Tag: Fruitlands

  • Sunday, January 18, 12:00 noon – 4:00 pm – Snowshoeing Clinic

    Meet the staff of Eastern Mountain Sports on Sunday, January 18, from 12 – 4, and learn the essentials of snowshoeing on the Fruitlands fields, 102 Prospect Hill Road in Harvard, Massachusetts. Equipment will be available for rental, so you can set out to practice this energetic winter sport on the Museum’s hills and trails.  CHECK THE FRONT OF THE FRUITLANDS MUSEUM WEBSITE FOR SNOW CONDITIONS. www.fruitlands.org.  Free with admission to the Museum.  Image of historic snowshoe race from www.vintagewinter.com.

  • Saturday, December 13, 10:00 am – Family Drop-in Workshop: Homespun Winter Crafts

    Let the winter season be your inspiration as the staff of Fruitlands Museum helps you create beautiful seasonal decorations for your home. Fashion glittering snowflakes, use a pinecone to create a tiny woodland creature, fold bold and colorful star garlands, and make old-fashioned jewel-toned window decals. All this and hot chocolate, too! Supplies provided. No registration required. The event is free with admission, and takes place Saturday, December 13 beginning at 10 am.  For more information visit www.fruitlands.org. Image from www.homemade-gifts-made-easy.com.

  • Saturday, September 27, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm, and Sunday, September 28, 11:00 am – 4:00 pm – 2014 Craft Festival

    Fruitlands Museum, 102 Prospect Hill Road in Harvard, is teaming up with the Worcester Center for Crafts for the fourth year to bring you a juried craft festival, Saturday and Sunday, September 26 and 27. Forty of the most talented artists in New England will be selling their work under the tent at Fruitlands. Mark your calendar now and get ready to do some Christmas shopping in September!

     

  • Saturday, August 16 – Sunday, August 17, 10:00 am – 3:00 pm – Harvest Home: Botanical Drawing in Colored Pencil

    Join artist/illustrator Helen Byers Saturday and Sunday, August 16 and 17, in this Fruitlands Museum two-day botanical art workshop. Through daily demonstrations and individualized attention, the instructor will guide students in contemporary botanical art techniques using colored pencils and watercolor pencils. Focused on a fruit or vegetable that historically was farmed at Fruitlands, we will practice drawing for accuracy, working in layers and burnishing. All levels welcome. Space is limited. Fruitlands members $225, Nonmembers $250. Registration required. To register, email programming@fruitlands.org or call (978) 456-3924, ext. 291.

  • Sunday, June 29, 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm, and Wednesday, July 9, 10:00 am – 3:00 pm – Transcendental Abstractions

    Meet Fruitlands Museum’s Artist-in-Residence Richard Kattman and tour his new exhibit of abstract paintings.  Some of Richard’s works are inspired by natural elements—sea, wind, sand, grass, sky, flowers, fields, woods, gardens and night stars. Some canvases are his views of the earth as it appears from space. Some are drawn from infinite places located within his subconscious. Others are explorations he takes at the speed of light to places he imagines in deep outer space. These artworks portray the fragility of life and the known universe. The exhibit will run through August 10.

    On Sunday, June 29, from 2 – 4, Richard will give a formal presentation and demonstration on abstract painting, free with museum admission.  On Wednesday, July 9, from 10 – 3, attend an Abstract Landscape Painting class.  This one day plein air workshop will cover the steps of capturing the essentials of the Fruitlands landscape in acrylics on canvas.  All skill levels are welcome.  Registration required.  Email Melissa at mkershaw@fruitlands.org.  Museum members $100, nonmembers $110.

  • Saturday, June 7, 6:30 am – 8:30 am – Birding at Fruitlands: Early Nesters

    Local ornithologist Pat White will lead novice and experienced birdwatchers in a guided early morning foray at Fruitlands, from 6:30 – 8:30 in the morning on Saturday, June 7. The group will walk about two miles on trails through meadows, woods and varied terrain. Meet at the Museum’s upper parking lot. Free. For more information and directions visit www.fruitlands.org.

  • Wednesday, March 19, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm – People of a Feather

    On Wednesday, March 19, from 7 – 8:30 at Fruitlands Museum, 102 Prospect Hill Road in Harvard, watch a film about survival in a changing Arctic environment. This award-winning film, People of a Feather, takes you into the world of the Inuit on the Belcher Islands in Canada’s Hudson Bay. Their traditional life is juxtaposed with modern challenges as they confront changing sea ice and ocean currents disrupted by the massive hydroelectric dams powering New York and eastern North America. Soup will be provided by Harvard’s own Chef Paul and lively discussion by the audience! Admission is free, and a bowl of soup is $5. Visit www.fruitlands.org for complete details.

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  • Wednesday, February 26, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm – Food for Thought Film Series: Eating Alabama

    Join the Fruitlands Museum on Wednesday, February 26 at 7 pm for Eating Alabama, a documentary about why food matters. This is the story of a young couple who return home to Alabama where they set out to eat the way their grandparents did. A thoughtful and often funny essay on community, the South and sustainability. Free (bowl of soup $5). For more information visit www.fruitlands.org.

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  • Saturdays and Sundays through March 30 – Relics from the Pergolas

    Clara Endicott Sears was a visionary, writer, historian, preservationist, and founder of Fruitlands Museum.

    Born in 1863 of Boston Brahmin lineage, Sears was cosmopolitan, cultivated, and independent. She preferred artistic and intellectual pursuits to the conventional roles expected of a lady of her social stature. Instead, she chose a life of the mind, nurtured by extensive travel, illustrious friendships, and her own curiosity and spirit.

    In 1910, Sears built a summer residence known as the “Pergolas” on Prospect Hill in Harvard, Massachusetts. The house (now gone) and property commanded dramatic views of the Nashua River Valley, originally settled by the Nashaway Indians.

    This spectacular site turned out to have historical associations that dovetailed with Sears’ passionate interest in the great minds and spiritual seekers of America’s past. Along with this extraordinary property came the farmhouse site where Bronson Alcott had founded his Transcendentalist community known as Fruitlands.

    Alcott’s utopia was short lived, but Sears was drawn to Transcendentalist writings, and their experiment in communal living. In 1914, she had the vision to turn Alcott’s farmhouse into a museum housing a treasury of original artifacts and furnishings.

    It was the beginning of Sears’ career as a preservationist, historian, writer, and curator of the four distinct collections she built over the next thirty years. Fascination with Alcott led Sears to the Harvard and Shirley Shakers, whom she befriended and admired for their ingenuity, spiritual devotion, and industry.

    When the Shaker community closed in 1917, Sears brought the eighteenth-century Shaker office to Fruitlands, furnished it with Shaker artwork, implements, and artifacts, many donated by the Shakers themselves.

    Sears went on to develop a small but exquisite Native American collection (with help from the Peabody Museum at Harvard), and later still, she built the Picture Gallery to house her Hudson River School landscapes and 19th-century vernacular portraits. Each museum: Fruitlands Farmhouse; the Shaker Museum—the first in this country; the Indian Museum and the Picture Gallery celebrate a unique spiritual encounter with the New England landscape, with the mind, and with the heart.

    Come celebrate the life of Clara Endicott Sears, and explore all the Fruitlands Museum has to offer, on Saturdays and Sundays through March 30, in the new exhibit in the Art Gallery entitled Relics from the Pergolas. For directions and complete information visit www.fruitlands.org.

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  • Saturday, January 25, 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm – The Kitchen Apothecary: Making Herbal Medicine the Shaker Way

    The Fruitlands Museum, 102 Prospect Hill Road, Harvard, Massachusetts, will present The Kitchen Apothecary: Making Herbal Medicine the Shaker Way, on Saturday, January 25 from 1 – 2:30, in partnership with the Herbal Community of Central Massachusetts.  Fee of $10 (Fruitlands members) and $15 (nonmembers) includes admission to WinterFest.  To register, call 978-456-3924, or email programming@fruitlands.org.

    http://www.fs.fed.us/wildflowers/ethnobotany/mindandspirit/images/solanaceae/Shakers_ExtractThornApple_lg.jpg