The Art Scene 04.24.25
Group show at Women's Art Center, rock 'n' roll photos at White Room, 81 artists at Lucore Art Gallery, monoprint workshop at the Parrish, Eric Haze and Elaine de Kooning at Pollock-Krasner.
Group show at Women's Art Center, rock 'n' roll photos at White Room, 81 artists at Lucore Art Gallery, monoprint workshop at the Parrish, Eric Haze and Elaine de Kooning at Pollock-Krasner.
Public rehearsal at Guild Hall, Beatles tribute and comedy at Bay Street, open studios at Watermill Center, jazz at the cinema, choral society auditions, music at the Masonic Temple.
Long Island Restaurant Week, wine dinner at 1770 House, menu changes at Village Bistro, Navy Beach and Mavericks to reopen, pizza and pasta on the move, news from Golden Pear and Art of Eating.
After coming under criticism for a proposal to broadly exempt town projects from the town zoning code if they are deemed "community resources," the East Hampton Town Board tabled a resolution to hold a public hearing on the matter.
Georgia O’Keeffe once said, “When you take a flower in your hand and really look at it, it’s your world for the moment.” In the spirit of the pioneering modernist painter’s hope to give that world to others, The Star spoke with two local anthophiles about extending the ‘moment’ of both store-bought and hand-harvested bouquets.
It’s time to get growing. The publication of The East Hampton Star’s annual East End Garden and Home supplement means the 2025 gardening season is officially under way. With this comes a lively calendar of spring and summer events, including garden workshops, educational lectures, art activities, and benefit parties, just a few of which are detailed here. Additional events may be added as the season progresses, so readers should check with their favorite organizations and garden clubs for more information.
In the Victorian-era school of thought known as “the Language of Flowers,” wisteria is associated with romance, beauty, and devotion, with a slightly ominous postscript referencing the plant’s twisting vines and warning of loving something a little too much, lest it be suffocated.
Concerned Citizens of Montauk is urging home gardeners and professional landscapers alike to stop adding synthetic fertilizer on their lawns, flower beds, and vegetable gardens.
If you have explored natural approaches to gardening, you may have heard of biodynamics. Depending on how it’s described, it can sound either mystical or based on ancient farming wisdom.
There it was: the moment the Garden Book editor became a gardener herself.
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