Archives: Events
Border Cantos | Sonic Border recepción para miembros (virtual)
Estás invitado a una recepción virtual para miembros para celebrar la apertura de Border Cantos | Sonic Border: Richard Misrach | Guillermo Galindo. Presentada por la directora del museo HRM y CEO Masha Turchinsky Comentarios de los artistas destacados Richard Misrach y Guillermo Galindo Recorrido de la exposición en video presentado por Laura Vookles, Presidenta
Border Cantos | Sonic Border Virtual Exhibition Reception for Members
HRM Members are invited to an exclusive virtual reception celebrating the opening of Border Cantos | Sonic Border: Richard Misrach | Guillermo Galindo. Hosted by HRM Director and CEO Masha Turchinsky Remarks by featured artists Richard Misrach and Guillermo Galindo Video tour of the exhibition by Laura Vookles, Chair, Curatorial Department Musical performance by Guillermo
Black History Month 2021
Celebrate Black History Month 2021 at the Hudson River Museum! Author, Activist, and Artist: A Virtual Panel Saturday, February 13, 2pm Support provided by Art Bridges. Virtual Planetarium Shows: Honoring Outstanding Black Scientists Monday, February 15–Friday, February 19, 12:30pm Sponsored by Con Edison. Virtual Performance: Mashed-Up Maps Sunday, February 28, 1:30pm Support provided by Art
Virtual Planetarium Shows: Honoring Outstanding Black Scientists
In honor of Black History Month, our tour of the sky will include a look at the contributions and discoveries of Black Americans, including NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson, astronomer and cartographer Benjamin Banneker, astronaut and NASA administrator Charles F. Bolden, astrophysicist and engineer George Carruthers, and X-ray physicist and engineer George Alcorn, Jr. Left:
Colaboradores en conversación: Richard Misrach y Guillermo Galindo (Virtual)
El fotógrafo Richard Misrach y el compositor y artista Guillermo Galindo discuten los caminos individuales y compartidos que, a lo largo de los años, los han llevado a combinar sus obras inspiradas en la región fronteriza mexicano-estadounidense en una exposición que transmite el impacto humano del viaje del inmigrante y, en el proceso, impacta en
Collaborators in Conversation: Richard Misrach and Guillermo Galindo (Virtual)
Photographer Richard Misrach and sculptor and composer Guillermo Galindo discuss the individual and shared paths that have, over the years, led them to combine their bodies of work inspired by the Mexican-American border region into an exhibition that conveys the human impact of the immigrant’s journey. How did Border Cantos | Sonic Border come to
Lenguaje e identidad: Un panel de discusión (virtual)
¿Cómo hablamos de nosotros mismos? ¿Preferimos identificarnos de acuerdo con nuestro país de origen o herencia, o usar términos comúnmente aceptados como: Hispanic, Chicana/o, Latino/a, o Latinx? Independientemente del término que se utilice, la gente rara vez está totalmente de acuerdo. Es un tema cargado de emociones y existen importantes variaciones de uso según factores
Virtual Performance: Mashed-Up Maps
Three artists perform visual, verbal, and musical mash-ups in reaction to the landscapes on view in Landscape Art & Virtual Travel, unearthing the multisensory and multilayered responses we have, conscious and subliminal, to the views we encounter in the world. Artist and rapper Umar Rashid, aka Frohawk Two Feathers, spoken word poet Marcus C. John,
Virtual Panel Discussion: Living Language and Identity
How do we talk about ourselves? Do we prefer to identify ourselves according to our country of origin or heritage, or use commonly accepted terms like: Hispanic, Chicana/o, Latino/a, or Latinx? No matter which term is used, people are rarely in full agreement. It’s an emotionally charged topic and there are important usage variations depending
Virtual Planetarium Show for Kids: Have You Ever Seen a Satellite?
We have been sending rockets into orbit since the 1950s. Today, thousands of satellites, a few astronauts, and lots of “space junk” (human-made objects in space that serve no purpose) circle the Earth. They’re not hard to spot—if you know where to look and what to look for. Then, we’ll return to our weekly sightings