The Millerton News - March 8, 2012

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‘Fields of Snakes’ opens at Standard Space, exploring collaboration and transformation
‘Snakes on Downey Rd, Millerton, NY, 2025,’ a pigment print by Theo Coulombe and Eve Biddle, from the series ‘Fields of Snakes.’ Printed from an 8×10-inch color negative on archival rag paper, 32 by 40 inches, 2024.
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Artist and Standard Space founder Theo Coulombe and Eve Biddle, artist and co-executive director of The Wassaic Project, share a fascination with land, body and transformation. Their recent collaboration is culminating in “Fields of Snakes,” opening at Standard Space in Sharon on Nov. 8.

The exhibit features new large-format landscapes by Coulombe alongside a collaborative body of work: photographs of Biddle’s ceramic sculptures placed within the very landscapes Coulombe captures.

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Hotchkiss presents ‘Pippin’

Rehearsal for ‘Pippin’ at Hotchkiss.

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The Hotchkiss Drama Association is kicking off its 2025–26 season with “Pippin,” the Tony Award-winning musical by Stephen Schwartz. The show opens Nov. 7 in Walker Auditorium.

Director MK Lawson, who heads musical theater at Hotchkiss, said students on the Drama Association board chose Pippin after discussing this year’s theme, “Innocence. Lost.”

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Rethinking Fall cleanup

Native Dogwood berries

Dee Salomon

The new fall cleanup

The almost two-month drought has made the exuberance of fall color all the more enchanting. How remarkable are the oaks this year, with their jewel-tone shades of deep red and reddish orange.You might not have been able to differentiate between oaks when all the leaves were all green, but now the swamp oak is distinct in color from the red, white or pin oak.

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Our visit to the Borscht Belt Museum

Dancers at the Raleigh Hotel's teen club, 1950s-early 1960s.

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Our trip to the Borscht Belt Museum at 90 Canal St., Ellenville, New York, was a delight.

The museum brings the Catskills’ golden age to life through many great displays — photos, articles, videos, items, and even entire rooms recreated to resemble those in the hotels and bungalows that once dotted the area.

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