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X-WR-CALNAME:Winterthur Museum, Garden &amp; Library
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.winterthur.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Winterthur Museum, Garden &amp; Library
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TZID:America/New_York
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DTSTART:20220313T070000
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DTSTART:20221106T060000
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DTSTART:20230312T070000
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DTSTART:20231105T060000
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DTSTART:20240310T070000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240612T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240612T160000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081430
CREATED:20240521T201306Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T141930Z
UID:47704-1718186400-1718208000@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Artist-in-Residence: Sarah Bourne Rafferty
DESCRIPTION:Wonders of Nature through Art\nMeet Artist-in-Residence Sarah Bourne Rafferty of Atwater Designs and watch her create works of art using cyanotype\, the oldest photographic process. Cyanotypes are created by imprinting plants and non-organic elements under sunlight on paper (or other surface) that has been treated with a light sensitive solution. See her most recent creations and marvel at how she turns the beauty of the Winterthur Garden into a permanent new form with the help of the sun. Her work will be available for purchase in the greenhouses. \nSarah’s scheduled residence dates:\nSaturday\, June 8 | 10 am – 4 pm \nSunday\, June 9 | 2 pm – 4 pm \nMonday\, June 10 | closed \nTuesday\, June 11 | 10 am – 4 pm \nWednesday\, June 12 | 10 am – 4 pm \nThursday\, June 13 | 10 am – 4 pm \nFriday\, June 14 | 10 am – 4 pm \nSaturday\, June 15 | not present this day \nSunday\, June 16 | 10 am – 4 pm  \nA prolific local artist\, Sarah taught darkroom and digital photography for many years before launching Atwater Designs. Her work has been displayed in galleries around the world and in features or collaborative projects with Town and Country Magazine\, Ralph Lauren\, and others. Sarah lives locally\, where she promotes handcrafted art inspired by the beauty of the Brandywine Valley. After her residency\, Sarah will return to demonstrate cyanotype and display her work at our Midsummer event on June 22 and for the Sun\, Cyanotype\, and Sundial event on August 18. \nDrop-in program. Included with admission. Members free. \nPurchase tickets.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/artist-in-residence-sarah-rafferty/2024-06-12/
CATEGORIES:Activity,Garden,Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/Artist-in-Residence_SarahBourneRafferty-1-scaled-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240611T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240611T160000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081430
CREATED:20240521T201306Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T141930Z
UID:47703-1718100000-1718121600@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Artist-in-Residence: Sarah Bourne Rafferty
DESCRIPTION:Wonders of Nature through Art\nMeet Artist-in-Residence Sarah Bourne Rafferty of Atwater Designs and watch her create works of art using cyanotype\, the oldest photographic process. Cyanotypes are created by imprinting plants and non-organic elements under sunlight on paper (or other surface) that has been treated with a light sensitive solution. See her most recent creations and marvel at how she turns the beauty of the Winterthur Garden into a permanent new form with the help of the sun. Her work will be available for purchase in the greenhouses. \nSarah’s scheduled residence dates:\nSaturday\, June 8 | 10 am – 4 pm \nSunday\, June 9 | 2 pm – 4 pm \nMonday\, June 10 | closed \nTuesday\, June 11 | 10 am – 4 pm \nWednesday\, June 12 | 10 am – 4 pm \nThursday\, June 13 | 10 am – 4 pm \nFriday\, June 14 | 10 am – 4 pm \nSaturday\, June 15 | not present this day \nSunday\, June 16 | 10 am – 4 pm  \nA prolific local artist\, Sarah taught darkroom and digital photography for many years before launching Atwater Designs. Her work has been displayed in galleries around the world and in features or collaborative projects with Town and Country Magazine\, Ralph Lauren\, and others. Sarah lives locally\, where she promotes handcrafted art inspired by the beauty of the Brandywine Valley. After her residency\, Sarah will return to demonstrate cyanotype and display her work at our Midsummer event on June 22 and for the Sun\, Cyanotype\, and Sundial event on August 18. \nDrop-in program. Included with admission. Members free. \nPurchase tickets.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/artist-in-residence-sarah-rafferty/2024-06-11/
CATEGORIES:Activity,Garden,Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/Artist-in-Residence_SarahBourneRafferty-1-scaled-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240609T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240609T160000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081430
CREATED:20240521T201306Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T141930Z
UID:47718-1717941600-1717948800@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Artist-in-Residence: Sarah Bourne Rafferty
DESCRIPTION:Wonders of Nature through Art\nMeet Artist-in-Residence Sarah Bourne Rafferty of Atwater Designs and watch her create works of art using cyanotype\, the oldest photographic process. Cyanotypes are created by imprinting plants and non-organic elements under sunlight on paper (or other surface) that has been treated with a light sensitive solution. See her most recent creations and marvel at how she turns the beauty of the Winterthur Garden into a permanent new form with the help of the sun. Her work will be available for purchase in the greenhouses. \nSarah’s scheduled residence dates:\nSaturday\, June 8 | 10 am – 4 pm \nSunday\, June 9 | 2 pm – 4 pm \nMonday\, June 10 | closed \nTuesday\, June 11 | 10 am – 4 pm \nWednesday\, June 12 | 10 am – 4 pm \nThursday\, June 13 | 10 am – 4 pm \nFriday\, June 14 | 10 am – 4 pm \nSaturday\, June 15 | not present this day \nSunday\, June 16 | 10 am – 4 pm  \nA prolific local artist\, Sarah taught darkroom and digital photography for many years before launching Atwater Designs. Her work has been displayed in galleries around the world and in features or collaborative projects with Town and Country Magazine\, Ralph Lauren\, and others. Sarah lives locally\, where she promotes handcrafted art inspired by the beauty of the Brandywine Valley. After her residency\, Sarah will return to demonstrate cyanotype and display her work at our Midsummer event on June 22 and for the Sun\, Cyanotype\, and Sundial event on August 18. \nDrop-in program. Included with admission. Members free. \nPurchase tickets.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/artist-in-residence-sarah-rafferty/2024-06-09/
CATEGORIES:Activity,Garden,Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/Artist-in-Residence_SarahBourneRafferty-1-scaled-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240608T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240608T160000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081430
CREATED:20240521T201306Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T141930Z
UID:47471-1717840800-1717862400@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Artist-in-Residence: Sarah Bourne Rafferty
DESCRIPTION:Wonders of Nature through Art\nMeet Artist-in-Residence Sarah Bourne Rafferty of Atwater Designs and watch her create works of art using cyanotype\, the oldest photographic process. Cyanotypes are created by imprinting plants and non-organic elements under sunlight on paper (or other surface) that has been treated with a light sensitive solution. See her most recent creations and marvel at how she turns the beauty of the Winterthur Garden into a permanent new form with the help of the sun. Her work will be available for purchase in the greenhouses. \nSarah’s scheduled residence dates:\nSaturday\, June 8 | 10 am – 4 pm \nSunday\, June 9 | 2 pm – 4 pm \nMonday\, June 10 | closed \nTuesday\, June 11 | 10 am – 4 pm \nWednesday\, June 12 | 10 am – 4 pm \nThursday\, June 13 | 10 am – 4 pm \nFriday\, June 14 | 10 am – 4 pm \nSaturday\, June 15 | not present this day \nSunday\, June 16 | 10 am – 4 pm  \nA prolific local artist\, Sarah taught darkroom and digital photography for many years before launching Atwater Designs. Her work has been displayed in galleries around the world and in features or collaborative projects with Town and Country Magazine\, Ralph Lauren\, and others. Sarah lives locally\, where she promotes handcrafted art inspired by the beauty of the Brandywine Valley. After her residency\, Sarah will return to demonstrate cyanotype and display her work at our Midsummer event on June 22 and for the Sun\, Cyanotype\, and Sundial event on August 18. \nDrop-in program. Included with admission. Members free. \nPurchase tickets.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/artist-in-residence-sarah-rafferty/2024-06-08/
CATEGORIES:Activity,Garden,Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/Artist-in-Residence_SarahBourneRafferty-1-scaled-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240526
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240527
DTSTAMP:20260406T081430
CREATED:20240327T184438Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240327T185025Z
UID:46299-1716681600-1716767999@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Temporary Estate Closure
DESCRIPTION:Attention Visitors: On Sunday\, May 26\, Winterthur Museum\, Garden & Library will be temporarily closed to both members and the general public as we host a private event. We will resume regular hours on Tuesday\, May 28\, and we look forward to welcoming you back then. Thank you for your understanding and continued support!
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/temporary-estate-closure/
CATEGORIES:Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/Logo-Thumbnail-for-Estate-Closure.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240502T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240502T153000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081430
CREATED:20240417T133225Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250212T224220Z
UID:46506-1714658400-1714663800@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Embroidering the Landscape: Women\, Art and the Environment in British North America\, 1740-1770 Lecture
DESCRIPTION:Discover how and why 18th-century American women depicted landscapes in their needlework and gain a fresh understanding of their lives and relationship to the natural world and culture around them. Using examples drawn from Winterthur’s collections and from other museums\, Andrea Pappas\, associate professor at Santa Clara University\, will discuss key elements of her book\, Embroidering the Landscape: Women\, Art and the Environment in British North America\, 1740‒1770. Included with admission. Members free. To unlock Member pricing when registering online\, login\, select general admission\, and then select the lecture under tour options. \nRegister now. 
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/embroidering-the-landscape-women-art-and-the-environment-in-british-north-america-1740-1770-lecture/
CATEGORIES:Lecture,Member,Museum
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240416T121500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240416T133000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081430
CREATED:20240207T142200Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240320T195503Z
UID:44857-1713269700-1713274200@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Made in China: Export Landscape Miniature Paintings from the Winterthur Collection
DESCRIPTION:This presentation will take a deep dive into the material compositions of six 19th-century Chinese export miniature landscape paintings in Winterthur’s collection. What has scientific analysis helped scholars learn about their material composition\, and how has this enriched established interpretations of Chinese export artifacts and 19th-century global trade networks? \nRegister now.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/made-in-china-export-landscape-miniature-paintings-from-the-winterthur-collection/
CATEGORIES:Lecture,Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/Chinese-export-painting.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240402T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240405T140000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20240207T143721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250204T195328Z
UID:44887-1712052000-1712325600@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Spring Fling
DESCRIPTION:Join us each day to celebrate the things that make spring special. Each day features a themed craft\, activity or demonstration\, and a planted seed to take home. \nTuesday—Birds. Build a birdhouse and take home a sunflower. \nWednesday—Bees. Meet Winterthur’s beekeeper and take home a bee-friendly plant. \nThursday—Meet Winterthur’s goats and take home a radish. \nFriday—Flowers. Make a flower crown and other crafts and take home a native wildflower. \nDrop-in program. Included with admission. Members free. \nPurchase tickets.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/spring-fling-3/2024-04-02/
CATEGORIES:Activity,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/DSC02868.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240326T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240329T140000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20230210T164043Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250204T195408Z
UID:39420-1711447200-1711720800@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Spring Fling
DESCRIPTION:Join us each day to celebrate the things that make spring special. Each day features a themed craft\, activity or demonstration\, and a planted seed to take home. \nTuesday—Birds. Build a birdhouse and take home a sunflower. \nWednesday—Bees. Meet Winterthur’s beekeeper and take home a bee-friendly plant. \nThursday—Meet Winterthur’s goats and take home a radish. \nFriday—Flowers. Make a flower crown and other crafts and take home a native wildflower. \nDrop-in program. Included with admission. Members free. \n  \nPurchase tickets.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/spring-fling-2/2024-03-26/
CATEGORIES:Activity,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/DSC02868.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240324T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240324T150000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20240207T204648Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T190309Z
UID:45179-1711276200-1711292400@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Stylish Suites
DESCRIPTION:Henry Francis du Pont applied his connoisseur’s eye and incomparable flair for design as he created the rooms at Winterthur. This one-hour guided tour will explore guest bedroom suites and stylish interiors on the first and sixth floors of his former home. Tours offered at 10:30 am\, and 12:00 and 2:00 pm. $10 with price of admission. $5 for Members. \nRegister now. \nJoin us for other House of Style events\, March 21–24. \nAn Evening with B Michael \nRiedel Sensory Workshop \nVictorian Terrarium Workshop \nA Garden House of Style: In Progress!
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/stylish-suites-2024-03-24/
CATEGORIES:Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/gold-and-white-room-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240323T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240323T150000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20240207T204647Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T190245Z
UID:45178-1711189800-1711206000@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Stylish Suites
DESCRIPTION:Henry Francis du Pont applied his connoisseur’s eye and incomparable flair for design as he created the rooms at Winterthur. This one-hour guided tour will explore guest bedroom suites and stylish interiors on the first and sixth floors of his former home. Tours offered at 10:30 am\, and 12:00 and 2:00 pm. $10 with price of admission. $5 for Members. \nRegister now. \nJoin us for other House of Style events\, March 21–24. \nAn Evening with B Michael \nRiedel Sensory Workshop \nVictorian Terrarium Workshop \nA Garden House of Style: In Progress!
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/stylish-suites-2024-03-23/
CATEGORIES:Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/gold-and-white-room-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240322T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240322T150000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20240207T204647Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T190206Z
UID:45177-1711103400-1711119600@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Stylish Suites
DESCRIPTION:Henry Francis du Pont applied his connoisseur’s eye and incomparable flair for design as he created the rooms at Winterthur. This one-hour guided tour will explore guest bedroom suites and stylish interiors on the first and sixth floors of his former home. Tours offered at 10:30 am\, and 12:00 and 2:00 pm. $10 with price of admission. $5 for Members. \nRegister now. \nJoin us for other House of Style events\, March 21–24. \nAn Evening with B Michael \nRiedel Sensory Workshop \nVictorian Terrarium Workshop \nStylish Suites Tour \nA Garden House of Style: In Progress!
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/stylish-suites-2024-03-22/
CATEGORIES:Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/gold-and-white-room-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240321T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240321T150000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20240207T204647Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250227T190107Z
UID:45175-1711017000-1711033200@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Stylish Suites
DESCRIPTION:Henry Francis du Pont applied his connoisseur’s eye and incomparable flair for design as he created the rooms at Winterthur. This one-hour guided tour will explore guest bedroom suites and stylish interiors on the first and sixth floors of his former home. Tours offered at 10:30 am\, and 12:00 and 2:00 pm. $10 with price of admission. $5 for Members. \nRegister now. \nJoin us for other House of Style events\, March 21–24. \nAn Evening with B Michael \nRiedel Sensory Workshop \nVictorian Terrarium Workshop \nA Garden House of Style: In Progress! \n  \n 
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/stylish-suites/2024-03-21/
CATEGORIES:Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/gold-and-white-room-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240321T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240324T150000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20240223T194531Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250220T163959Z
UID:45806-1711015200-1711292400@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:House of Style Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Get inspired to create or elevate your very own house of style. Featured guest and fashion designer B Michael will inspire with an unveiling of his new book\, Muse\, and with stories from his long career dressing clients with the world’s best fashion houses. Enjoy the special Stylish Suites Tour\, a wine tasting\, a terrarium workshop\, and more. \nThursday\, March 21\nStylish Suites | 10:30 am\, 12:00 pm\, and 2:00 pm \nHenry Francis du Pont applied his connoisseur’s eye and incomparable flair for design as he created the rooms at Winterthur. This one-hour guided tour will explore guest bedroom suites and stylish interiors on the first and sixth floors of his former home. \nRiedel Sensory Workshop | 6:00-7:30 pm \nJoin us for a fascinating wine seminar featuring Riedel crystal and delicious wines. Learn how the shape of the glass influences the perception and enjoyment of wine. \nFriday\, March 22\nA Garden House of Style: In Progress! | 10:00 am-5:00 pm \nDrop by the historic Head House to see the work in progress by garden staff preparing for spring. You’ll see containers being prepared to showcase spring flowers and seeds started to transplant to a nearby area\, where their blooms will dazzle in the summer. Located next to the greenhouses\, the Head House is a working space for today’s gardening staff\, originally used by Henry Francis du Pont’s gardeners.  \nStylish Suites | 10:30 am\, 12:00 pm\, and 2:00 pm \nHenry Francis du Pont applied his connoisseur’s eye and incomparable flair for design as he created the rooms at Winterthur. This one-hour guided tour will explore guest bedroom suites and stylish interiors on the first and sixth floors of his former home. \nAn Evening with B Michael | 5:30 pm-7:30 pm \nAcclaimed fashion designer B Michael will inspire you with stories from his long career dressing some of Hollywood’s most famous clients\, notably Cicely Tyson. He will describe his decades-long friendship with Tyson\, forged over experiences dressing her for the Academy Awards\, White House functions\, and events with celebrities like Sidney Poitier\, Barack Obama\, Whitney Houston\, Oprah\, and others.  The talk will be followed by a meet-and-greet with a sparkling toast and a signing of his new book\, Muse: Cicely Tyson and Me: A Relationship Forged in Fashion. \nSaturday\, March 23\n\nA Garden House of Style: In Progress! | 10:00 am-5:00 pm \nDrop by the historic Head House to see the work in progress by garden staff preparing for spring. You’ll see containers being prepared to showcase spring flowers and seeds started to transplant to a nearby area\, where their blooms will dazzle in the summer. Located next to the greenhouses\, the Head House is a working space for today’s gardening staff\, originally used by Henry Francis du Pont’s gardeners.  \nStylish Suites | 10:30 am\, 12:00 pm\, and 2:00 pm \nHenry Francis du Pont applied his connoisseur’s eye and incomparable flair for design as he created the rooms at Winterthur. This one-hour guided tour will explore guest bedroom suites and stylish interiors on the first and sixth floors of his former home. \nVictorian Terrarium Workshop | 11:00 am-12:00 pm \nGet inspired by Henry Francis du Pont’s mastery of bringing the outdoors inside and immerse yourself in the intricate beauty of Victorian aesthetics as we guide you through the process of crafting your very own terrarium masterpiece.  \nSunday\, March 24\nStylish Suites | 10:30 am\, 12:00 pm\, and 2:00 pm \nHenry Francis du Pont applied his connoisseur’s eye and incomparable flair for design as he created the rooms at Winterthur. This one-hour guided tour will explore guest bedroom suites and stylish interiors on the first and sixth floors of his former home.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/house-of-style-weekend/
CATEGORIES:Garden,Museum,Program,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/Design_Month_Banner.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231220T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231220T200000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20231101T145311Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240809T145505Z
UID:43852-1703091600-1703102400@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Wonderful Wednesdays
DESCRIPTION:Soak in the evening glow of the house decked in its holiday glory or toast marshmallows by the outdoor ﬁre pits. Tap your toes to the sounds of Wilmington’s best jazz\, savor a seasonal cocktail\, and see our magical gingerbread and doll houses. Included with admission. Members free. Ticket includes a self-paced house tour\, live music\, gingerbread and dollhouse viewing\, exhibitions\, and shopping in the Museum Store (open until 8:00 pm). Yuletide workshops available for an additional fee. Food and drink available for purchase. House tours have limited capacity.  \nPurchase tickets online or call 800.448.3883. \nDecember 6\nJazz: Cartoon Christmas Trio \nOther performances by Janet Whitman\, harpist\, and Sara Michaels Jazz N’ Blues Quartet \nWorkshop: Riedel Sensory Champagne\, Hosted by Riedel \nWorkshop: Handmade Soap Making with Miche Scott  \nMeet the Artists: Asata Maisé Beeks and Shawn Baron Pinkney \nDecember 13\nJazz: Tony Smith and Friends \nOther performances by Janet Whitman\, harpist\, and The Philadelphia Handbell Ensemble \nWorkshop: Introduction to Calligraphy with Maiden September \nWorkshop: Holiday Succulent Workshop with Terrarium Therapy \nLecture: Fashioned by Nature: The Story of Green Art Shoes with Lenny Wilson \nDecember 20\nJazz: Jackie Browne Jazz Nonet \nOther performances by The Q Factor\, Lenape Brass\, and the Newark Ukesters \nWorkshop: Candle Making with KC Essentials \nDecember 27\nJazz: The Sharon Sable Group \nOther performances by  The Copeland String Quartet and Lenape Brass \n“Twelve Days of Christmas” toy train display \nWorkshop: Introduction to Calligraphy with Maiden September \nWorkshop: Beautiful Botanicals with Maria Villegas-Heaney \nBook signing: Piper Huguely\, By Her Own Design: A Novel of Ann Lowe\, Fashion Designer to the Social Register
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/wonderful-wednesdays-5/
CATEGORIES:Entertainment,Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/DSC08992-Enhanced-NR-6-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231213T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231213T200000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20231101T144919Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240809T145606Z
UID:43850-1702486800-1702497600@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Wonderful Wednesdays
DESCRIPTION:Soak in the evening glow of the house decked in its holiday glory or toast marshmallows by the outdoor ﬁre pits. Tap your toes to the sounds of Wilmington’s best jazz\, savor a seasonal cocktail\, and see our magical gingerbread and doll houses. Included with admission. Members free. Ticket includes a self-paced house tour\, live music\, gingerbread and dollhouse viewing\, exhibitions\, and shopping in the Museum Store (open until 8:00 pm). Yuletide workshops available for an additional fee. Food and drink available for purchase. House tours have limited capacity.  \nPurchase tickets online or call 800.448.3883. \nDecember 6\nJazz: Cartoon Christmas Trio \nWorkshop: Riedel Sensory Champagne\, Hosted by Riedel \nWorkshop: Handmade Soap Making with Miche Scott  \nMeet the Artists: Asata Maisé Beeks and Shawn Baron Pinkney \nEnjoy a celebration of Enchanted Woods and see the lighted mushroom used at midnight on December 31 for Kennett Square’s “Midnight in the Square” suspended over the Visitor Center\, presented by Bob’s Crane Service. \nDecember 13\nJazz: Tony Smith and Friends \nWorkshop: Introduction to Calligraphy with Maiden September \nWorkshop: Holiday Succulent Workshop with Terrarium Therapy \nLecture: Fashioned by Nature: The Story of Green Art Shoes with Lenny Wilson \nDecember 20\nJazz: Jackie Brown Jazz Nonet \nWorkshop: Candle Making with KC Essentials \nDecember 27\nJazz: The Sharon Sable Group \nWorkshop: Introduction to Calligraphy with Maiden September \nWorkshop: Beautiful Botanicals with Maria Villegas-Heaney \nBook signing: Piper Huguely\, By Her Own Design: A Novel of Ann Lowe\, Fashion Designer to the Social Register
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/wonderful-wednesdays-3/
CATEGORIES:Entertainment,Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/DSC08992-Enhanced-NR-6-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231206T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231206T193000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20231106T133927Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241003T190931Z
UID:44077-1701885600-1701891000@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Meet the Artists
DESCRIPTION:Enjoy an enchanted evening of art and celebrate the artists whose works are featured on the Yuletide tour. Asata Maisé Beeks and Shawn Baron Pinkney’s Yuletide installation “Fashion in Full Bloom” features couture designs inspired by the design sensibilities of Henry Francis du Pont and Ann Lowe. After viewing their designs on the Yuletide tour\, raise a glass to their achievements with a special drink (available for purchase) in the Galleries while enjoying live festive music. This is a drop-in program. \n 
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/meet-the-artists/
CATEGORIES:Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/Shawn-and-Asata.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231206T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231206T200000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20221027T180738Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240809T145636Z
UID:37827-1701882000-1701892800@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Wonderful Wednesdays
DESCRIPTION:Soak in the evening glow of the house decked in its holiday glory or toast marshmallows by the outdoor ﬁre pits. Tap your toes to the sounds of Wilmington’s best jazz\, savor a seasonal cocktail\, and see our magical gingerbread and doll houses. Included with admission. Members free. Ticket includes a self-paced house tour\, live music\, gingerbread and dollhouse viewing\, exhibitions\, and shopping in the Museum Store (open until 8:00 pm). Yuletide workshops available for an additional fee. Food and drink available for purchase. House tours have limited capacity.  \nPurchase tickets online or call 800.448.3883. \nDecember 6\nJazz: Cartoon Christmas Trio\, and performances by harpist Janet Whitman and Sara Michaels Jazz N’ Blues Quartet \nWorkshop: Riedel Sensory Champagne\, Hosted by Riedel \nWorkshop: Handmade Soap Making with Miche Scott Sold out \nMeet the Artists: Asata Maisé Beeks and Shawn Baron Pinkney \nThe lighted mushroom that is the centerpiece of Kennett Square’s “Midnight in the Square” celebration on New Year’s Eve will be suspended over the Visitor Center\, presented by Bob’s Crane Service. \n  \nDecember 13\nJazz: Tony Smith and Friends\, and performances by harpist Janet Whitman and The Philadelphia Handbell Ensemble \nWorkshop: Introduction to Calligraphy with Maiden September \nWorkshop: Holiday Succulent Workshop with Terrarium Therapy Sold out \nLecture: Fashioned by Nature: The Story of Green Art Shoes with Lenny Wilson \nDecember 20\nJazz: Jackie Brown Jazz Nonet and performances by The Q Factor\, Lenape Brass\, and the Newark Ukesters \nWorkshop: Candle Making with KC Essentials \nDecember 27\nJazz: The Sharon Sable Group and performances by The Copeland String Quartet and Lenape Brass \nWorkshop: Introduction to Calligraphy with Maiden September \nWorkshop: Beautiful Botanicals with Maria Villegas-Heaney \nBook signing: Piper Huguley\, By Her Own Design: A Novel of Ann Lowe\, Fashion Designer to the Social Register
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/wonderful-wednesdays-2/
CATEGORIES:Entertainment,Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/DSC08992-Enhanced-NR-6-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231118T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240107T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20230725T141038Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231228T144833Z
UID:42364-1700301600-1704646800@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Yuletide at Winterthur
DESCRIPTION:Tradition\, style\, and surprise…\n \n  \n  \nNovember 18\, 2023-January 7\, 2024 \n\n\n\n\nExperience a celebration of American elegance in holiday style\, inspired by Ann Lowe: American Couturier. This year’s Yuletide Tour features custom fashion by local designers Shawn Pinckney and Asata Maisé Beeks\, whose creations reflect the history of Winterthur and the design sensibilities of Henry Francis du Pont and Ann Lowe. Explore the house decorated in all its finery with our signature traditions\, including the show-stopping Dried-Flower Tree\, and artistic Christmas trees inspired by Ann Lowe gowns. Tradition\, style\, and surprise await you around every turn this holiday season at Winterthur.  \nIncluded with admission. Open New Year’s Day. Closed Thanksgiving and Christmas Day. \nPurchase tickets online or call 800.448.3883. \nSpecial Programs & Events\n \nSpecial programs throughout the season include Wonderful Wednesdays in December\, evening events that feature live jazz performances\, caroling\, and workshops. Visitors can also enjoy a live one-man performance of A Christmas Carol by Gerald Charles Dickens\, the great-great-grandson of Charles Dickens\, wine and cocktail tastings\, and Brunch with Santa. \nPurchase tickets online or call 800.448.3883. \nMake Magical Memories\n \nWinterthur sparkles with holiday cheer! Marvel at the dazzling outdoor lights and festive displays throughout the estate. Delight in a giant gingerbread replica of Enchanted Woods\, the garden for children\, and a charming three-story dollhouse filled with thousands of miniatures. Enjoy a toy train display\, “The Twelve Days of Christmas\,” featuring Lionel Standard Gauge trains. Find and keep beautiful ornaments made by local artist Samara Weaver hanging alongside walking paths. Make your visit a magical experience your family will remember for years to come. \nPurchase tickets online or call 800.448.3883. \n  \n\n  \nDuring Yuletide at Winterthur and the annual summer Artisan Market\, all reciprocal admissions are blacked out. Thank you for understanding! \nWinterthur’s Yuletide outdoor lighting is supported\, in part\, by Dynamic Celebration Lighting.  \n \n 
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/yuletide-at-winterthur-4/
CATEGORIES:Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/DSC02277-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231104T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231104T120000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20230817T175456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250303T140427Z
UID:42576-1699088400-1699099200@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Mastercraft Workshop: Heirloom Narratives
DESCRIPTION:Heirloom Narratives: Writing the Stories of Stuff \nIn this fun and meaningful workshop\, use a simple book-binding technique to create a journal and learn some tools to write the story or document the memory associated with a cherished family object.  Your writing might arrive in the form of a short story\, a poem\, or an essay. Please bring with you one important object from your collection. It should be easy to carry and could represent a new or old family legacy. Reservations required. $80; $64 for Members.  \nRegister now.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/mastercraft-workshop-heirloom-narratives/
CATEGORIES:Activity,Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/handbound-journal-for-Heirloom-Narratives.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231028T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231028T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20230817T174952Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250303T193006Z
UID:42572-1698501600-1698512400@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Crafternoon: Ukrainian Pysanky Ornaments
DESCRIPTION:Join us for artmaking in a friendly setting.  \nExplore the art\, symbolism\, and joy in creating Pysanky ornaments using melted beeswax and vivid dyes to create traditional Ukrainian and unique patterns on eggshells. Create a lovely work of art to brighten your holiday home or give as a gift. Reservations required. $15; $10 for Members \nSold out.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/crafternoon-pysanky-ornaments/
CATEGORIES:Activity,Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/Pysanky.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230924T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230924T160000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20230817T174849Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250303T192837Z
UID:42568-1695560400-1695571200@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Crafternoon: Felted Bird Pods
DESCRIPTION:Join us for artmaking in a friendly setting.  \nCreate a felted pod no bird can resist! You will work with wool and roving from Winterthur’s own flock of Merino and heritage Leicester longwool sheep at Greenbank Mill and Phillips Farm\, to create a one-of-a-kind structure for hanging on a porch or inside a window. Reservations required. $15; $10 for Members \nSold out.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/felted-bird-pods/
CATEGORIES:Activity,Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/felted-bird-pod-photo-e1691783548606.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230923T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230923T160000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20230817T175027Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250303T192943Z
UID:42564-1695474000-1695484800@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Crafternoon: Fabric Flowers
DESCRIPTION:Join us for artmaking in a friendly setting.  \nInspired by Ann Lowe’s fabric flowers\, learn to stitch a beautiful blossom using cotton. Fabulous prints and threads are provided for inspiration. Reservations required. $15; $10 for Members \nSold out.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/crafternoon-fabric-flowers/
CATEGORIES:Activity,Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/fabric-flower-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230915T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230916T163000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20230803T192712Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250212T223136Z
UID:42478-1694786400-1694881800@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Interpretation through Embroidery: Thirty Years of Danish Ecclesiastical Needle Art
DESCRIPTION:In this two-day workshop\, Lizzi Damgaard\, embroiderer to Danish Queen Margrethe II and a Knight of the Order of Dannebrog\, will discuss her 30 years of experience as a needlework artist. \nOn Friday\, visitors will enjoy a tour of textile storage with Laura Johnson\, curator of textiles\, as well as a tour of the Winterthur needlework collection with a museum interpreter. On Saturday\, visitors will enjoy a lecture by Lizzi Damgaard in the morning (10:30 am–12:00 pm) followed by an afternoon workshop for experienced embroiderers to create a unique piece inspired by Flora Danica (1:30–4:30 pm.). Registration required. Friday only $37. Both days $137; $100 for Members. Saturday lecture\, $25\, includes general admission to Winterthur. \nSaturday lecture\, Interpretation Through Embroidery: Thirty Years of Ecclesiastical Needle Art\, still available. Register now.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/interpretation-through-embroidery-thirty-years-of-danish-ecclesiastical-needle-art/2023-09-15/
CATEGORIES:Activity,Lecture,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/lizzi.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230715T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230715T160000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20220802T181157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240410T192833Z
UID:36727-1689415200-1689436800@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Artisan Market
DESCRIPTION:July 15 & 16\, 2023\, 10 am–4 pm\nSpend a summer day—or the whole weekend—exploring Winterthur while shopping for artisan-made crafts and gifts. \nSome of the region’s most talented craftspeople will present their outstanding wares\, including antiques and collectibles\, furniture and home décor\, upcycled items and architectural salvage\, high-quality handmade crafts\, vintage clothing and jewelry\, artisanal and small-batch gourmet goods\, original art in a variety of media\, garden items\, and much more! \nArtisan Market reflects the mission of Winterthur by showcasing local artisans through a variety of handmade crafts relating to art\, textiles\, ceramics\, glass\, woodworking\, antiques\, edibles\, and gardening. Each of these categories connects to Winterthur’s past\, and we invite you to share a bit of your own history with us during this special weekend.   \nTickets\nArtisan Market is included in the General Admission ticket\, which offers access to the self-paced house tour\, exhibitions in the Galleries\, and the garden and estate. Enjoy free live music throughout the weekend. Food and drink available for purchase. Reservations encouraged—sellout likely. Members FREE—join today! \n\n\n\nMarket Bag\n  \nAdd a shopping tote to your purchase! This reusable jute bag (20″ x 8″ x 16″) is big and sturdy enough to hold your Artisan Market treasures. $10. Pick up your tote bag when you check in for the event. \n\n\nMeet Delaina Jolley\n\nArtist Delaina Jolley (photo courtesy of Nick Gould Photography team)\n\nDelaina will be one of the more than 100 artists\, musicians\, and vendors featured in Winterthur’s Artisan Market on July 15 and 16. She received an Artisan Market grant to participate. The grants encourage emerging artists and start-up businesses to take part in the event. \n“Receiving this grant means that the first step in my career as an artist starts in my home state\,” said Delaina\, an admissions counselor at Delaware College of Art and Design in Wilmington. “This will be my first time creating my own booth and showcasing my own work. I’m just excited about being around other artists\, designers\, and artisans. This is kind of like my first rodeo.” \nReceiving the grant is also about serving as an example to artisans who\, like her\, are just starting out. As she explains\, “I can show other young local artists that they can take chances\, create what they love\, and even sell their work\, too.” \nRead more about Delaina’s Debut. \nFeatured Artisans\n“Be Your Own Artisan” and create your own masterpieces alongside the immensely talented craftspeople of the Artisan Market. Select artisans (denoted by an asterisk) will offer a hands-on aspect within their space for you to create a custom and uniquely yours piece as they give you a deeper look into their craft. \n\nVISITOR CENTER PATIO\n		\n\n    \n\n\nClaire RosenVisitor Center Classic Elegance\, LLCVisitor Center Patio Henisee PotteryVisitor Center Patio   Peg and AwlVisitor Center Patio   The Farm at OxfordVisitor Center Patio  Warwick Furnace Farm*Visitor Center Patio  Works of ArtVisitor Center Patio   \n\n \n  \nCLENNY RUN LAWN\n		\n\n    \n\n\nAlex Hossick CollectionsClenny Run Lawn    Arden + JamesClenny Run Lawn    Art by Samara WeaverClenny Run Lawn    Atwater DesignsClenny Run Lawn    Beautiful Botanicals LLCClenny Run Lawn  Carvings by BruceClenny Run Lawn Cary Galbraith ArtistClenny Run Lawn   Chalktree WAX CandlesClenny Run Lawn   Elements/Jill SchwartzClenny Run Lawn   Gentry by JennaClenny Run Lawn    Gillian ValentineClenny Run Lawn   Skippy CottonClenny Run Lawn    Jennifer Hoertz MillineryClenny Run Lawn    Kara Hinson Fine ArtClenny Run Lawn  LouLou Clayton Custom Pet PortraitsClenny Run Lawn    Maria MaurioClenny Run Lawn  Miche Scott Handmade*Clenny Run Lawn  MillmontClenny Run Lawn  Pluma Avis DomusClenny Run Lawn   Raysun DesignClenny Run Lawn  reFIIND furnitureClenny Run Lawn  Saint Rocco's TreatsClenny Run Lawn  Short Sweet SaucyClenny Run Lawn  StemS VasesClenny Run Lawn  TalufaneClenny Run Lawn  Temre ArtClenny Run Lawn   TerraintexturesClenny Run Lawn    TOADSTOOLClenny Run Lawn  Walking OliveClenny Run Lawn  \n\n \n  \nSYCAMORE HILL\n		\n\n    \n\n\nAnthony TurnsSycamore Hill   Earthen ColorSycamore Hill   Fairhope GraphicsSycamore Hill    Jennifer Domal StudiosSycamore Hill   Kabyco DesignsSycamore Hill   Lillian Forziat Fine ArtSycamore Hill   Moss & BrookeSycamore Hill   OnlyInTheForest foraged botanical artSycamore Hill    Playthings StudioSycamore Hill   Pottery MasonSycamore Hill    Robert Francis JamesSycamore Hill  Salt Town Trading CoSycamore Hill    The FussyCutting Quilt ShopSycamore Hill    Whiskey HollowSycamore Hill   White Historic ArtSycamore Hill   Zachary Bloom Jewelry DesignsSycamore Hill    \n\n \n  \nENCHANTED WOODS\n		\n\n    \n\n\nAlexis Bocelli ArtsEnchanted Woods Anna Biggs DesignsEnchanted Woods Aristos’ HarvestEnchanted Woods Atelier de Jean-LucEnchanted Woods Avant~Garden PotteryEnchanted Woods Bijoux- handmade jewelry by dawn elizabethEnchanted Woods Black Creek WorkshopEnchanted Woods BPK PhotographyEnchanted Woods Chadds Ford CanvasEnchanted Woods Chester County Craft GuildEnchanted Woods Delaina Jolley Enchanted Woods Delaware Bay ClayEnchanted Woods Earthen CreedEnchanted Woods Eric Zippe Fine ArtEnchanted Woods Fusions Tasters ChoiceEnchanted Woods George Gallatig StudioEnchanted Woods GoGoGardenEnchanted Woods Grace Hunsinger Studio*Enchanted Woods Handcrafted by Abraham WarrenEnchanted Woods Unique Traditional BasketryEnchanted Woods HKM Jewelry*Enchanted Woods
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/artisan-market-3/2023-07-15/
CATEGORIES:Activity,Garden,Member,Museum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.winterthur.org/wp-content/uploads/am_2022-leitch-photo-by-bob-leitch-2-2-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230420T083000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230420T163000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20230130T163406Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251028T153118Z
UID:39401-1681979400-1682008200@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Shifting Tides: Art in the 18th-Century Caribbean
DESCRIPTION:April 20–21\, 2023\nJoin leading and emerging scholars\, museum professionals\, and community partners as we rethink narratives surrounding colonial art in the Caribbean region. Shifting Tides: Art in the 18th-Century Caribbean aims to reimagine the relationship between American historical collections in public institutions and the communities they serve. The conference is made up of an in-person symposium followed by a virtual study day\, with livestreamed roundtable discussion and an examination of paintings in the Winterthur collection. \nConference is free\, with a box lunch available for purchase. All lectures take place in Copeland Lecture Hall\, located in the Visitor Center.  \nThursday\, April 20\, 2023\n8:00 – 8:30 am: Registration and coffee\, Visitor Center  \n8:30 am: Welcome  \nChris Strand\, Charles F. Montgomery Director and CEO\, Winterthur \nAlexandra Deutsch\, John L. and Marjorie P. McGraw Director of Collections\, Winterthur \n8:40 to 10:40 am: Panel #1 \nSources and Perspectives: Rethinking the 18th-century Caribbean \nScholars will introduce new perspectives on comparative colonialism in the Americas\, on the Caribbean\, and the Atlantic world and their role in renewing our understanding of the Americas in the eighteenth century. The panel will also reflect on the ways the field of United States American and Latin American art history have engaged with this recent historiography.  \nJosé Luis Lazarte Luna (Metropolitan Museum of Art)\nChristelle Lozère (Université des Antilles)\nPedro Luengo (Universidad de Sevilla)\nEveline Sint Nicolaas (Rijksmuseum) \n11 am to 12:30 pm: Panel #2 \nCentering the Caribbean \nPanelists will present new sources that are currently employed by art historians\, scholars of material culture\, and conservators in their research on eighteenth-century art and material culture. The speakers will discuss how their sources have been key to the emergence of new ways of seeing the nature of artmaking in American colonies\, the mobility of creators\, the role of enslaved individuals\, knowledge transfer\, and mixed-race artists and artisans.  \nEmily Casey (University of Kansas)\nJaneth Rodríguez Nóbrega (Universidad Central de Venezuela)\nSophie White (University of Notre Dame) \n12:30 to 1:30: Lunch\, Visitor’s Center  \nOptional boxed lunch available for pre-purchase when you register online.  \n1:30 to 3:30: Panel #3 \nBeyond Boundaries: Artists and Creators \nThis panel will focus on individual-centered narratives emerging from research on creators\, as well as curatorial practice. The speakers will talk about their projects and discuss how such individual-centered approaches present models for shifting our approach to what American art as a field of study should encompass.  \nAlexis Callender (Smith College)\nIraida Rodríguez-Negrón (Museo de Arte de Ponce)\nMarc Vermeulen (National Archives\, UK)\nMichael Wilson (Temple University) \n3:45 to 5:15 pm: Panel #4 \nColor & Artistic Creation \nThis panel will center questions of race and colorism in Caribbean art. Speakers will discuss research and projects that address the various roles that enslaved people and free people of African and Indigenous descent played in artmaking in the Caribbean\, as well as their relationships with artistic practices in continental colonies.  \nMark Aronson (Yale University)\nJorge Rivas Pérez (Denver Art Museum) \nLucia Noor Melita (Victoria and Albert Museum) \nFriday\, April 21\, 2023\n9 am – 12 pm: Study Day \nPhysical examination and discussion of colonial paintings in the Winterthur collection\, highlighting their Caribbean connections. The selected group of paintings include those by John Greenwood\, Benjamin West\, William Williams\, John Smibert\, John Wollaston\, and Robert Feke.  \nStephanie Delamaire (Carnegie Museum of Art)\nMatthew Cushman (Winterthur Museum\, Garden & Library)\nMina Porell (The Barnes Foundation) \n***Due to space constraints\, the Study Day will be filmed and available online only. Registrants will receive further information with a link to the recording.  \n2 pm to 4 pm: Roundtable Discussion Livestream \nArt in the 18th-century Caribbean: Research\, Methodologies\, and Institutional Initiatives \nThis final roundtable brings together scholars\, museum and historic site administrators\, and community partners who have contributed to initiatives that are creating spaces for Caribbean art in their institutions and communities. They will discuss new trends and opportunities for an expanded view of the significance of eighteenth-century Caribbean art in various regional and national institutions. \nRocío Aranda-Alvarado (Ford Foundation)\nRafael Damast (Taller Puertorriqueño)\nWim Klooster (Clark University)\nLouis Nelson (University of Virginia) \nPresenters/Panelists\nRocío Aranda-Alvarado\, PhD\nSenior Program Officer\, The Ford Foundation \nDr. Rocío Aranda-Alvarado is an art historian\, curator\, and arts worker. She joined the Ford Foundation in 2018 after serving as curator at El Museo del Barrio in New York City for nearly a decade. At the Ford Foundation\, she is part of the Creativity and Free Expression team\, focusing on support for arts and culture organizations across the U.S. At El Museo\, she presented visual arts and programming that reflected the history and culture of El Barrio as well as the greater U.S. Latinx and Latin American diaspora. She organized exhibitions featuring emerging and established artists\, including Presente! The Young Lords in New York and Museum Starter Kit for El Museo’s 45th anniversary and several versions of El Museo’s biennial. From 2000 to 2009\, she was curator at the Jersey City Museum\, where she organized solo exhibitions of Chakaia Booker and Raphael Montañez Ortiz as well as many group exhibitions. Aranda-Alvarado has lectured as an adjunct professor; consulted and curated independently on Latinx and Latin American art and culture; and published and advised\, in both a scholarly and curatorial capacity\, at various institutions. She earned her PhD in art history from the Graduate Center\, City University of New York. \nMark Aronson \nDeputy Director and Chief Conservator\, Yale Center for British Art. \nMark received a BA from Reed College\, an MS in the conservation of art from the University of Delaware\, and a certificate of study in painting conservation from the Center for Conservation and Technical Studies at Harvard’s Fogg Museum. He held postgraduate fellowships at the Cincinnati Art Museum\, the Philadelphia Museum of Art\, and the Frans Hals Museum and was a guest conservator at the J. Paul Getty Museum. He is particularly interested in old and modern master painting techniques and attitudes toward restoration. He has spoken and published on the history of conservation at Yale\, light levels in Louis Kahn’s Yale Center for British Art\, the treatment of Italian Renaissance painting\, Sir Joshua Reynolds\, Benjamin West\, the Haitian painter Louis Rigaud\, and a sculpture about baseball. His teaching includes serving as a critic at the Yale School of Art and courses on the history of painting technique and painting as well as seminars on technical art history with students and faculty from Historically Black Colleges and Universities \nAlex Callender\nAssistant Professor of Art\, Smith College \nAlex Callender works in drawing\, painting\, and installation to trace and remap historical materials to explore how we might disentangle the interwoven relations of race\, gender\, and capitalism. Callender has had recent solo shows at Northeastern University’s Gallery 360\, NYU Gallatin Galleries\, the Rubber Factory (NY)\, and Michigan State University’s LookOut Gallery. Currently\, she has a public work on view at UMass Amherst commissioned by the University Museum of Contemporary Art. She has held artist residencies with the MacDowell Colony\, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture\, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council\, the Drawing Center’s Open Session program\, Art in Embassies Program\, the Vermont Studio Center\, Urban Glass\, the Santa Fe Art Institute\, Alice Yard in Trinidad\, and DRAW International and the BAU Institute in France.  \nEmily C. Casey\, PhD\nHall Assistant Professor of American Art and Culture\, University of Kansas \nDr. Emily C. Casey is an art historian specializing in the early modern Atlantic world. Her current book project critically examines British and American visual and material culture to reveal how the world’s oceans became a space through which networks of empire and capital were imagined and constructed. Her most recent article\, “A More Perfect Atlantic World: Abolition\, Liberty\, and Empire in Art after the American Revolution\,” critically reevaluates Samuel Jennings’s Liberty Displaying the Arts and Sciences\, which is considered to be the earliest abolitionist painting in the United States\, a version of which is in the collection at Winterthur. Casey holds a PhD from the University of Delaware\, and an AB from Smith College. She has received grants and fellowships to support her research from the Metropolitan Museum of Art\, the Smithsonian American Art Museum\, the Peabody Essex Museum\, the Library Company of Philadelphia\, and the National Maritime Museum in London. In the fall of 2022\, she joined the Kress Foundation Department of Art History at the University of Kansas. \nRafael Damast\nExhibitions Manager and Curator\, Taller Puertorriqueño \nSince joining Taller Puertorriqueño in December 2010\, Rafael Damast has curated over 40 exhibitions. As manager of the exhibitions program\, he has brought in new audiences and expanded and deepened the institution’s connection with the local community.  \nWim Klooster\, Ph.D.\nRobert H. and Virginia N. Scotland Chair in History and International Relations\, Clark University \nDr. Wim Klooster has taught at Clark University since 2003. After earning his doctorate at the University of Leiden\, he was a Fulbright Fellow\, an Alexander Vietor Memorial Fellow\, an Inter-Americas Mellon Fellow at the John Carter Brown Library\, a Charles Warren Fellow at Harvard University\, a postdoctoral fellow in Atlantic History at the National University of Ireland\, Galway\, and a fellow at the Netherlands Institute of Advanced Study in Wassenaar. His work has a strong comparative dimension and focuses on revolt and revolution\, maritime illegality\, the Dutch empire\, and Jewish trade and migration. He is the author of dozens of articles and 11 monographs and edited books\, including The Dutch Moment: War\, Trade\, and Settlement in the Seventeenth-Century Atlantic World\, Revolutions in the Atlantic World: A Comparative History\, and Illicit Riches: Dutch Trade in the Caribbean\, 1648–1795. Klooster has been coeditor of Brill’s Atlantic World series since 2001. \nJosé Luis Lazarte Luna\nAssistant Conservator\, The Metropolitan Museum of Art \nJosé Lazarte joined the Department of Paintings Conservation at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2016 to complete a Mellon Fellowship\, followed by a Research Scholar position\, and became a member of the staff in 2019. He works primarily with European paintings of the 16th to the 18th centuries and American paintings\, including works from colonial Latin America. Lazarte received a BA in Art Conservation (with a minor in studio arts) from the University of Delaware and an MA in Science from the Winterthur/University of Delaware Graduate Program in Art Conservation in 2016. During his studies\, he undertook internships at the Yale University Art Gallery\, the Prado Museum\, and the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. \nChristelle Lozère\, PhD\nProfessor of Art History\, University of the West Indies \nDr. Christelle Lozère’s work focuses on the history of art in the French West Indies in a slavery and post-slavery context (19th and 20th centuries) and the construction of colonial imaginaries between Europe and the Caribbean. She is the author of Bordeaux Colonial\, La Croisière du Tricentenaire des Antilles et de la Guyane\, and 40-some articles on the history of colonial art and the Caribbean. Her doctoral thesis won the 2011 Musée d’Orsay prize. She is also a guest researcher at the National Institute for Art History (INHA)\, the Clark Art Institute\, and the Villa Vassilieff.  \nPedro Luengo\, PhD\nAssociate Professor of Art History\, University of Seville \nDr. Pedro Luengo teaches at the University of Seville and has been a visiting scholar in the Philippines\, Mexico\, Italy\, and the United Kingdom. His research has focused on the history of 18th-century architecture in East Asia and the Caribbean\, and he is the author of seven monographs. Luengo is the principal investigator on projects financed by Spain and China\, as well as participating in others from Mexican or Brazilian institutions. He currently serves on the boards of CEHA (Spanish CIHA)\, HDH (Spanish Digital Humanities Association) and AEEAO (Spanish Association of East Asian Studies) and is a corresponding researcher at CHAM. \nLucia N. Melita\, PhD\nConservation Scientist\, Victoria and Albert Museum \nLucia N. Melita is a material scientist\, holding BSc and MSc degrees in Heritage Science. She completed her PhD at UCL and specialized in the development of nanomaterials and the assessment of long and short-term effects of innovative conservation practices. She has expertise in the analysis of a wide range of materials\, both traditional and modern\, using various analytical and imaging techniques\, as well as in the identification of conservation treatments and degradation products. Her research interests include the understanding of degradation processes and changes in material properties associated with environmental conditions and ageing in museum objects. She recently joined the British Library as conservation scientist after one year at the Victoria and Albert Museum. Prior to that\, she was an Andrew W. Mellon fellow at the British Museum\, working on the analysis of colorants in Japanese woodblock prints from the Edo period and on the laser cleaning project.   \nLouis P. Nelson\, PhD \nVice Provost for Academic Outreach and Professor of Architectural History\, University of Virginia \nDr. Louis P. Nelson is a specialist in the built environments of the early modern Atlantic world\, with published works on the American South\, the Caribbean\, and West Africa\, and is a leading advocate for the reconstruction of place-based public history. In the summer of 2020\, he was awarded funding for “Recovering Erased Histories\,” an Andrew Mellon grant supporting three team-led and community-engaged field schools to document African American cultural landscapes. He is part of the advisory team for an NEH-funded initiative to extensively revise the interpretation of the Hermann-Grima House in New Orleans. He has argued for the preservation of damage to the U.S. Capitol from the January 6 insurrection as an important threshold in the history of American democracy. On the international stage\, he is a member of the international Institute for Historical Research funded seminar “The World in a Historic House” and has just begun a new partnership with the curators of Dyrham Park in South Gloucestershire\, England. He has previously worked with the Maison des Esclaves on Goree Island\, Senegal\, and built an online platform\, the Falmouth Project\, a GIS-based data information system used as a repository for ongoing work in Falmouth\, Jamaica. Nelson is an accomplished scholar\, with two book-length monographs; three edited collections of essays; two terms as senior coeditor of Buildings and Landscapes\, the leading English-language venue for scholarship on vernacular architecture; and numerous articles. The majority of his work focuses on the early American South\, the Greater Caribbean\, and the Atlantic rim.  \nJorge F. Rivas Pérez\, PhD\nFrederick and Jan Mayer Curator and Department Head of Latin American Art\, Denver Art Museum \nDr. Jorge F. Rivas Pérez is an art historian\, architect\, and designer. Prior to his role at the Denver Art Museum\, he served as the curator of Spanish colonial art at the Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros in Venezuela and as the associate curator of Latin American art at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. He is the Latin American art editor and organizer of the Mayer Center Symposium program and publications and has curated exhibitions and contributed essays to publications on a wide range of Latin American art\, architecture\, design\, and material culture topics. He received his architecture degree from Universidad Central de Venezuela\, an MA from the University of Florence\, Italy\, and an MPhil and PhD from the Bard Graduate Center in New York City. \nJaneth Rodriguez-Nobrega\nProfessor of Art\, Universidad Central de Venezuela \nJaneth Rodriguez-Nobrega is an art historian specializing in Venezuelan colonial art. She holds an MFA in History and Theory and a BA from Universidad Central de Venezuela. At the Universidad Central de Venezuela’s School of Art\, she teaches courses about the history of Latin American art. She has supervised various undergraduate and graduate theses dealing with Venezuelan colonial art\, a field in which she has distinguished herself as a researcher\, participating in various international conferences and editorial projects. \nIraida Rodríguez-Negrón\nMuseum Curator\, Museo de Arte de Ponce \nCurrently at the Museo de Arte de Ponce\, Iraida Rodriguez-Negrón has worked at the Frick Collection in New York and received the first Meadows/Kress/Prado curatorial residency from the Meadows Museum. She holds a BA with a concentration in Humanities and Art History from the University of Puerto Rico\, Río Piedras Campus; an MA with a concentration in Art History from the George Washington University in Washington D.C.; and an MPhil in Art History and Archaeology from the Institute of Fine Arts at New York University\, where she studied with the renowned Hispanist Jonathan Brown. She has published many essays in books and various specialized magazines in the U.S. and Europe. \nEveline Sint Nicolaas\nCurator of History\, Rijksmuseum \nEveline Sint Nicolaas studied socioeconomic history and cultural studies at the University of Amsterdam and has been the Curator of History at the Rijksmuseum since 1998. A key area of focus in her work is the relationship between the Netherlands and Brazil\, Suriname\, and the Caribbean Netherlands. She is the author of Shackles and Bonds: Suriname and the Netherlands from 1600.  \nEmily Thames\, PhD \nDr. Emily Thames received a PhD in art history from Florida State University in 2022. She specializes in the visual and material culture of the colonial Atlantic World\, with a focus on the Spanish Americas and the Caribbean. Her dissertation project focused on José Campeche\, a Puerto Rican artist working in San Juan during the late 18th and early 19th centuries. She received a BA in art history and criticism from the University of Arkansas and an MA from the University of North Texas; her thesis focused on a set of buttons allegedly painted by Italian artist Agostino Brunias and worn by Haitian revolutionary Toussaint L’Ouverture. She has received many fellowships and awards\, including the Joe and Wanda Corn Predoctoral Fellowship at the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the Object Research and Teaching Programming Internship at the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art.  \nMarc Vermeulen\, PhD \nSenior Conservation Scientist\, National Archives\, UK \nDr. Marc Vermeulen obtained his PhD in Chemistry from the University of Antwerp in collaboration with the Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage (Belgium)\, where he focused on the multi-analytical characterization of natural and synthetic arsenic sulfide pigments and the understanding of their degradation processes in painted works of art. He gained experience in various heritage science labs across Europe and the United States\, including an internship at Winterthur Museum\, Garden & Library\, research positions at the Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage\, the Museum of Modern Art\, Geneva’s Musée d’Art et d’Histoire\, the Netherlands Cultural Heritage Agency\, and the Art Institute of Chicago\, where he focused on pigment characterization in easel paintings\, furniture\, works on paper\, and photography. In 2018\, Vermeulen was awarded an Andrew W. Mellon Post-Doctoral Senior Fellowship in Conservation Science at the Metropolitan Museum of Art\, where he undertook a comprehensive imaging and spectroscopic study of approximately 150 prints by Hokusai from the Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji series. Before joining the National Archives\, he worked as a research associate at the Center for Scientific Studies in the Arts at Northwestern University in Chicago. \nSophie White\, PhD\nProfessor of American Studies\, University of Notre Dame \nDr. Sophie White holds an MA and PhD from the Courtauld Institute of Art\, where she specialized in the study of material culture and race. She is the author of more than 20 articles and essays and two monographs\, Wild Frenchmen and Frenchified Indians: Material Culture and Race in Colonial Louisiana and Voices of the Enslaved: Love\, Labor\, and Longing in French Louisiana\, which has won nine book prizes including the 2020 Frederick Douglass Prize for the best book on slavery. She is currently completing a Digital Humanities Project on slavery for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture and is writing a cultural and visual studies history of red hair\, for which she was awarded her third NEH fellowship. \nMichael Wilson\nCuratorial Fellow\, African American Museum of Philadelphia \nMichael Wilson is a PhD candidate in the Department of Africology and African American Studies at Temple University and a Curatorial Fellow at the African American Museum in Philadelphia. His research interests include decolonial aesthetics in addition to the relationship between ancestral memory\, memorialization\, and counterarchival practices throughout the African diaspora\, particularly among artists of Caribbean descent. His publication contributions include the edited volume New Frontiers in the Study of the Global African Diaspora and the monograph Visible Man: Fahamu Pecou. \n\nThis in-person and virtual conference is supported by grants from the Terra Foundation for American Art\, the Carl & Marilynn Thoma Foundation\, and Delaware Humanities\, a state program of the National Endowment for the Humanities. \n \nPhoto: A New and Correct Map of the Trading Part of the West Indies . . . \, 1741. Published by Henry Overton I (1676–1751); London\, England. Engraving\, etching\, and watercolor on laid paper. Museum purchase with funds drawn from the Centenary Fund 2019.0034
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/shifting-tides-art-in-the-18th-century-caribbean/2023-04-20/
CATEGORIES:Conference,Museum
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221110T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221110T210000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20220907T183109Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240730T182114Z
UID:37271-1668099600-1668114000@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Opening Night Party—Delaware Antiques Show
DESCRIPTION:Celebrate the opening of the Delaware Antiques Show with cocktails and exclusive early shopping!\n \nSponsor: $250 per person (includes admission at 5:00 pm)\nPatron: $175 per person (includes admission at 6:00 pm)\nYoung Collector (ages 35 and under): $125 per person (includes admission at 6:00 pm) \nChase Center on the Riverfront\, Wilmington\, Delaware \nRegister now! \nTickets are valid for the entire weekend. Proceeds from this year’s Delaware Antiques Show Opening Night will support key school and family educational initiatives.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/opening-night-party-delaware-antiques-show-2/
CATEGORIES:Activity,Member,Museum
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220927T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220927T120000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20220222T144107Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220925T114011Z
UID:32422-1664272800-1664280000@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Home School Day
DESCRIPTION:Join fellow home schoolers in spotting frogs in the pond\, wandering along garden paths\, and learning about the plants blooming in the Winterthur Garden. Enjoy active exploration\, hands-on learning\, and creative projects for home schooled students ages 5–10.  \nRegister now.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/home-school-days/
CATEGORIES:Activity,Garden,Museum
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220730T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220730T200000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20220419T200654Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250212T224900Z
UID:34366-1659204000-1659211200@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:World Embroidery Day
DESCRIPTION:Celebrate this annual day by creating a wonderful travel journal cover. The Purple Thread will take you on a journey around the world with over a dozen stitches from different countries. Kit includes 32-count linen\, floss\, fabric\, ribbons\, buttons\, charms\, and chart. $50; $45 Members. Virtual\, sold out.  \nRegister for in-person program.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/world-embroidery-day-2/
CATEGORIES:Activity,Museum
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220315T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220315T130000
DTSTAMP:20260406T081431
CREATED:20220223T140327Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220814T130039Z
UID:32443-1647345600-1647349200@www.winterthur.org
SUMMARY:Objects Up Close Virtual Series
DESCRIPTION:Get a lively and up close introduction to assorted objects from a staff expert. Each month features a different theme. Registration required.  $5. Members free.  \nOff the Wall: The Chinese Wallpaper in Winterthur’s Chinese Parlor\, May 17\nThe Chinese Parlor is one of the most iconic rooms in the house\, largely due to the magnificent hand-painted 18th-century Chinese wallpaper. But how did it get to Winterthur? Join Amanda Hinckle\, assistant director of philanthropy\, as she peels back the layers to reveal a story of interior design\, business\, and betrayal. Register now.
URL:https://www.winterthur.org/calendar/objects-up-close-virtual-series-3/2022-03-15/
CATEGORIES:Lecture,Misc.,Museum
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END:VCALENDAR