Woodstock Travel Guide

Page 1

The

COLONY OF THE ARTS

2015

Celebrating

the 100th Anniversary of the Maverick

FESTIVAL


Woodcut of Hervey White. Courtesy the Woodstock Public Library

Woodstock! The Maverick Theater! Hervey White… All in all, it was a unique spot in the world, wasn’t it? Throbbing with creation, flashing with genius - and so placid and countrified withal.” — Helen Hayes

Printed by Fort Orange Press.


WOODSTOCKGUIDE.COM 12 TINKER STREET, WOODSTOCK, NY 12498

ARTICLES: MaverickFestival: 100 Year Anniversary ..................... 2-5 Fresh From Paradise ................................................. 6-11 Festival Falls Victim to Fearful Forces .....................12-15

LISTINGS: Arts, Activities, Galleries & Museums .....................16-21 Dining & Food ....................................................... 22-23 Lodging: B&Bs .........................................................24-26 Cottages & Campgrounds..............................27 Motels, Inns ............................................ 28-29 Media, Music, Theater & Film .................................30-31 Mind, Body & Spirit ................................................32-33 Real Estate .............................................................. 34-35 Services ................................................................... 36-39 Shopping ................................................................. 40-45

CONTRIBUTORS: Publishers: Pat Horner & Larry Lawrence Graphic Design & Production: Katie Jellinghaus Writers: Pat Horner, Karen St. Pierre, Barry Samuels

COVER ART: Painting by Leslie Bender. Sculpture by Lily Ente. Left: Woodcut of Hervey White. Courtesy of the Woodstock Library. This year we acknowledge the 100th anniversary of the Maverick Festival. Unless specified otherwise, Festival photos are courtesy of the Jean Gaede and Fritzi Striebel Archive from the Center for Photography at Woodstock’s Permanent Print Collection and are on extended loan at the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art at SUNY New Paltz. Businesses advertising in the Guide make our publication possible. We encourage you to support them. Copies of the Guide are available at many of the advertiser locations, or see listed locations at WoodstockGuide.com. 1


by Bolton Brown Courtesy of the Woodstock Artists Association & Museum

“This is the best of stories…now to be seen through a looking glass, over the shoulder, backwards to understanding.” —Jean Lasher Gaede 2


Woodstock owes much of its current reputation as “The Colony of the Arts” to the remarkable writer and gentle gentleman Hervey White (1866–1944). Hervey came here with Ralph Whitehead and Bolton Brown to found the Byrdcliffe Arts Thought by and Crafts Colony in 1903 before many as the first buying land nearby to start his hippie, Hervey own community, the Maverick helped young Colony. Thought by many as the first hippie, Hervey helped talented musicians, young talented musicians, writers & artists writers and artists by building them houses on his land, charging $100 a year if they could pay, and nothing if they couldn’t. The first Maverick Festival in 1915 came out of necessity. After building over 20 houses, a water well was needed and 500 feet of drilling cost $1500. The idea to raise money was hatched, to hold a festival charging a small entrance fee for those in costume and double the fee for those not. The festival was so successful Hervey White photo by Konrad Cramer it continued on for 16 more years before being shut down for “debauchery.” (See Barry Samuels’ story on page 12.)

Peggy Bacon, Isabella Howland, Armando Zegri, Bertie Shevlin, Alexander Brook

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Jean & Eileen Lasher at a Maverick Festival is from the Maverick Notebooks at Woodstock Artists Association & Museum.

“On a full moon in August, musicians from the Metropolitan Opera were tuning up while artists made sets, posters and banners. The musicians descended into a pit that had been dug down into a field below the quarry wall…The woods were darkening but we could see they were carrying musical instruments... The men had to remain standing to play them with their bows held ready in silence. They were ready to go to work now. And right in this instant there was that breathholding moment before they started to play, and like them, I, too was holding my breath!... they began emitting wonderful clucking and plucking sounds into the night... I held myself on full alert sucking in the starry sky until it burned my throat and filled my chest... the entire scene was lit by a truly magical light, an amalgamation of the mixes of the merry-go-round feeling of the moment.” 4


Jean Lasher Gaede wrote about this imaginary evening based on recalled memories from the last Maverick Festival in 1931 when she attended at age 6.

And always the host selecting & embellishing the story...

Jean remembers, “The Festivals got us through two wars and many depressions of all kinds and kept the town repartee fattened and refreshed. Everybody of every age got lost in dreaming of the Festivals, the first Festival and the next Festival, the just past Festival and the next Festival! Every year there was a different story played out against some elaborate backdrop built and polished for whatever occasion of real life that it warned against the danger of, the danger of armies, pilgrims, frivolity, pirates, the man next door... And always the host selecting and embellishing the story, creating and hatching the theme, providing breath-catching settings for each new festival. The host who understood what the human heart longs for, who cheered the faltering struggle, who laughed with all of them, who wept with all of them, who provided a place to rest, a place to play and to work, shared always a cup of tea, who loved and kept the music playing... Hervey White.” Jean, now nearing 90, and the departed Fritzi Striebel spent much of their lives documenting Hervey and all things dealing with the Maverick. An extensive archive, the Maverick Notebooks, is housed at the Woodstock Artists Association & Museum (WAAM) in the center of Woodstock. Regarding White, Jean wrote in 2005, “We celebrate one hundred years of Hervey White and marvel at his Maverick Colony. He did get a Utopia. It was formed by the crystallization of his unique view of life… and of his celebration of all human beings, being human. He was a graceful spirit leavened by robust good humor! He set us a ‘high style.’” We feel the same today about Jean.

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Fresh From Paradise

Karen St. Pierre

Calm of the evening, gentle as the smile Of some great angel fresh from paradise Breathe on us now for yet a little while The fragrant air from golden desert skies! From Adventures of Young Maverick by Hervey White

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Woodstock is often described as a state of mind—one that revels in creative freedom, social liberation, peaceful co-existence and a literal back-to-the-garden sensibility. The 1969 Woodstock Festival imprinted this ideal on hearts and minds Hervey White around the world.

channeled the counterculture We here in the beautiful zeitgeist of the time town of Woodstock into an annual summer know that the genesis of pilgrimage event this utopian state of mind was defined by the exploits of a rare and remarkable man— Hervey White—the rebel founder of Woodstock’s Maverick Colony and instigator of the renowned Maverick Festival now celebrating its 100th anniversary. In 1915, Europe was in the throes of the First World War and prevailing social and artistic mores were breaking down here and abroad. Woodstock poet, philosopher and social activist Hervey White channeled the counterculture zeitgeist of the time into an annual summer pilgrimage event. His Maverick Festivals became notorious, full-moon bacchanalia that for 17 years could be counted on as a night of raucous revelry, where creatively costumed (and frequently unclothed) participants enjoyed avant-garde theatrical spectacles and world-class music and artistic comaraderie.

Arnold Blanch, Portrait of Hervey White, oil on canvas, ca. 1930, 21” x 26” Courtesy of Woodstock Historical Society

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White declared himself and his colony of kindred bohemian souls “mavericks”—an allusion to his early poetic rendering of a young spirited colt, free of ties to the branded herd and human bondage. At his Maverick Colony, surrounded by the raw beauty and peace of the Catskill Mountains, artists, writers and musicians were free to challenge the bondage of artistic convention without financial concern. At his Maverick Festivals, members of the public enjoyed a taste of that bohemian freedom in rustic simplicity. In exchange, they helped fund the mounting operating expenses needed of the growing colony.

Earnest Brace, Florence Cramer, Reeves Brace, Konrad Cramer, Helen Walters, Eugenie Gershoy, Harry Gottlieb, Margie Barnes.

In the August 25th, 1915 edition of The New York Times, the first Maverick Festival was announced as “...a fête patterned after the European fair.” The posting went on to describe the bucolic setting of the colony nestled on the south slope of Ohayo Mountain and noted the contributions of the Woodstock organizers of the groundbreaking 1913 Armory Show: “A theatre has been constructed in a stone quarry in the side of a hill. The rock walls of the quarry provide excellent acoustics, and its shape adapts it for use as a theatre. It has been decorated in the style of the modernists by Andrew Dasburg and H. L. McFee, artists and Ilonka Karasz, a poster artist of note. In the fields and groves below the quarry spacious picnic grounds have been arranged.”

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White intended the Festival to be more than a gathering for passive spectators. Attendees would be fully engaged participants in the all-night revels:

Those attending the festival have been asked to come in fancy costume, or at least to dress comfortably without regard for convention

“Those attending the festival have been asked to come in fancy costume, or at least to dress comfortably without regard for convention, and to bring articles to sell. In the afternoon there will be a pageant and concert within the theatre... a costume ball will end the day’s festivities.� That Saturday evening, Lada, an American dancer compared favorably at the time to Isadora Duncan, performed a program of dances by moonlight. Accompanied by conductor Leon Barzin and the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, Russian opera singer and Maverick colonist Madame Mieler-Narodny sang to acclaim. The raucous costume ball that followed lasted until dawn. In the years to follow, the Maverick Festival expanded its tradition of exciting and socially unconventional theatrical presentations and daring nocturnal revelry to a growing, enthusiastic audience. Along with the season-long Maverick Concerts series founded the following year, summer at the Maverick Colony vibrated with energetic artistic collaboration and controversy. Maverick residents prepared presentations

Charles Rosen as Cupid

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Noted Maverick resident Edna St. Vincent Millay presented her play, Aria da Capo

including Washington Irving’s Rip Van Winkle, with nude nymphs—a scandal in 1917—and a satirical farce ridiculing the Kaiser in 1918. Noted Maverick resident Edna St. Vincent Millay presented her play Aria da Capo—a commedia dell’arte with characters in masks and harlequin costumes. Its powerful anti-war message struck a deep theatrical chord with festival attendees, who were costumed and masked as well.

The pirate ship The Ark Royale

Avant-garde festival themes became the norm. In 1923, future American housewares innovator Russel Wright created sets for the theme “Cubist Circus.” And in 1924, swash-buckling colonists constructed an elaborate 80-foot pirate ship, The Ark Royale, which was burnt to the ground in a spectacular Burning Man–style conflagration. The gatherings continued until 1931, leaving behind a legacy of unbridled spirit and freedom. The spirit of that legacy strives to live on in today’s Woodstock through the abundance of art, film, writing, theatre, music, comedy and magic festivals that thrive here. Hervey White’s vision and generosity of spirit opened the possibilities of creative community that continue to define our town. One hundred years ago, White understood that the joy of that freedom within the simplicity of nature remains forever timeless. ~Karen St.Pierre 10


Russel Wright’s Decoration for A Cubist Circus

Let us, the moment, hear thy symphonies; And list the melodies of moon and sun, Planets of Life’s and Death’s eternities, Chant of the ages, which have ne’er begun And ne’er will end the race, but ever onward run. From “The Adventures of Young Maverick” by Hervey White

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Charles Rosen as Cupid

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Why did the Maverick Festival, founded by Hervey White in 1915 to raise money to dig a well, suspend all activity by 1931? It died with a whimper, not a bang. Alf The new Modern Evers records that White Art, beginning with felt that the festivals had the Armory Show of “fallen victim to outside forces.” A few of those forces, 1913, found its way and not just the stock market to Woodstock crash of 1929 and the ensuing Great Depression, were at work to cause its demise. One particular ingredient was the clash between the less-inhibited artists, who mainly emigrated from the salons of NYC with their exuberance and freespirited attitude, and the local people, pastors and business people alike who feared the radicalism of these “free-love fanatics.”

Alexander Archipenko (in black wig) and his wife (in white wig) with friends

The new Modern Art, beginning with the Armory Show of 1913, found its way to Woodstock with the Art Students League and was a culture shock to this quiet community. The 1920s witnessed emboldening of the women’s rights movement (women got the vote in 1923) and the moresubtle influences of culture and fashion. Freud unlocked the psyche a decade before and placed the mystery of the mind as rooted to the beginnings of sexuality in the child. No longer were women confined by whale-bone corsets of Victorian America, nor were they hampered by the time-consuming chores now alleviated by new modern 13


Maverick Players, courtesy of the Woodstock Library

appliances. Hollywood gave women new role models. Clara Bow exhibited something called “It,” which signified a new and greater expression of seduction and sexuality. Also, the decade saw the steady economic growth of the middle classes which brought with it an adventurous quality that was illustrated by the Flapper and all her loose morals and thrill-seeking ways. It was the roaring ’20s, it was the Jazz Age so well documented by the literature of the time, especially by Scott Fitzgerald. By the summer of 1929 locals were thoroughly shocked by the goings-on of the festivals. It was a hotbed of sin, some exhorted. At the time there were appeals by local religious folk to report wild parties, nude bathing and indecent dress and lewd behavior. “The Festivals,” stated Alf Evers, “were becoming less an expression of creating community exuberance and more an occasion for people of all sorts... to cast off their inhibitions.” That year saw a record 8000 14


attendees, whose vehicles clogged the arteries leading to the festival and hindered access to the town…a situation that was mirrored by the Woodstock festival 40 years later.

“the dancers came on The Maverick Festival stage with a closer of 1929, themed “The Gay ’90s,” included a great & closer approach to many dance performers, cancomplete nudity” can numbers, a bathing beauty contest and, as one observer suggested, “the dancers came on stage with a closer and closer approach to complete nudity.” The New York Herald reported “the old Greek spirit [of the festival] has been abased by a squad of state police, recrudescence of Puritanism and hordes of fat, goggle-eyed curiosity-seekers.” So the festival was brought down by its own success of outrageous costumes and more outrageous attitudes and eccentric behaviors and by visitors who wanted to catch a glimpse of scantily clad women. It was no surprise that the battle between pro- and anti-festival forces created, as Alf Ever suggested, “as vigorous a controversy as Woodstock has ever endured.” The easy comparison between the original Aquarian festival and the one of sex, drugs and rock & roll from 1969 is inevitable. Woodstock still remains a liberal, fun- loving community in sharp contrast to the conventional doings of much of Ulster County. The battle continues today in Woodstock. There are those who seek a more conservative lifestyle and those who are more forwardlooking. I for one hope that the spiral of history moves progressively upward and not in a downward motion... for we are the inheritors of both the artist & the farmer, the city & the town, the modern & the old. Lucille Blanche’s The Bather Courtesy James Cox Gallery

~Barry Samuels 15


Arts, Activities, Galleries & Museums

Llyn Towner

Art Instruction with K. McGuiness 14 Wall Street West Hurley 679-1241 woodstockartist.com Encouraging strong self-expression. See ad below.

Drawing Printmaking Sculpture Painting

Bethel Woods. See ad page 45.

2470 Route 212 Woodstock, NY, 12498 845. 679. 2388 woodstockschoolofart.org

Center for Photography at Woodstock 59 Tinker St. Woodstock 679-9957 cpw.org Exhibits,classes, lectures & more. See ad page 20.

All phone numbers are in the 845 area code unless otherwise indicated.

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Arts, Activities, Galleries & Museums

Lily Ente Studio 153 Tinker St. Rear Woodstock 917-952-7514 LilyEnte.com Sculpture & Prints by Lily Ente Sculpture by Paulette Esrig pauletteesrig.com

Elena Zang Gallery 3671 Rte. 212 Shady (Woodstock) 679-5432 elenazang.com Contemporary Fine Art, Ceramics & Sculpture Garden. EvolveD Interiors & Design Showroom, LLC See ad page 18.

Matagiri Gallery 1218 Wittenberg Road Mt. Tremper 679-8322 matagiri.org Paintings by Sam Spanier; by appt. only.

Historical Society of Woodstock 20 Comeau Drive, Woodstock 845 679-2256 historicalsocietyofwoodstock.org Exhibitions and events, weekends May - Oct.

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Kate McGloughlin

James Cox Gallery at Woodstock 4666 Route 212 Willow 679-7608 jamescoxgallery.com DEALERS, ADVISORS, APPRAISERS


Arts, Activities, Galleries & Museums

Chris Engel

Opus 40 50 Fite Rd. Saugerties 845-246-3400 opus40.org 6 1/2 acres of Harvey Fite’s amazing bluestone wonder; available for weddings.

Saugerties Artists Studio Tour Free! Art in the Village July 14 - August 16 SaugertiesArtTour.com See ad page 20. Woodstock Artists Association & Museum 28 Tinker St. Woodstock 679-2940 woodstockart.org Gallery & Museum of Regional Art. See ad page 19.

86-88 MILL HILL ROAD WOODSTOCK 845-679-9979

Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild 34 Tinker St. Woodstock 679-2079 byrdcliffe.org Exhibitions, Residencies, Concerts. See ad page 19.

evolvedinteriors.com 18


Arts, Activities, Galleries & Museums Celebrating the Maverick Centennial July 18 - August 23

28 Tinker Street, Woodstock, NY 12498 www.woodstockart.org • 845-679-2940

Robert W. Chanler, Portrait of George Barrere

Music in the Woods

Woodstock Framing Gallery 31 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock 679-6003 WFGgallery.com Fine art and custom framing. Woodstock Public Library “knowledge, enjoyment, community” 5 Library Lane Woodstock 679-2213 woodstock.org * WIFI* See ad page 20. All phone numbers are in the 845 area code unless otherwise indicated.

Meridith Rosier

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Arts, Activities, Galleries & Museums

Woodstock Museum 13 Charles Bach Road Saugerties 845 246-0600 WoodstockMuseum.org Festival(s) and town history. See ad page 17.

Frank D’Astolfo

Woodstock School of Art PO Box 338 2470 Rte. 212 Woodstock 679-2388 woodstockschoolofart.org Fine art classes and exhibitions. See ad page 16.

WOODSTOCK

PUBLIC LIBRARY Book Sales • Live Music • Forums • Kid’s Events • Free WiFi • Printers • Local Tips 5 Library Lane Woodstock, NY 12498 845.679.2213 www.woodstock.org

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Mercedes Cecilia

Last night the full moon laid a cloth of white Within my window, spread upon my bed, And, with her old-time splendor, asked of me To share her harvest supper. I arose, And stepped without to pay my greetings. When, Behold! The old world flowered again, as it had done When I was twenty, at the gate of life‌ — Hervey White 21


Dining & Food Hickory BBQ SmokeHouse 743 Route 28 Kingston 338-2424 Open daily, lunch & dinner. Mountain Gate Indian Restaurant 4 Deming Street Woodstock 679-5100 Fine Indian cusine since 1993 - 21 years. Peace, Love and Cupcakes See ad page 23.

Garden Cafe on the Village Green Woodstock 679-3600 woodstockgardencafe.com Organic, Fresh, Local Whole Foods Organic Wine & Beer.

All phone numbers are in the 845 area code unless otherwise indicated.

Joyce Washor

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Mandara Calderon

Sunflower Natural Foods Market 75 Mill Hill Road Woodstock 845-679-5361 sunflowernatural.com Natural & Organic Grocery, since 1978. See ad above. Taco Juan’s 31 Tinker St. Woodstock 679-9673 HEALTHY MEXICAN FOOD & HOMEMADE ICE CREAM!!!

Reservoir Inn See ad page 22.

Woodstock Farm Festival See ad below.

All phone numbers are in the 845 area code unless otherwise indicated.

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Marilynn Rowley

“And if you sing though as angels, and love not the singing, you muffle man’s ears to the voices of the day and the voices of the night.” — Khalil Gibran

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Lodging: B&Bs The Woodstock Inn on the Millstream 18 Lovely Private Rooms Bountiful Continental Breakfast Walk to Shops Cascading Stream

1-800-420-4707 www.woodstock-inn-ny.com

48 Tannery Brook Rd. Woodstock, NY 12498

Onteora Mt. House PO Box 356 Boiceville 657-6233 www.onteora.com Rooms, Weddings, Retreats PB, FP. See ad this page.

Barclay Heights B&B Mountain view near the Hudson call 845-532-5565 OutstandingHospitality.com Chef-owned Luxury Eco-Victorian. Enchanted Manor of Woodstock See ad page 26. Morning Glory B&B 141 Tinker St. Woodstock 679-3208 morninggloryinwoodstock.com A Beautiful B&B in the Village.

All phone numbers are in the 845 area code unless otherwise indicated.

Gay Leonhardt

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Lodging: B&Bs

Twin Gables of Woodstock See ad this page.

The Woodbine Inn Palenville 518-947-6787 thewoodbine.com Whole Inn rentals; B&B; Groups, reunions, weddings.

Village Green Bed & Breakfast See ad above. Wild Rose Inn See ad page 25.

Palmer Shaw

Woodstock Inn on the Millstream 48 Tannery Brook Rd-Woodstock 1-800-420-4707 www.woodstock-inn-ny.com 18 rooms, gardens & stream $143-$375

10 Rooms Located In The Heart Of Woodstock Rates from $90-$184 single/double occupancy. Complimentary breakfast, 24 hr. organic coffee & tea bar, wi-fi & individual climate control. Private & shared baths available. 73 Tinker St. | Woodstock NY | 845-679-9479 www.twingableswoodstockny.com

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Lodging: Cottages & Campgrounds Villas In Woodstock See ad this page.

beautiful properties in the heart of Woodstock

Woodstock Inn on the Millstream 1-800-420-4707 www.woodstock-inn-ny.com Private & sunny. Walk to town. Decks overlook stream. Complete kitchen. See ad below.

. com 917 596 8533 Villasinwoodstock@yahoo.com

Saugerties / Woodstock KOA 882 Route 212 Saugerties 845-246-4089 saugertieskoa.com Award Winning Family Campground Lucile Blanch

All phone numbers are in the 845 area code unless otherwise indicated.

Scott Clugstone

STREAMSIDE

SERENITY

IN THE HEART OF THE VILLAGE Two-bedrooms, two baths & two lovely outdoor decks overlooking Tannery Brook. Complete kitchen, living room and yoga loft. Enclosed lawn. One-minute walk to bus. Available for daily, weekly or monthly rentals. Includes access to nearby private swimming stream.

1 - 8 0 0 - 4 2 0 - 4 7 0 7 • w w w. w o o d s t o c k - i n n - n y. c o m 27


Lodging: Motels & Inns

BEST WESTERN PLUS Kingston 503 Washington Ave, Kingston, NY tel: 845-338-0400 Fax 845-340- 1908 www.bwpkingston.com bwp@cooperhotels.com Indoor heated saltwater pool Hotel Dylan 320 Maverick Road Woodstock 845-684-5422 TheHotelDylan.com Destination for those seeking to unwind. See ad this page.

Howard Johnson Inn

2764 Rte 32, Saugerties 845-246-9511 84 newly renovated rooms, indoor heated pool/sauna. Free Wi-Fi

Howard Johnson Inn See ad this page. The Maple Tree Guest House 12 Old Forge Road Woodstock 845-657-1879 mapletreebandb.com Two Guest Suites off the Village Green.

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Woodstock Inn on the Millstream 48 Tannery Brook Rd-Woodstock 1-800-420-4707 www.woodstock-inn-ny.com Great gardens along lovely stream. Walk to town. Includes b’fast. $143-375. See ad this page.


Pat Horner

“The healthy being craves an occasional wildness, a jolt from normality, a sharpening of the edge of appetite, his own little festival… a brief excursion from his way of life.” — Robert Maclver

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Media, Music, Theater & Film An Historical Center of American Theatre History Est. 1938 At the Gateway to Woodstock

The Gathering Place for

GREAT PERFORMANCES

In Music, Theatre, Dance, Film, Fine Art

www.WoodstockPlayhouse.org

(845) 679-6900

Phoenicia Festival of the Voice See ad page 31. All phone numbers are in the 845 area code unless otherwise indicated.

Bach • Mozart• Dvořák • Schickele • Bruch • Debussy• Schumann • Cowell • Platt Hall Photo by Dion Ogust

Maverick Concerts A Century of Music in the Woods

Great Classical Music & Jazz Weekends from June 27th www.MaverickConcerts.org

120 Maverick Road, Woodstock, NY 12498 Schumann • Cowell • Cage • Copland • Haydn • Tsontakis • Bach • Bartók • Brahms

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Hand • Platt • Griffes • Prokofiev • Bach • Mozart • Dvořák • Schickele • Bruch • Debussy • Schumann • Cowell • Cage

Bach • Mozart• Dvořák • Schickele • Bruch • Debussy• Schumann • Cowell • Cage • Copland • Haydn • Tsontakis

Maverick Concerts 120 Maverick Road Woodstock 679-8217 maverickconcerts.org A Century of Great Chamber Music & Great Jazz Concerts in the Woods June 27 - Sept 13. See ad below

103 Mill Hill Road Woodstock NY 12498


Media, Music, Theater & Film

Deborah L. Moissinac

Woodstock Guitar Festival Hosted by Rennie Cantine Woodstock 853-5115 woodstockguitarfestival.us August 12 Thru 20. Rock On . . . Woodstock Playhouse See ad page 30.

L. Paul Saltzman

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Mind, Body & Spirit Flowing Spirit Healing 33 Mill Hill Road Woodstock 679-8989 flowingspirit.com Physical/Emotional/Spiritual. See ad below.

wood stock

yoga DOWNTOWN

KTD Monastery See ad this page.

SHAKTI

6 Deming Street 679-8700 woodstockyogacenter.com

Northern Dutchess Hospital See ad page 33.

28 West Fitness Center See ad page 33. Psychic Readings by Rose See ad page 33 Dr. Bruce Schneider 4 Deming Street Woodstock, NY 12498 (845) 679-6700 www.drbruceschneider.com Chiropractic/Cranio-Sacral/N.E.T.

Inner/outer harmony & physical healing By Spiritual Healing, Mediation, Channeling FlowingSpirit.com 845.679.8989 33 Mill Hill Rd.

Sam Spanier

All phone numbers are in the 845 area code unless otherwise indicated.

All phone numbers are in the 845 area code unless otherwise indicated.

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Mind, Body &✩✩ Medium Spirit✩✩ Astrology Tarot ✩ ✩ Clairvoyant Clairvoyant Medium Astrology Tarot Tarot ✩ Clairvoyant ✩ Medium ✩ Astrology Tarot

Clairvoyant

Medium

Astrology, Clairvoyant Psychic in person person or or by by phone phone Private & & Confidential Confidential Readings in Private Readings Walk Ins welcome or by Appointment Private & Confidential Readings by Phone 40 Mill Mill & Hill Rd., Woodstock, Woodstock, NYin••person 845.679.6801 or by phone Private Confidential Readings 40 Hill Rd., NY 845.679.6801 40 Mill Hill Rd., Woodstock, NY • 845.679.6801

40 Mill Hill Rd., Woodstock, NY • 845.679.6801 Stone Flower Mountain Health 1310 Route 28 West Hurley 845-679-4872 stoneflowermountainacupuncture health.com *Acupuncture*NAET*Chinese Medicine

Woodstock Yoga 6 Deming Street Woodstock 845-679-8700 WoodstockYogaCenter.com Styles: Iyengar, Vinyasa, Yin, Basics, Restorative, and Special Workshops. See ad page 32.

28 WEST

Paulette Esrig

Where Woodstock Works Out! Walk-ins Welcome Great Classes! www.28westgym.com

Ze’ev Neumann

To “meet” specialists, primary care and OB/GYN providers, visit healthquest.org/myHQMPdoc Accessibility/TTY: (800) 421-1220

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Real Estate

Lisa Halter Realty See ad below.

Paul McMahon

Laurie Ylvisaker, Associate Broker Coldwell Banker/Village Green R.E. 845-901-6129 lylvisaker@gmail.com Ulster County #1 Realtor 2014

Peter Brandt

Westwood Metes & Bounds Realty, Ltd. 24 Mill Hill Road Woodstock 679-0006 westwoodrealty.com also @ 275 Rte 375, West Hurley Top residential total sales leader for past 20 years. See ad above.

www.halterassociatesrealty.com

3257 Rt 212 Woodstock NY 845 679-2010 | info@halterassociatesrealty.com

Robert M. Lipgar

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John Kleinhans

“This is the way to hear music, I think, surrounded by rolling hills and farmlands, under a big sky.” — Michael Lang

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Services

Sam Spanier

experience your playground [

U L S T E R

C O U N T Y ,

N . Y .

]

Ulster County is home to the most-famous small town in the world - Woodstock! Visit your playground today and discover: Places to Stay - Resorts, Lodges and Campgrounds Things to Do - Skiing, Skating, Rock Climbing, Apple Picking, Wine Tasting and more All this, less than 90 minutes from NYC!

Hudson Valley/Catskill Regions

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Services

Cadmus Editorial Services Carol Cadmus, ELS carol.cadmus@gmail.com 845-750-0604

Mike DuBois

David Ekroth, Architect Willow, NY 845-679-5495 dekroth@hvc.rr.com Regional, Contemporary, Energy-Efficient Site & Building Design.

Adirondack/Pine Hill Trailways 499 Hurley Ave. Hurley 800-858-8555 trailwaysny.com Line bus service & charters. See ad page 38.

Friends of the Woodstock Library 5 Library Lane Woodstock 679-2213 74th Annual Library Fair.July 30th. See ad page 43. Marigold Home Interiors 34 Tinker St. Woodstock 679-2040 747 State Route 28 Kingston, NY 12401 845-338-0800 marigold-home.com Kathy Anderson’s School for Young Artists 31 Wittenberg Road, Bearsville 12409, Ph.(845) 679-9541 35 Years of Stories & Art at SchoolforYoungArtists.Org See ad page 17.

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Services

Reidunn Fraas

Ulster County Tourism. See ad page 36.

Diane Christi

Ulster Savings Bank 68 Mill Hill Road, Woodstock (866) 440-0391 ulstersavings.com MORE THAN JUST BANKING. See ad page 41. Walker Architecture PO Box 678 Woodstock 679-4217 walkinwood@hvc.rr.com Specializing in residential design.

Woodstock Aikido Upper Byrdcliffe Rd. Woodstock 679-8153 woodstockaikido.com 7 days a week; visitors welcome.

All phone numbers are in the 845 area code unless otherwise indicated.

Woodstock Haircutz See ad page 37.

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Kim Kauffman Rita Schwab Gertrude Abramson

“If you think positively Sound becomes Music Movement Becomes Dance Smile Becomes Laughter Mind Becomes Meditation And Life Becomes a Celebration….” — Rishika Jain

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Scott Andrew

“It’s in the reach of my arms The span of my hips, The stride of my step, The curl of my lips… It’s the fire in my eyes, And the flash of my teeth, The swing in my waist, And the joy in my feet.” — Maya Angelou

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Shopping

Catskill Art & Office Supply Woodstock 679-2251 Gifts, Trail Maps, Greeting Cards Copies, Custom Printing, Blueprints Custom Picture Framing, cool vibes

Childhood Memories Antiques Vintage Modern/Mid Century 70 Tinker St. Woodstock 917-903-3153 giaimoteaches@aol.com Art, furniture, lighting, toys & pottery

Irwin Berman

Sandra Nystrom

All phone numbers are in the 845 area code unless otherwise indicated.

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Shopping Crafts People 262 Spillway Rd. West Hurley 331-3859 craftspeople.us Representing 500 craftspeople. See ad page 41. The Golden Notebook See ad page 41. H. Houst & Son Inc. 4 Mill Hill Rd. Woodstock 679-2115 hhoust.com True Value Hardware * Just Ask Rental. See ad pg 41.

Jarita’s Florist 17 Tinker St. Woodstock 679-6161 or 1-877-JARITAS jaritas.com Serving Woodstock since 1977.

RE-SOURCE GALLERY

Liz Horn Jewelry See ad page 44.

Vintage Consignments Always Buying • Ebay Sales Gold • Silver • Paintings Antiques 32 Mill Hill Rd. Woodstock NY James Morrison Jimpicks@mac.com 518-209-7792

LOOMINUS WOODSTOCK 18 Tinker Street Woodstock 679.6500 loominus.com HandWoven Wearables, Gifts, USA Made. Modern Mythology See ad page 44.

All phone numbers are in the 845 area code unless otherwise indicated.

Staats Fasoldt

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Shopping

Mowers Sat/Sun Flea Market Maple Lane Woodstock 845 679-6744 woodstockfleamarket@hvc.rr.com Weekends May–Nov • Google us! Konrad Cramer

Pondicherry Yoga Arts 12 Tinker St. Woodstock 679-2926 pondi.biz Yoga Accessories, Auroville Handicrafts, Jewelry. See ad page 44. Re-Source Gallery See ad page 42. Tibetan Arts & Crafts See ad page 44.

FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY

5 LIBRARY LANE, WOODSTOCK

Overlook Mountain Bikes 93 Tinker St. Woodstock 679-2122 overlookmountainbikes.com Sales, service, rental. Pegasus Comfort Footwear 10 Mill Hill Road Woodstock 679-2373 pegasusshoes.com Awesome Footwear.

SATURDAY BOOK SALES 10-3 May7 9&&21, 23,July 12 May 10April & 24,25, June June 13 & 27, July 11 July 26 Library Fair 25 Library LibraryFair, Fair10-5) (83rdJuly annual (84th annual Library Fair, 10-5) Aug. 9 & 23 Aug. 8 & 22 BUDGET VOTE SEPT. 4, 4pm SEPT. 3, 4pm BUDGET VOTE Sept. 13 & 27 (half price sale) Sept. 12 & 26 (half price sale) Oct. 11 - bag sale, Oct. 25 - giveaway Oct. 10 - bag sale, Oct. 24 - giveaway HOLIDAY SALE DEC. 6, 10-1 DEC. 5, 10-1 HOLIDAY SALE

845-679-2213

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Shopping Woodstock Harley Davidson See ad Page 43. Woodstock Wine & Liquors 63 Tinker St. Woodstock 679-2669 woodstockwineandliquors.com Specializing in Fine Wine & Spirits. Woofstock 7 Elwyn Lane Woodstock 679-9663 Pet Food & Supplies. Your Pets Next Best Friend.

Timbuktu 2 Tannery Brook Rd. Woodstock 679-1169 timbuktuwoodstock.com Exotic World Decor.

Liz & Ron Jewelers

Franz Heigemeir

A selection of jewelry by Liz Horn & Ron Zukor can be found at the Byrdcliffe Gallery.

lizandronjewelers.com

The White Gryphon See ad page 42.

Pam Ehrhardt

Woodstock Emporium & Holiday Haus 27 Tinker Street Woodstock 679-9627 T-Shirts, Gifts, Xmas year round.

Welcome to

Village Green

Bed & Breakfast 845-679-0313

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THE STORY OF

THE SIXTIES & WOODSTOCK

You may be in Woodstock, but the Woodstock festival actually took place just over an hour from here in Bethel, NY. Come on over and learn about the legacy of the decade that defined a generation.

Bethel Woods Collection, gift of Baron Wolman and friends of the museum. Š Baron Wolman.

BethelWoodsCenter.org Download

Our APP

Bethel Woods Center for the Arts is a not-for-profit cultural organization that inspires, educates, and empowers individuals through the arts and humanities.

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TOWN Crisis Counseling Highway Department Justice Court Police / Fire / Emergency Town Offices

679-2485 679-2805 679-6345 679-2422 679-2113

RELIGIOUS Christ’s Lutheran Church Congregation Agudas Achim Congregation Ahavath Israel First Church of Christ Scientists KTD Buddhist Monastery Living Word Chapel Matagiri Sri Aurobindo Center Overlook United Methodist Church St. Gregory’s Episcopal Church St. John’s Roman Catholic Church Trinity Baptist Church Unitarian Fellowship Wesleyan Community Church Woodstock Dutch Reformed Church Woodstock Jewish Congregation Zen Arts Center Donshinji Monastery

679-2336 331-1176 338-4409 679-9534 679-5906 338-9305 679-8322 679-6800 679-8800 679-7696 518-265-6238 331-2884 657-8444 679-6610 679-2218 688-2228

ORGANIZATIONS Center for Photography Family Woodstock Artists Association & Museum Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild Woodstock Chamber of Commerce & Arts Woodstock Film Festival Woodstock Library Woodstock Museum Woodstock Times Youth Center & Skatepark

679-9957 331-7080 679-2940 679-2079 679-6234 679-4265 679-2213 246-0600 334-8200 679-2015

ALL PHONE NUMBERS ARE IN 845 AREA CODE unless otherwise specified.


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