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“We’ve announced an opportunity to create a new home for businesses & non-profits working in #climate & environment-related fields i
A visit to the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art, which is located in SoHo and dedicated to the art of the LGBTQ community.
A visit to the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art, which is located in SoHo and dedicated to the art of the LGBTQ community.
https://www.chronogram.com/hudsonvalley/thornwillow-makers-village-a-creative-community-in-newburgh/Content?oid=7630976
The Thornwillow Makers Village is a transformative economic development and downtown revitalization initiative launched by Thornwillow Institute, an outgrowth of Luke Ives Pontifell's Thornwillow Press, a world leader in handcrafted, limited-edition publishing and exquisite letterpress stationery, based in Newburgh since 2004. (Thornwillow editions are in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum, the Vatican, the White House, the Smithsonian, Vassar, Harvard, and Yale.)
The Makers Village seeks to add to Newburgh's ongoing resurgence and serve its diverse community. "Newburgh's businesspeople and grassroots makers are joining forces with New York City refugees who needed space they could afford." says Pontifell. "It's not 'signs of' change anymore, it's actual change."
+ Thornwillow Makers Village will encompass 100,000 square feet in and around five adjacent properties. Anchored by a historic carriage house, the village will include maker incubator spaces; live/work studios; gallery, event, and retail spaces; and a bar and restaurant highlighting Hudson Valley craft distilleries.
+ Last fall, the Mid-Hudson Regional Economic Development Council awarded $400,000 in New York State economic development funding for the initiative.
+ The village will also include a bookstore, the city's first in 50 years.
At its annual fall gala this evening, October 22, the world’s only museum dedicated to the presentation of queer art will make several big-ticket announcements, from the start of a capital campaign for building renovations to a $500,000 bequest for operations to the establishment of its first endowment fund.
Perhaps the biggest change for the institution, though, is being made to one of its defining facets: its name. The Leslie-Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art in New York will now be called the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art. (It will also begin to use taglines in its marketing, the first one being “The Future Is Queer,” the theme of this evening’s gala.)
Gonzalo Casals, the Leslie-Lohman’s executive director, told ARTnews that the name change is emblematic of “what the vision of the future of the museum is.” He pointed out that the museum’s founding and the Stonewall Uprising both took place in June 1969, and said that while reflecting on the past can be useful, it is equally important to ensure that “the past is informing the present, so we can be projected into the future. Part of that was embracing the idea of queerness in the most expansive way possible. In doing that it became evident that our name needed to be as expansive as the concept of queerness, so that everyone feels welcome to the museum.
The museum will also establish a $7 million capital campaign that will allow the institution to alter its public-facing spaces, create a new community engagement and education center, and make an upgrade to its archives and library that will better serve the needs of researchers. Three New York City civic entities—the City Council, the Department of Cultural Affairs, and the Manhattan Borough President’s office—have together pledged a combined $3.4 million to the campaign, making this the first time that the museum has received capital funding from the city. It’s the largest gift the museum has received to date.
Casals said that New York is facing a wave of displacements of peoples and small businesses, and this particularly affects queer spaces, from bars to bookstores. The city must understand the “importance of physical spaces for arts and culture that mirror the experiences of marginalized groups,” he said, adding, “it’s amazing that in 50 years we’ve moved from not being able to be in spaces as ourselves to having this support.”
“The Leslie-Lohman Museum has become a cultural hub for the LGBTQ community at large,” Manhattan Borough President Gale A. Brewer told ARTnews in an email. “The dialogue provoked during a visit to this museum is priceless to the community it represents, and to New York City as a whole.”
The Leslie-Lohman recently underwent a renovation that doubled its exhibition space in 2017. Though the capital campaign is primarily intended to re-up the museum’s infrastructure, Casals said that staff saw it as an opportunity to further fulfill the vision he has for the museum. “Most of the public spaces of the museum are gallery spaces,” Casals said. “That in a way limits the vision that we have for the museum that is so much more than just hanging artworks on the wall.”
The museum’s new Learning Center for Arts and Intersectionality will be a 650-square-foot flexible space for various types of programming, and it will take over the institution’s current administrative offices, which will move downstairs into the museum’s basement level. In this space, the education team will mount exhibitions, lead tours and workshops, and conduct an after-school program with youth and public-school students in mind that places an emphasis on queer identities and intersectionality. The museum will also establish a more accessible space for its research library and archives to better serve the recent uptick in scholars who have come to do research at the museum.
http://www.artnews.com/2019/10/22/leslie-lohman-museum-name-change-endowment/
The museum will also establish a $7 million capital campaign for building improvements and has received a $500,000 bequest. Read More
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