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Albany
Institute of History & Art |
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125
Washington Avenue |
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Albany,
New York
12210 |
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518-463-4478 |
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information@
albanyinstitute.org |
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Upcoming
Exhibitions |
HORSING AROUND: 19th Century Cast Iron
Hitching Posts
January 26 - May 25, 2008
Based on new scholarly research and a large
private collection of cast-iron hitching posts accompanied by a fully
illustrated catalogue. Hitching posts like weathervanes were utilitarian in
nature, but have easily entered the realm of folk art with their varied and
imaginative decorative forms. Designs include eagles, flags, dogs, horses,
portraits, hands, jockeys and natural forms of all shapes and sizes. The
exhibition and catalogue will survey and explore the cast iron hitching post
in America, its history and use, production, and the wealth of designs cast
by various foundries across the nation. The exhibition will include
approximately 70 hitching posts along with a selection of paintings, prints,
broadsides and sculptures of the horses who used posts. Also included will
be a small selection of patterns, trade catalogues, photographs, and other
supporting material. When not in motion, hitching posts and rails secured
horses and helped maintain order. Their decorative shapes were commonly seen
in front of houses and public buildings, standing firm despite the adverse
effects of weather. While hitching posts were made from various
materials-wood, stone, metal-cast iron models displayed some of the most
charming and creative designs. |
THE FOLK SPIRIT OF ALBANY: Folk Art from the
Collection of the Albany Institute of History & Art
January 26 - May 25, 2008
Drawn from the museum's collection of folk
art dating from the 18th century to the present, this exhibition will
include paintings by Ammi Phillips, Mary Gridley, Horace Bundy, Thomas
Chambers, and Fritz Vogt; quilts, mourning pictures, and textiles; stoneware
by Paul Cushman and a variety of materials made by unidentified artists. |
CAST WITH STYLE: 19th Century Cast-Iron
Stoves from the Albany Area
January 26 - May 25, 2008
This exhibition, drawn from the museum's
well-known collection will include 30 stoves complemented by prints,
drawings, photographs, stove catalogues, and advertising materials. During
the nineteenth century Albany and Troy, New York manufacturers were
considered to be among the largest producers of cast-iron stoves in the
world. Stoves made in these two upstate New York cities were renowned for
their fine-quality castings and innovations in technology and design. The
strategic location of Albany and Troy, located nine miles apart on opposite
banks of the Hudson River afforded easy and inexpensive transportation of
raw materials to the foundries, and finished stoves to worldwide markets. |
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