthcare in new two-year goals

Cornwall First Selectman Gordon Ridgway

File photo

CORNWALL — Housing and healthcare topped the list of 15 goals the Board of Selectmen set for the next two years, reflecting the board’s view that both areas warrant continued attention.

First Selectman Gordon Ridgway and Selectmen Rocco Botto and John Brown outlined their priorities during the board’s regular meeting on Tuesday, Dec. 2. On housing, the board discussed supporting organizations working to create affordable options in town, and Botto said the town should also pursue additional land acquisitions for future housing.

Keep ReadingShow less