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Legal Notices - 2/20/2025
Feb 19, 2025
Legal Notice
Notice of Formation of EMERY’S MINI MARKET LLC. Articles of Organization filed with SSNY on 1/23/2025. Office: Dutchess County. SSNY designated as agent for process & shall mail copy to: 9 David Rd, Millerton, NY 12546. Purpose: Any lawful.
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Legal Notice
Notice of Formation of 166 Albany Avenue LLC, Arts. of Org filed with SSNY on 12/12/24. Office location: Dutchess County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail process to 21 Steamboat Dock Road, Barrytown, NY 12507. Purpose: any lawful act or activity.
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Legal Notice
Notice of formation of Faithwell Farms And Wellbeing Center, LLC. Art. Of Org. filed with the SSNY on 12/26/24. Office in Dutchess County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, PO Box 86, LaGrangeville, NY 12540. Purpose: Any lawful purpose
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Legal Notice
Self Destruct Sequence Tattoo LLC Art. Of Org. Filed Sec. of State of NY 1/14/2025. Off. Loc. : Dutchess Co. SSNY designated as agent upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY to mail copy of process to 21 Merry Hill Rd, Poughkeepsie NY 12603. Primary business location is 21 West Main Street, Pawling NY, 12564. Purpose: Any lawful act or activity.
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03-20-25
Legal Notice
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that Homeland Towers, LLC (“Homeland Towers”) will perform a balloon test at 6534 Route 22, Ancram, NY (the “Site”), in connection with its proposal to locate a wireless communications facility (the “Facility”) at the Site.
The Facility is proposed to include a 150-foot monopole with panel antennas thereon, together with related equipment located within a secure fenced area at the base thereof.
The balloon test will be conducted on Saturday, February 22, 2025 at the Site, or in case of inclement or windy weather, on Saturday, March 1, 2025 and then each consecutive weekend date thereafter until the balloon test is completed. The balloon shall be flown from approximately 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. weather permitting.
The purpose of the balloon test is to establish the approximate location and height of the Facility so that computer generated visual renderings can be prepared from various viewpoints. The balloon test will consist of an approximately three-foot diameter brightly colored balloon being floated on a tether line to a maximum height of 150 feet above ground level. A second alternate color balloon will be floated at 100 feet above ground level for evaluation purposes. Please contact the Planning Board clerk via email at Smacarthur@ancramny.org or check the Town Website at https://www.ancramny.org/ for additional updates regarding the balloon test and the proposed Facility.
02-20-25
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Classifieds - February 20, 2025
Feb 19, 2025
Help Wanted
Plumbing/Heating Technicians & Appliance Installers: Decker & Beebe 404 Ashley Falls Rd, North Canaan is looking for skilled/licensed technicians with strong mechanical aptitude, problem-solving skills and attention to detail. Our team values expertise, dedication and craftsmanship. We offer competitive hourly wages with overtime opportunities, bonuses, health insurance, paid time off, and 401(k) with company matching after a probationary period. Email resumes to LS@DeckerandBeebe.com or Call Lisa for an interview now, 860-824-5467.
Services Offered
Lamp repair and rewiring: Serving the Northwest Corner. 413-717-2494.
Hector Pacay Service: House Remodeling, Landscaping, Lawn mowing, Garden mulch, Painting, Gutters, Pruning, Stump Grinding, Chipping, Tree work, Brush removal, Fence, Patio, Carpenter/decks, Masonry. Spring and Fall Cleanup. Commercial & Residential. Fully insured. 845-636-3212.
Antiques, Collectibles
MID CENTURY FURNITURE WANTED:1950’s-1970’s designer modern furniture and lighting. Danish, French, Italian and American design. Eames, Knoll, Herman Miller, Nakashima, Wegner, Noguchi Etc. Buying Vintage Porsche cars any condition. Open Air Modern 718.383.6465 info@openairmodern.com
Houses For Rent
Sharon Rentals: 1b/1b home on a private lake. Avail 4/1/25. Yearly. $2750/Furnished, weekly housekeeping, garbage, water, ground maint. included. utilities addtl. 860-309-4482.
Apartments For Rent
SHARON: Now accepting applications for 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at SHARON RIDGE EXPANSION. Income-based housing. USDA income limits apply. NO SMOKING. For information and to obtain application, contact: 203-699-9335 ext. 310. leave message. tbroderick@cremllc.com. ****Equal Housing Opportunity****
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Invited to be a featured speaker at The Millbrook School’s launch of The Firefly Environmental Arts Project on Friday, Feb. 21, Eileen Fielding, Director of the Sharon Audubon Center, paused for a photo with Bob, the American Kestrel, a long-term resident at the Center due to respiratory troubles.
Photo by Leila Hawken
MILLBROOK — Inspired by hope and resiliency found in nature, the Millbrook School is launching The Firefly Environmental Arts Project, assembling area artists, naturalists and environmentalists, seeking to build community through shared experiences in nature and the arts. The project will kick off at the Millbrook School on Friday, Feb. 21, at 7 p.m.
In the event of snow, the date will move to Sunday, Feb. 23, at 1 p.m. The public is invited to attend.
Guest speaker will be Eileen Fielding, Audubon Center of Sharon Director since 2018, preeminent expert, active in the protection of wildlife within the regional landscape. The title of her talk will be “Bending the Bird Curve.”
“There are so many environmental and sustainability issues that it’s a challenge to decide where to focus,” Fielding commented on Saturday, Feb. 1. “For this talk, I’ll discuss climate change, and how we can address it in part through natural climate solutions as they can be applied in the Northeast,” she added.
Pleased to have been asked to participate in the Millbrook School’s environmental work and the current project, Fielding said, “There’s a rising cohort of young people who are capable, creative, concerned over the state of the planet, and motivated to do something about it. Audubon is one of the organizations offering pathways for young leaders to take action. I welcome this opportunity to invite their participation and encourage them. They have a lot to give.”
Tim Good of the Good Gallery in Kent was responsible for curating the art and artists. Students from eight area independent schools are expected to participate in the Firefly Project, along with 15 prominent visual artists from the region, all combining talents and energy to environmental issues.
“This event will allow young artists to display their work alongside established artists. That invitation is an important vote of confidence, a recognition that their work and their perspectives are valuable,” Fielding said.
“In the same way, the event recognizes a connection between art and advocacy for the environment. In my talk, I hope to highlight how these two endeavors can inspire and strengthen each other,” Fielding said.
Fielding earned a Master of Science and Ph.D. in Ecology from the University of Connecticut and a Bachelor of Science degree in Natural Resources from the University of Massachusetts.
Before becoming the Sharon Audubon Center’s director, she volunteered to help with the bird rehabilitation department and contributed actively to the Center’s advisory board.
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Joy Brown installing work for her show at the Tremaine Art Gallery at Hotchkiss.
Natalia Zukerman
This year, The Hotchkiss School is marking 50 years of co-education with a series of special events, including an exhibition by renowned sculptor Joy Brown. “The Art of Joy Brown,” opening Saturday, Feb. 22, in the Tremaine Art Gallery, offers a rare retrospective of Brown’s work, spanning five decades from her early pottery to her large-scale bronze sculptures.
“It’s an honor to show my work in celebration of fifty years of women at Hotchkiss,” Brown shared. “This exhibition traces my journey—from my roots in pottery to the figures and murals that have evolved over time.”
Co-curated by Christine Owen, Hotchkiss ceramics instructor, and Joan Baldwin, curator of special collections, the scale and scope of the exhibition was inspired by a recent Ed Ruscha retrospective in Los Angeles. “I thought it would be incredible to showcase all these different aspects of Joy’s work,” said Owen, who has known Brown for over 30 years.
Brown’s father, a Presbyterian missionary and medical doctor, opened a hospital in Japan where Brown grew up and cultivated her love of clay. Her first apprenticeship was in Tomba, a region in Hyogo Prefecture known for its ancient pottery kilns and Tambayaki pottery. “There are thousands of years of continuous history of clay there and I was working with a 13th generation potter.” Brown recalled that as part of her early training, her teacher handed her a sake cup and said, “make these.” With no extra instruction given, Brown proceeded to make thousands of copies of the cup. Never fired, she realized that the pieces were an exercise. She explained, “You’re not really making something, you’re participating in a process that these things emerge from.” From there, she embarked on an apprenticeship with master potter Shigeyoshi Morioka. As part of the process she learned from Morioka, Brown has built a 30-foot-long wood-firing tunnel kiln on her property in Kent, Connecticut, where she fires her work once a year in an intensive month-long process. The fire’s natural interaction with the clay creates unique earth tones and ash patterns, highlighting the raw beauty of the material.
Natalia Zukerman
“I learned not just pottery but a whole way of life,” she recalled. “The work is a continuous process—like practicing a signature until it evolves into something uniquely yours.” Her figures, initially emerging as playful puppets, have since evolved into large-scale sculptures now found in public spaces from Shanghai to Broadway to Hotchkiss’s own campus.
Brown’s seven-foot “Sitter with Head in Hands” was installed near Ford Food Court in October, followed by “Recliner with Head in Hands” near Hotchkiss’s Main Building in November. She welcomes interaction with her sculptures, encouraging visitors to touch them and even dress them with scarves or hats. “These figures transcend gender, age, and culture,” Brown noted. “They’re kind of like when you’re 4 years old and you didn’t know or care what you were, you know? All of us meet in that field and I think people resonate with that.”
In conjunction with the exhibition, Hotchkiss will host a screening of “The Art of Joy Brown,” a documentary by Eduardo Montes-Bradley, followed by a panel discussion with the artist and filmmaker on March 6 in Walker Auditorium. Brown will also serve as an artist-in-residence, collaborating with students on special projects.
On being part of the celebration of women at Hotchkiss Brown said, “Fifty years ago, I was deep in the mountains of Japan, immersed in clay.” With a soft spoken and almost childlike quality, Brown spoke about and interacted with her pieces with curiosity, reverence and wonder.
“The practice of working with clay for all these years is grounding and centering for me. It challenges me,” she said. “The work forces me to put myself out there. It’s not just the making of the pieces that make me more whole, the pieces themselves become more present.”
Brown reflected on the retrospective nature of the show and shared that putting it together has been like looking at a family album. “It’s kind of like I’m seeing my whole life in front of me,” she said. “It’s humbling and makes me think about why I do what I do. It comes back to the idea of those thousands of sake cups, you know? We’re just here, being as present as we can be. We’re not making things, we’re participating in a process of being more present, and all that spirit is reflected in the work.”
“The Art of Joy Brown” opens Saturday, Feb. 22, and runs through April 6. For more information, visit www.hotchkiss.org.
This story has been updated to reflect a change in the scheduled opening date due to forecast extreme weather conditions.
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