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Arts & Entertainment

Local Venues Offer Art Lovers a World of Choices

Established artists and the talent of tomorrow are on display in and about town.

When you feel inspired to spend time appreciating art, it’s probably natural, living where we do, to think first of an excursion into New York City. 

There’s no denying that New York is one of the great cultural centers of the world. Days could be spent exploring the city’s art museums without exhausting its collections of great masters and emerging artists. 

But, when you’re looking for an hour or an afternoon’s indulgence in the visual arts, it’s also possible to satisfy yourself much closer to home.

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The Weir Farm Art Center in Wilton, “sustains and promotes the legacy of American artist Julian Alden Weir and preserves Weir Farm’s historic landscape and artistic tradition.” Connecticut’s only National Park, it’s also the only one dedicated to American painting.

A unique combination of park, historic site and arts center, it’s certain to provide inspiration as it did for the American impressionists who visited and painted here over 100 years ago. 

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Celebrating 100 years, the Bruce Museum in Greenwich has a unique combination of offerings under one roof. The museum, as its website explains, “is a regionally based, world-class institution highlighting art, science and natural history.”

Among its current exhibitions is  “Cindy Sherman: Works from Friends of the Bruce Museum.” Billed as its “major winter exhibition featuring the work of one of today’s most influential artists,” the show "is comprised of approximately 30 works, including large-scale black-and-white and color photographs, drawn from 10 local collections in Greenwich and the surrounding communities."

Ridgefield is home to The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, a beautiful space which houses “one of the few non-collecting contemporary art museums in the United States.” 

Featuring the work of emerging and mid-career artists, it currently has on exhibition the work of Swiss artist Thilo Hoffmann, among others. Hoffmann’s work, “High School Portraits," features 14 area students as subjects.

At the Carriage Barn Arts Center in New Canaan, high school students are the artists, rather than the subjects. Beginning March 13, this charming space located on the grounds of Waveny Park will feature “Through Our Eyes," the work of 50 New Canaan High School art students. Admission to this show is free, so take advantage of the opportunity to get in on the ground floor with these young talents.

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