CMoG offering free admission to those who receive museum postcards at Corning Pride events June 12-13 weny.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from weny.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
/PRNewswire/ Dustin Yellin, in collaboration with the National Wildlife Federation, Droga5, Squint/Opera, Q Department, Mach1 and Vrai Pictures, today.
Fill up on fun at the Finger Lakes region.
With more than 100 wineries, distilleries and breweries there, the area makes for the perfect summer getaway. Located in upstate New York, the Finger Lakes offer quaint, picturesque towns; antique stores; and the distinct flavors of New Yorkâs best restaurants. There are art galleries, casinos and shopping outlets as well as spas, nature areas and hiking trails where you can relax. Four-legged friends are welcome as well, with dozens of pet-friendly wineries, breweries and restaurants spread across the region.
Book a stay at Watkins Glen Harbor Hotel, which includes everything you need for the perfect getaway. Set on the shores of Seneca Lake in the heart of Finger Lakes Wine Country, the hotel offers deluxe rooms and suites; spectacular, landscaped grounds; and fire pits set against the backdrop of the shoreline. To relax and recharge, plan a spa day through Rasa Spa, a full-service, holistic health care spa. It encompasses a wide ra
In 1981, glass artist Josh Simpson threw a few teaspoons of cobalt, copper, silver and zinc into a crucible of molten glass, and came out with an explosion of swirling reds, blues and greens that closely resembled a NASA photograph of the Crab Nebula,.
Wandering Eye: A Stitch in Time Editorial Staff
Corning Museum of Glass, Corning, New York.
ART ALL OVER
A two-part exhibition of
sixteen quilts, made over the course of seventy years by women from the same family and recently given to the Columbus Museum in Georgia, is underway in that state. The gift was presented by Dr. Paul M. Goggans, whose quilting grandmother, great-grandmother, and great-great-aunt intended these showstoppers for get this functional purposes. (
What’s in a name? A lot. So should we use women artists’ first or last (or first and last) when referencing them in academic discussions of their work? First names are frequently employed, as in the case of Alexander Nemerov’s new book on Helen Frankenthaler. This essay brings to light the complicated issues at play for some writers of biographical scholarship: “Yes, it’s hard to have a name when you’re a woman. But it shouldn’t have to be.” (