Environmental Art Looks Back and Forward
“Regeneration,” the new show at the Parrish Art Museum, features work by 11 artists who engage with local and global environmental challenges.
“Regeneration,” the new show at the Parrish Art Museum, features work by 11 artists who engage with local and global environmental challenges.
The Hamptons Pride Film Series will bring Todd Haynes’s film “Carol,” which received six Oscar nominations, to Bay Street.
Sag Harbor’s Emily Weitz and her band M takes the Mic have a new 14-song album, “No Song Left Behind,” whose first two tracks have been released on streaming platforms.
The Church will host two programs devoted to the written word and a conversation with Oliver Tobin, curator of “Martha Graham: Collaborations,” and Janet Eilber, the artistic director of the Martha Graham Dance Company.
“Streetcar Named Desire” at Guild Hall, auditions for “Great Gatsby” radio play, songs of peace and reconciliation, and a virtual horticulture book group.
Group show at Ma's House and BIPOC Art Studio to feature works that express connections to end-of-life practices.
Slow Food East End will host a Sunday potluck supper in Remsenburg, and tastings continue at Park Place Wines and Liquors.
From the late 1980s until the early 2000s, it would not have been unusual to see Sigrid Owen near Fort Pond or Hook Pond — large net or perhaps a bag of cracked corn in hand — on a mission. Ms. Owen, who would have been 98 on Feb. 7, died on May 23 of last year.
James F. Darrell, a Cub Scout master, trustee of the East Hampton Methodist Church, and food delivery driver for Meals on Wheels, died on Jan. 9 at Stony Brook University Hospital. He was 80.
Marie D. Whalen, a grade school teacher for many years at P.S. 90 in the South Bronx, died at her son’s house in Montauk on Feb. 3. She was 100.
Copyright © 1996-2025 The East Hampton Star. All rights reserved.