Skip to main content

Diversity and Community at Guild Hall

Wed, 01/20/2021 - 17:11
Courtney M. Leonard, a Shinnecock artist and filmmaker, and Donnamarie Barnes, the chairwoman of the Plain Sight Project and curator-archivist at Sylvester Manor, will be participants in "Gather" at Guild Hall

Guild Hall will present “Gather,” a series of four virtual conversations led by Black and indigenous leaders from Suffolk County, on four consecutive Mondays from 7 to 8:30 p.m. beginning this week. Devised specifically for community leaders, service workers, teachers, and developers, the sessions will take place over Zoom for an intimate group of 15 to 20 participants.

“Gather” builds new understandings, celebrating the East End’s diversity while acknowledging fault and colonization. Jeremy Dennis and Tela Troge, both of whom are members of the Shinnecock Indian Nation, will lead the first session, “On This Site.”

Ms. Troge, who is also a member of the Hassanamisco Nipmuc Nation in Massachusetts and an attorney, recently organized the Warriors of the Sunrise Sovereignty Camp in an effort to raise awareness of the plight of the Shinnecock people. Mr. Dennis is a fine-art photographer whose work explores indigenous identity, culture, and assimilation.

Courtney M. Leonard, a Shinnecock artist and filmmaker, will host “The Art of Water” on Feb. 1. Her current projects investigate and document the historical ties of indigenous communities to water, marine life, and native cultures of subsistence.

On Feb. 8, Donnamarie Barnes and David E. Rattray will discuss the Plain Sight Project, established to restore the stories of enslaved people, particularly on Long Island and across the Northeast, to their essential place in American history. Ms. Barnes is chairwoman of the project and curator-archivist of the Sylvester Manor Educational Farm on Shelter Island. Mr. Rattray is the founder of the project and the editor of The East Hampton Star.

The series will conclude on Feb. 15 with “Preservation and Community” with Georgette Grier-Kay, the inaugural executive director and chief curator of Eastville Community Historical Society of Sag Harbor and president of the Association of Suffolk Country Historical Societies. Ms. Grier-Key advocates for the preservation of Long Island history with an emphasis on African-American, Native American, and mixed-heritage historical reconstruction.

As of press time, Monday's program was sold out. Tickets for subsequent programs are $35 each and can be obtained from Guild Hall’s website.

Art as Ecosystem: Building Community 
Art as Ecosystem, an ongoing series of discussions through the Guild Hall Academy of the Arts and The Church in Sag Harbor, will examine “Building Community Through Artist-led Transformative Spaces,” a Zoom conversation with Eric Fischl, Stephen Petronio, and Emily Simoness, on Sunday evening at 8.

Ms. Simoness is the founder and executive director of SPACE on Ryder Farm, a nonprofit residency program in Brewster, N.Y., that is an important center for the development of new plays.

Mr. Petronio, a choreographer, established the Petronio Residency Center in the Catskill Mountains as a retreat for choreographers to study, work, and experiment.

Mr. Fischl and April Gornik have transformed a former Methodist church in Sag Harbor into The Church, a cultural incubator that will combine a residency program with accommodations, studio space, exhibition galleries, and a library.

A link to register for the free talk is on Guild Hall’s website.

Say Cheese (or Caviar), Day or Night

Self Provisions, a storefront attached to Cavaniola’s Gourmet Cheese in Sag Harbor, is “always open,” as is proclaimed by an illuminated sign on the wall at the entrance. Two large, brightly lit vending machines dominate the space, with offerings ranging from sea salt crackers and slabs of French butter to jars of caviar and curated gift boxes — and, of course, cheese.

Dec 25, 2025

New Year’s Eve at Almond

Almond restaurant in Bridgehampton will celebrate New Year’s Eve with a locally sourced five-course prix fixe dinner that will include party favors and a champagne toast.

Dec 25, 2025

News for Foodies 12.25.25

Lulu Kitchen and Bar in Sag Harbor is offering New Year’s Eve dinner packages to go, and the Ram’s Head Inn on Shelter Island will serve a New Year’s Eve prix fixe and can host private parties any night of the week.

Dec 25, 2025

 

Your support for The East Hampton Star helps us deliver the news, arts, and community information you need. Whether you are an online subscriber, get the paper in the mail, delivered to your door in Manhattan, or are just passing through, every reader counts. We value you for being part of The Star family.

Your subscription to The Star does more than get you great arts, news, sports, and outdoors stories. It makes everything we do possible.