A Second Century of Art and Inspiration


July August September 2025
July August September 2025
OCTOBER 16, 2025
OHEKA CASTLE, HUNTINGTON, NY
Benefit Co-Chairs Richard T. Cunniff, Jr. & Elizabeth Halpern
The Heckscher Museum of Art is pleased to announce the 2025 Honorees for its annual Benefit. The Bagley Family, Bank of America, and Deborah Buck embody the creative and philanthropic spirit that drives The Heckscher Museum’s mission.
The Benefit will take place at historic Oheka Castle, and will celebrate the exhibition Emma Stebbins: Carving Out History For more information, visit Heckscher.org/benefits/2025 or Contact: Caitlynn Schare at Schare@Heckscher.org.
The Bagley Family
Joan and Milton Bagley are philanthropists, passionate collectors, and patrons of the arts. They have been generous supporters of the Museum and part of Huntington’s cultural community for over 30 years.
Over more than three decades, Joan, Milton and the Bagley family have developed an impressive collection of paintings and sculpture
by artists across Latin America that is notable for its range, depth, and rich variety of visual expression. The Heckscher Museum was fortunate to exhibit their family’s collection, including masterworks by Fernando Botero, Diego Rivera, and more in the 2018 exhibition Rivera and Beyond: Latin American Art from the Joan and Milton Bagley Collection.
Most recently in 2024, a transformative gift from the Collection of Joan and Milton Bagley was made to the Heckscher Museum’s permanent collection of artworks by Francisco Zúñiga, Roberto Matta, Julio Larraz, and Ignacio Iturria, leaving an important legacy that will allow the Museum to share the family’s treasured art with the community in perpetuity.
Bank of America is one of the world’s leading financial institutions, serving clients and local communities on Long Island. A partner of more than three decades, the bank has supported The Heckscher Museum since 1991. The bank’s Art in our Communities program, established in 2009, offers museums and nonprofit cultural institutions the opportunity to borrow complete or customized exhibitions from Bank of America’s art collection at no cost. In
2019, the Museum’s popular exhibition In a New Light: American Impressionism: Works from the Bank of America Collection was lent through this program, sharing important American Impressionist works with Long Islanders.
In 2024, the bank underwrote free admission to the Museum, providing visitors and families with access to the Museum’s art collection and exhibitions at no cost through 2025.
Internationally recognized artist Deborah Buck has been challenging the boundaries of art for over four decades. Her work is defined by an unflinching exploration of abstraction and surrealism.
Mentored by Clyfford Still, she was encouraged to broaden her mind beyond art, which led her to a liberal arts education at Trinity College—a foundation that still fuels her creative vision today. Her work defies trends and embraces bold, intuitive expression. Deborah’s work They Had Stars in Their Eyes is part of the Museum’s permanent collection and was recently exhibited in The Rains are Changing Fast: New Acquisitions in Context
In 2019, she founded the Deborah Buck Foundation to amplify women’s voices in the arts. Her support of The Heckscher Museum recognizes its strong commitment to talented women who were overlooked in their lifetimes. Her Foundation has generously supported the exhibitions Salt Life: Arthur Dove and Helen Torr and Emma Stebbins: Carving Out History.
Your Gift Will be Matched! This is an unprecedented opportunity for your gift to have extra impact! In addition to supporting the exhibition and the Museum’s year of arts education and public programming, your Benefit sponsorship contribution will help us unlock an incredible 50% matching gift from a philanthropic Anonymous donor.
At the Opening of All of Me with All of You, clockwise from top left: David Shumway and Heather Arnet with their donated artwork (vanessa german’s Oh when you’re low, I’ll be there to hold you tight to me., c. 2005 – 2009); Exhibition sponsors LGBT Network: Connor Teague, Development Coordinator, Robert Vitelli, Chief Executive Officer, Jess Bell, Development Manager, and Brian Rosen, Chief Development Officer; Guest Curator Victoria Munro with exhibiting artist Joanne Mulberg, and exhibition sponsors Andrea and Neil Kreinik.
Dear Friends,
The summer is a particularly wonderful time to visit the Museum and to join us in reflecting on and celebrating the Museum’s growth – and the people in our community who make our exhibitions and programs possible.
All of Me with All of You, which opened with a celebration of more than 175 people is now on view. This is more than an exhibition – it is an invitation to connect, reflect, and celebrate the power of art in embracing the full spectrum of our existence.
Guest curated by Victoria Munro, Executive Director of the Alice Austen House, the exhibition spans 150 years and features the work of 28 artists and collectives. All of Me With All of You, uncovers profound yet often overlooked connections between the Museum, its surrounding landscape, and the LGBTQ+ communities that have both influenced and been shaped by this context.
As with all of our exhibitions, we hope All of Me will foster a sense of belonging, spark meaningful dialogue, and reaffirm the role of art as a catalyst for community and representation.
More than an exhibition space, the Museum is also a place for community building. Our summer programs and events bring people together in the galleries and out in the park. Following its successful debut last year, the outdoor Palette Café is ready to share delicious foods and treats from its roster of food trucks, which now are in Heckscher Park for extended hours (12 to 8 pm).
It’s a perfect time of year to visit the Dove/ Torr Cottage, the home of Artists Arthur Dove and Helen Torr on the shores of Titus Mill Pond. Explore the cottage on your own with the accessible Soundwalk, or join us for the open house on July 26. Join us in July for the The Mix program which brings music and grown-up fun into the galleries after hours on select Fridays. Children can “drop in” to create their own artwork with the guidance of Museum Educators on Thursdays in July and August, or take part in our monthly, bilingual Art Explorers Club. The summer will culminate with Draw Out, our fabulous community arts event featuring free live music, docent-led exhibition tours, and adult and kid art-making activities. See our programs page for more details.
We look forward to seeing you this summer, enjoying everything the Museum and the park have to offer!
Heather Arnet, CEO and Executive Director
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 14, 2025
Sponsors: Michelle Hatzopoulos & Evangeline Knell; Andrea & Neil Kreinik; Alicia L. Ruberti & Kathryn Kroleski; LGBT Network
This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services.
For the first time, The Heckscher Museum of Art is exploring its collection through the lens of LGBTQ+ identities and histories in it's current exhibition All of Me with All of You. “The artworks that I selected for this exhibition span over 150 years, revealing profound, often overlooked connections between The Heckscher Museum of Art, itssurrounding landscape, and the historically queer communities that have shaped and been shaped by it. By recognizing these works as queer, and honoring their historical and cultural significance, The Heckscher Museum offers pivotal support and inspiration, not only to artists but also to the broader LGBTQ+ community,” noted
Guest Curator Victoria Munro, Executive Director of the Alice Austen House.
All of Me with All of You, creates a dynamic dialogue about nature, identity, and interpersonal connection that intersects with broader historical and cultural moments. Acknowledging the LGBTQ+ identities of the artists presented in this exhibition validates their lived experience and reflects more accurate and expansive narratives of American art. Noted Heather Arnet, Executive Director and CEO: “Our hope is that this exhibition will foster a sense of belonging, spark meaningful dialogue, and reaffirm the role of art as a catalyst for community and representation.”
By: Nina Chohan, Curatorial Intern
The exhibition All of Me with All of You: LGBTQ+ Art Out of the Collection marks a milestone as the museum’s first comprehensive exploration of its collection through the lens of LGBTQ+ histories and identities. Organized by guest curator Victoria Munro, Executive Director of the Alice Austen House, the exhibition will traverse over 150 years of paintings, sculptures, and works on paper.
A highlight of the show is the inclusion of six photographs by the artist collective PaJaMa, composed of Paul Cadmus, Jared French, and Margaret French. PaJaMa (an acronym of their first names) was formed in 1937, during trips the trio made to the beaches of Fire Island in Long Island and their studios in New York City. Their photographs draw on themes of surrealism, often featuring themselves as well as people from their close circle of artists, writers, and dancers. They created intimate black-andwhite images that captured the spirit of artistic and personal freedom that came
with spending summers with the queer community of Fire Island. Their subjects appeared in togas, swimsuits, or nude, posed in classical or unusual compositions and set against environmentally tactile backgrounds that featured the vast ocean, sand dunes, tree stumps, seaweed washed ashore, rocks and other natural materials, blurring the lines between myth, fantasy, and autobiography.
Although PaJaMa's photographs exude theatricality and formal precision, they were initially made for private enjoyment, passed among friends rather than displayed publicly. Cadmus once remarked, “We would go out late and take photographs when the light was best. They were just playthings. We would hand out these little photographs when we went out to dinner parties, like playing cards."1 Since these photographs were not originally meant for public display, there is a sense of freedom of expression and unconstraint that captures the subjects at ease, interacting with close friends and lovers.
Art institutions have historically excluded queer artists or downplayed their identities. By contextualizing PaJaMa within this exhibition, The Heckscher Museum is helping to dismantle cultural stigma around LGBTQ+ art and artists. Furthermore, it aligns with the museum’s long standing support of local artists, which was first championed by Heckscher Museum Director Eva Gatling and her 1970s Artists of Suffolk County exhibition series. “It is the spirit of the Island that’s operative here,” Gatling said about the series. It is this spirit that continues to shine at the Heckscher with All of Me With All of You. By revisiting its collection with a focus on LGBTQ+ narratives, the museum not only rectifies historical oversights but also, with the inclusion of PaJaMa’s photographs among others, celebrates the legacy of queer artists working in Long Island's cultural and physical landscapes.
Nina K. Chohan is currently working towards her Master’s in Art History and an Advance Certificate in Curatorial Studies at Hunter College, and has her Bachelor’s in Museum Studies from Arizona State University. A Long Island local, Chohan currently works at the Whitney Museum as a Visitor & Member Assistant; she has also worked as an Education and Visi -
tor Services Assistant at the Parrish Art Museum, and volunteered as a Visitor Services Associate at the Nassau County Museum of Art.
1 https://www.pineshistory.org/the-archives/art-history-paul-cadmus-jaredamp-margaret-french
Previous page: Amy Adler, Eclipse, 2003, C-print, Gift from the Collection of Ninah and Michael Lynne. This page clockwise from top left: PaJaMa (CADMUS, Paul; FRENCH, Jared; FRENCH, Margaret) Founded 1937, all Museum Purchases: Jared French, Fire Island, 1949, Vintage gelatin silver print; Paul Cadmus and Jose Martinez, Fire Island, 1939. Vintage gelatin silver print; Jared French, Paul Cadmus and Jose Martinez, Fire Island, 1938. Vintage gelatin silver print; Lincoln Kirstein, Jose Martinez, Jared French, and Unidentified Figure, After the Hurricane, Fire Island, 1944. Vintage gelatin silver print; Jared French, Fire Island, 1949, Vintage gelatin silver print.
The Heckscher Museum’s Youth Advisory Board has created a ‘Zine’ to accompany All of Me With All of You: LGBTQ+ Art Out of the Collection. The Youth Advisory Board – with mentorship from the mulit-generational Community Advisory Board – spent months discussing the artists and works on view, learning from LGBTQ+ mentors, and exploring how their own voices and identities resonate with the artwork.
Filled with statistics, stories, timelines, resources, and personal reflections, the Zine was created to offer visitors new reflections and personal perspectives shaped by young people today. It also offers some thoughtful words on LGBTQ+ mental health, and how Museums can help!
To view the Zine, visit issuu.com/heckschermuseum/docs/ the_plus_zine_from_the_heckscher_museum
Being part of the Heckscher community gave me the opportunity to meet other creatives to bring a platform to queer artists, writers, and activists... who I wouldn’t meet otherwise. I hope visitors to the exhibition take away that queer stories and experiences are important to preserve.
– MICHA RAIMONDI, SMITHTOWN HIGH SCHOOL WEST, GRADE 12
This September the Museum is excited to share the first exhibition to recognize Emma Stebbins (1815–1882) as one of the most significant American sculptors of the nineteenth century. While her Bethesda Fountain in Central Park has been a global icon for 150 years, the full scope of Stebbins’s life and work is virtually unknown. From 1857 to 1870, she created innovative sculptures while living in Rome with her wife, renowned Shakespearean actress Charlotte Cushman, who championed her career.
Emma Stebbins: Carving Out History brings together most of the artist’s rare extant work, including a portrait drawing and several sculptures that will be on public view for the first time in a century. In addition to fourteen sculptures, the exhibition features archival material including photographs that document lost marble sculptures and plaster studies that Stebbins never realized in stone or bronze. Stebbins completed the Bethesda Fountain to celebrate the Croton Aqueduct, which brought clean drinking water to New York City. The inclusion of paintings and photographs by historic and contemporary artists including William Merritt Chase, Martha Edelheit, and Ricky Flores attest to its enduring relevance as a monument to health, healing, and peace.
In addition to the Stebbins’ works in the Museum collection, the exhibition includes loans from The Art Institute of Chicago, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Harvard University, and Brooklyn Museum, among others.
The exhibition is curated by Karli Wurzelbacher, PhD, Chief Curator of The Heckscher Museum of Art, which stewards the largest collection of Stebbins’s work. An extensive scholarly publication with a foreword by Pulitzer- and Tony-award winning playwright Tony Kushner accompanies the exhibition.
A member preview will take place on Saturday, September 27. A reception for sponsors and donors will follow.
This exhibition was made possible through support from the Terra Foundation for American Art and the Henry Luce Foundation.
Major support provided by exhibition campaign co-chairs Richard T. Cunniff, Jr. and Robin T. Hadley, and leadership gifts from Priscilla and Robert Hughes and Andrea B. and Peter D. Klein.
Additional support provided by The Deborah Buck Foundation, The Stebbins Fund in memory of James F. Stebbins and Jane Stebbins Greenleaf, the Wyeth Foundation for American Art, the Every Page Foundation, and The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation.
Public support provided by the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York State Council on the Arts, and the Town of Huntington, New York. Community engagement and public programming support were provided by a distinguished Museums for America grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services.
Julie Sengle, Director of Development, Heather Arnet, Executive Director and CEO, and Heckscher Board Member Bruce Segal at the Imagine Awards event.
The Heckscher Museum of Art was selected as an award winner at the 13th annual Long Island Imagine Awards on April 29th. The Museum gratefully serves as a forum for community where sharing and educating lead to better understanding and empathy. It was especially meaningful to receive The Chase for Business award honoring our work advancing core values and IDEAs advancing inclusion, diversity, equity, and accessibility. Heather Arnet, Executive Director and CEO, reiterated the Museum’s commitment to ensure all people have access to the arts and feel safe and welcome in our galleries. Congratulations to all the deserving organizations at the well-attended event! The award came with a $6.000 prize that will help continue the work of engaging and supporting our community.
The award recognized the Museum’s mission to create opportunities for everyone to experience art that broadens understanding of the past, fosters community connections to the present, and creates diverse possibilities for the future.
A recent grant from Bank of America, has helped to remove cost as a barrier, by underwriting free admission to the Museum year-round. Museum exhibitions interpret multifaceted stories about American art, with
particular emphasis on illuminating the creative and cultural contexts of artists and peoples who traditionally have been excluded from historical narratives. To honor and serve our growing Latinx community, all Museum signage and wall text are now fully bilingual (English/Spanish). Museum staff and the accessibility Advisory Group created multi-sensory art experiences involving braille, 3D tactiles, ASL, and increased accessible seating. Thoughtful exhibitions and year-round public programming celebrating Lunar New Year, Día de los Muertos, Pride, Juneteenth, Haitian Mother’s Day, and Ramadan, center the community in ongoing organization-wide work to advance accessibility, accountability, and community.
We are so grateful to Kenneth R. Cerini, Cerini & Associates, LLP, Founder of & Chair of Long Island Imagine Awards, for shining “a light on nonprofits that are truly unique.” Thanks to Diamond Award Sponsor SterlingRisk as well as Platinum Sponsors Certiman Balin, Chase for Business, Flagstar, Jovia, Nerds that Care, and Vanguard Benefits. Particular thanks to the Claire Friedlander Family Foundation, who has generously supported the Museum’s Long Island’s Best exhibition for many years.
Julie Sengle has joined The Heckscher Museum of Art as Director of Development. Sengle is a development professional with more than 15 years of experience with New York and the tri-state area nonprofits.
“Her expertise in both the art and nonprofit space is a perfect fit for the Museum,” said Heather Arnet, Executive Director and CEO, The Heckscher Museum. “Julie will be a wonderful addition to our team with proven success stewarding donors, running special campaigns and benefit events, steering board committees, and managing staff teams.”
Sengle’s most recent roles were at Helen Keller International as Manager of Major Gifts and seven years at the Brooklyn Museum as Director of Special Events. Prior to joining the Brooklyn Museum, Julie worked for the Bronx Museum of the Arts and The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.
In a letter to members and donors, Sengle noted,”I’m thrilled to bring my decades-long experience to the small but mighty Heckscher Museum, with its worldclass exhibitions, top-notch arts education programs, multi-lingual programming for youth and families, and enhanced accessibility throughout.” Adding, “Having studied art myself, it’s been a joy to introduce my three-year-old daughter to the Museum. She has delighted in exploring the galleries, using the interactive kid’s activities that accompany every exhibition, and participating in children’s programs which help her develop coordination and critical thinking skills.”
Sengle has a Masters in Performance Studies & Art History, and a Certificate in Arts Administration from New York University. She has a Bachelor of Arts in English Literature from East Stroudsburg University.
Sengle added: “Like many museums, we are experiencing increased funding pressures. In April we shared the sobering news that one of the Museum’s biggest funders, the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) is in flux and our promised grant of $250,000 would not be paid in full. Recently we also received news of the termination of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts. Many of you have stepped-up in response. We are so grateful to everyone who gave their support."
If you would like to donate to the Museum, please contact Sengle@Heckscher.org. Donations can also be made on our website at Heckscher.org/give/ways-to-give.
The Heckscher Museum is honored to share that it now has an ASL sign given by Monica Ortiz-Menier.
Sign names are a cherished tradition in deaf culture typically given to a person and can only be created and given by deaf individuals. It is unusual to give a museum a sign name. “I was moved to gift the sign after working with Heckscher and the Town of Huntington,” said Ortiz-Menir said. “It was very impactful to the deafblind/blind community. I was touched and amazed by the museum's efforts to go above and beyond to be inclusive for the deaf and hard of hearing community.” ASL interpretation on video for the sign has been provided by Angie Bedoya. You can see the video of the sign on Heckscher.org/ASL.
In 2023, Ortiz-Menier was a member of the Heckscher Museum’s Accessibility Advisory Group as part of her work program with Helen Keller National Center. She collaborated with the Museum on the Dove/Torr Cottage & Heckscher Park Soundwalks project. This included designing accessible signage at both locations and creating immersive accessible experiences in the Museum’s digital guide in the Bloomberg Connects app. Ortiz-Menier is an artist and has had her tactile Pop Art pieces showcased in exhibitions at the Art Guild, Port Washington, NY, Three River Arts Festival (TRAF) in Pittsburgh, PA. She has collaborated with Library of Accessible Media for Pennsylvanians (LAMP), and Radiant Hall to curate an exhibit through The Pittsburgh Trust.
Monica Ortiz-Menier. Watch her sign the Museum’s American Sign Language (ASL) name at Heckscher.org/asl
Angie Bedoya grew up on Long Island, NY. She lost her hearing as a baby and is the only deaf child of her hearing parents. She earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration with a minor in Studio Art during the COVID-19 pandemic. For the past several years, she has been working with the DeafBlind community as a Co-Navigator and Support Service Provider, where she is gaining valuable knowledge and experience in her journey. Both Monica and Angie are Gallaudet Alumnus.
OPEN HOUSE
Saturday, July 26
11:30 am to 12:30 pm Members & Donors Program with Historian Robert Hughes 12:30 to 4 pm Open to the Public Members should contact Caitlynn Schare at Schare@Heckscher.org
The Arthur Dove/Helen Torr Cottage, Centerport, NY, has won its second award for the historic property’s Soundwalk project. The Soundwalk won the Engaging Communities 2025 Award of Distinction, one of only 14 awards presented by the Museum Association of New York (MANY). The Heckscher Museum is steward of the property in Centerport, NY, where celebrated modernists artists Arthur Dove and Helen Torr last lived. The Soundwalk was designed to enhance visitor engagement with the artists and the property.
Visitors can explore the property on their
own by accessing the Bloomberg Connects app. Visitors can also join the Museum during the Open House event to gain new insights. During a member and donor preview, Town of Huntington Historian Robert Hughes will discuss the history of the cottage and the area. At 12:30 pm, Poet Jesse Curran will read from her works, inspired by the artists.
MANY’s Engaging Community awards celebrate organizations that use exceptional and resourceful methods to engage their communities and build new audiences. For the Soundwalk, that included a collaboration with Girls Inc. Long Island which engaged middle-school students into the design process. An Accessibility Advisory Group was assembled to provide advice and expertise, including incorporating braille, 3D tactile maps, and signage into the project, ensuring the Soundwalk would be as accessible as possible to those with vision
impairment. One of the most important and unique aspects of this project became the utilization of community centered design principles with emergent technology to increase access to the arts and historic spaces.
This is the second award for the exciting Soundwalk project, which received an Award of Excellence from the Greater Hudson Heritage Network.
Visitors can access both the Dove/Torr Soundwalk, and one at Heckscher Park, Huntington, through the Bloomberg Connects app with the QR code below.
The Dove/Torr Soundwalk was created with support from a Dorothy C. Radgowski Learning Through Women’s Achievement in the Arts Grant, a joint effort of Where Women Made History (WWMH), and Historic Artists Homes & Studios (HAHS) at the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Special thanks to Susan Buroker, Evangeline Knell, Girls Inc. Long Island, Monica Ortiz-Menier, Helen Keller National Center, and the Heckscher Museum Accessibility Advisory Group for their work on the project. Tactile Maps and Signage were created and installed for this project at Heckscher Park and the Dove/Torr Cottage with generous grant support from the Town of Huntington Environmental Open Space & Park Fund Advisory Committee.
Fridays through September 12
Food Truck Hours 12 to 8 pm (Newly Extended) Museum Open 12 to 5 pm
Get ready for another unforgettable season of Fridays at The Heckscher Museum of Art’s Museum Palette Café! After a successful debut last year, we’re serving up delicious fun this summer with more dates, free Museum admission, and extended hours. Food trucks will be in the park from 12 to 8 pm, while the Museum is open 12 to 5 pm. Come for the food, stay for the art, and experience summer Fridays like never before. For a list of performances on the Chapin Stage in Heckscher Park in July and August, visit huntingtonarts.org. For more information on the Food Trucks visit heckscher.org/cafe.
July 11: Cousins Maine Lobster
July 18: How U Dogin
July 25: Crepes & Bakes
August 1: All American Wontons
August 8: Roadhouse Empanadas
SUMMER DROP-IN ART WORKSHOPS FOR KIDS
More info at Heckscher.org/dropin
August 15: Big Black Food Truck
August 22: B Bistro
August 29: All American Wontons
September 5: Cousins Maine Lobster
September 12: Coalhouse Food Truck
THURSDAYS, JULY 10AUGUST 14 10:3011:30 am FRIDAY, JULY 11 6:308:30 pm
VISUALIZING COMMUNITY: SNAPSHOTS OF MEMORIES
FRIDAY, AUGUST 1 6:30 - 9 pm
A collaboration between The Heckscher Museum, Planned Parenthood, and Protégé Art Studio. Register at Heckscher.org/snapshots
THE MIX: A CENTURY & BEYOND Register at Heckscher.org/themix
SATURDAY, SEPT 13 12 - 5 pm
DRAW OUT! COMMUNITY ARTS FESTIVAL (rain date Sept 14) Info at Heckscher.org/Drawout
SATURDAYS, JULY 12AUGUST 9
ART EXPLORERS CLUB / CLUB DE EXPLORADORES DE ARTE (EN ESPAÑOL) 9:30 - 10:30 am (English) 11 am - 12 pm (en Español) For Ages 5 - 10. Register at heckscher.org/explorers
SATURDAY, SEPT 27 12 - 3 pm
MEMBERS & DONORS PREVIEW HOURS FOR EMMA STEBBINS: CARVING OUT HISTORY*
Contact Caitlynn Schare at Schare@Heckscher.org
Mickalene Thomas, Interior: Red Couch and Landscape, 2024, UV pigment print on 410gsm Somerset Tub Sized Radiant White paper with two silkscreen metallic shimmer and glitter layers, two satin and gloss detail layers and a matte varnish silkscreen seal. Museum Purchase.
THE HECKSCHER MUSEUM OF ART CREATES OPPORTUNITIES FOR EVERYONE TO EXPERIENCE ART THAT BROADENS UNDERSTANDING OF THE PAST, FOSTERS COMMUNITY CONNECTIONS TO THE PRESENT, AND CREATES DIVERSE POSSIBILITIES FOR THE FUTURE.
The Heckscher Museum of Art is grateful to The Town of Huntington and the Town of Huntington Board of Trustees and Suffolk County Department of Economic Development & Planning for their generous support of the arts.
ASL, Braille, and Spanish language translation made possible by a generous grant from the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature.
HECKSCHER MUSEUM HOURS
Thursday through Sunday 12 to 5 pm (Closed Monday through Wednesday)
Docent volunteers are available in the Museum to answer visitor questions on select days. Please see Heckscher.org/calendar for details.
LIE or Northern State Parkway to Route 110 North. Turn right onto Route 25A East, Main Street, in Huntington. Left onto Prime Avenue.
PRIVATE GROUP TOURS
Tours for groups now available. For scheduling and fees, register at Heckscher.org/visit/groups-tours VISIT HECKSCHER.ORG FOR EXHIBITION AND PROGRAM INFORMATION