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Joseph Squillante/Icons of the Hudson: Portrait of a River

Current Exhibits | Past Shows | Derfner Judaica Museum

May 19 – September 13, 2009

 

Adirondack High Peaks from Mount Marcy,
© Joseph Squillante 1981
 

Bannerman’s Castle,
© Joseph Squillante 1996
 

Clearwater Bow & Liberstad (Argentina), July 4, 2000,
Op Sail, Parade of Tall Ships,
© Joseph Squillante 2000
 

Highlands Nook,
© Joseph Squillante, 2000
 

Palisades in Winter, from JFK Memorial Park, Yonkers,
© Joseph Squillante 2003
 

Pete Seeger at the Strawberry Festival in his hometown Beacon,
© Joseph Squillante 2000
 

Powerless, Glenwood Power Station, Yonkers,
© Joseph Squillante 1978
 

Cloud, Storm King Mountain,
© Joseph Squillante 1996

As an Ambassador of New York State’s Hudson River Quadricentennial celebration this year, The Hebrew Home at Riverdale is pleased to present Joseph Squillante/Icons of the Hudson: Portrait of a River. This exhibition includes more than 20 photographs of iconic sites along the Hudson River from its source on Mount Marcy, the highest in the State, to a night view from atop the World Trade Center. Joseph Squillante explores the River’s majesty in photographs that reveal nature’s embodiment of Emerson’s Transcendentalist spirit and broadly reflect the aesthetic strategies of the 19th-century Hudson River School painters. In his images, man and nature co-exist. While the River and its bounty provide opportunities for both work and leisure, Squillante’s project serves as a reminder that those who live and work along its shores today must take responsibility for its future.

For more than thirty years, the Peekskill-based photographer has created images that educate the public about the River’s natural wonders and has brought attention to efforts to preserve it for future generations. Romantic and pastoral views include such iconic locations as Bannerman Castle, the haunting ruins of a Scottish mansion built in the early 20th century, and Storm King Mountain, which sparked the modern day environmentalist movement in the Hudson Valley. His portraits of the people who ply their trade along the River and in the Hudson Valley, such as Claude Potts an apple farmer, Everett Nack a shad fisherman and famed folk singer Pete Seeger, reflect traditions carried on from generation to generation. Squillante’s photographs have been called icons, suggesting that they are lasting and enduring symbols that define the essential character of the river. These icons also indicate sacred sites with complex meanings whose stories the photographer conveys through his awe-inspiring black and white images. The nuanced contrasts and sharply defined details of his traditional gelatin silver prints and more contemporary digital Iris and pigment prints capture the beauty of his subjects and add to the impact they have on the viewer.

Squillante is a well-respected figure in the Hudson River community. As has long been recognized, his photographic skills combined with a concern for the River have allowed him to capture the remarkable beauty and awesome power of the icons of the Hudson. Squillante has been part of the conservation and stewardship efforts of such organizations as Riverkeeper, Clearwater and Scenic Hudson, which recognized him as a “Hudson Valley Hero.” He and his wife, Carol Capobianco, founded the Hudson River School of Photography, cultivating an appreciation for the Hudson through workshops, slide presentations, in-classroom talks, lessons, exhibitions, and note cards and prints. “As I reach out and share my work, I meet many people who also love the river,” Squillante has said. “My aim is to nurture and expand this community. I believe that a greater appreciation of this natural resource will lead to a better understanding of its importance. The Hudson is a universal subject and a continual source of inspiration.”

During the Hudson River Quadricentennial, Squillante’s work will also be on view in a solo exhibition: Life Along the Hudson at the Albany Institute of History and Art (June 20 – Oct. 4, 2009). Icons of the Hudson: Portrait of a River will travel to The Field Library in Peekskill (opening on September 20). His work will also appear in the group exhibitions: Dutch New York: The Roots of Hudson Valley Culture at the Hudson River Museum in Yonkers (June 13, 2009 – Jan. 10, 2010), Hudson River Panorama: 400 Years of History, Art and Culture at the Albany Institute of History and Art (Feb. 7 – Jan. 3, 2010), and a show of abstractions at Maxwell Fine Arts in Peekskill (opening in September 2009).

Situated on 19 acres overlooking the Hudson River and Palisades, the Hebrew Home is a steward of the Hudson River’s majestic beauty. This year marks the four-hundredth anniversary of Henry Hudson’s remarkable voyage to the “New World” when he sailed for the Dutch East India Company. The trip led to his discovery of the magnificent river which now bears his name.

An opening reception with a talk by the artist will take place on May 19 from 6:30 – 8 p.m. at the Gallery in the Milton A. Gilbert Pavilion of the Hebrew Home. The exhibition is open to the public free of charge and on view daily from 10:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. This exhibition is supported in part by the Margaret A. Darrin Foundation.

As a member of the American Association of Museums, The Hebrew Home at Riverdale is committed to publicly exhibiting its renowned art collections throughout its 19-acre campus, and to providing educational and cultural programming that benefits both its residents and visitors from New York City and its surrounding suburbs. It also houses the Derfner Judaica Museum. The Home is a nonprofit, non-sectarian geriatric center serving more than 3,000 elderly persons through its resources and community service programs. For further information and press images, please contact the Art Department at (718) 581-1596 or Public Relations Department at (718) 581-1225, or visit http://hebrewhome.org/currentexhibits.asp.


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