Addison Gallery Of America Art Set To Reopen In Fall

Andover, Mass. On Sept. 7, 2010, the Addison Gallery of American Art, the academic art museum of Phillips Academy, will once again welcome the public after the first renovation and restoration in its history. In celebration of this long-awaited occasion, the entire museum will be filled with more than three hundred historical and contemporary art objects drawn exclusively from the Addison’s extraordinary collection of American art.

“After eighteen months of anticipation, we are overjoyed to begin the next phase of the Addison’s storied history with our reopening in September,” said Brian T. Allen, Mary Stripp & R. Crosby Kemper Director of the Addison. “The staff has worked diligently to prepare an exhibition that truly honors the Addison’s collection, showcases our improved space and celebrates our tradition of cultivating a love for the beautiful. The Addison is a jewel among museums – and after much devoted, often difficult, work – the jewel has been reset.”

Designed to showcase the museum’s renewed and enlarged state, the opening exhibit is titled Inside, Outside, Upstairs, Downstairs: The Addison Anew. This extraordinary exhibit will offer viewers the opportunity to discover great treasures and rediscover old favorites, learn about lesser-known but equally compelling works, and become acquainted with newly acquired additions to the Addison’s collection.

Inside, Outside, Upstairs, Downstairs: The Addison Anew highlights the range and depth of the Addison’s holdings. The exhibition acknowledges the transformative and respectful nature of the Addison’s restoration, which returned original gallery spaces in the 1931 building to their former use, restored the main entrance rotunda and its celebrated Paul Manship fountain, and installed new climate control, security and lighting systems throughout the building.

In late July 2008, the Addison officially closed its doors for the first major building project in the museum’s 79-year history. The reopening marks the completion of five major goals:

* Create the Addison Gallery Museum Learning Center
* Provide appropriate collection storage and art preservation space
* Construct new office space
* Renovate and restore the existing Platt Building
* Ensure the Addison’s future financial stability

Beginning Sept. 7, 2010, the Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass., is open to the public from Tuesday through Saturday, 10:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 – 5:00 p.m. The Gallery is closed on Monday. Admission to all exhibitions and events is free. The Addison Gallery also offers free education programs for teachers and groups. For more information, call 978-749-4015, or visit the website at www.addisongallery.org

Peabody Essex Museum Announces Re-Opening Of Crowninshield-Bently House

SALEM, MA –– The Peabody Essex Museum (PEM) today announces the reopening of one of its most storied properties, the Crowninshield-Bentley House. The house, one of 22 historic properties stewarded by PEM, is located at 126 Essex Street in Salem, MA and designated by the National Register of Historic Places. Docent-led tours of the house will resume on June 26, and a public opening celebration for the house will take place during Salem Heritage Week in August.

Built at 108 Essex Street in 1727 by fish merchant and ship captain, John Crowninshield, the house was home to one of New England’s most renowned diarists, Reverend William Bentley, from 1791 through 1819. The house was sold to Salem’s Hawthorne Hotel in the late 1940s. The Hawthorne Hotel donated the house to the Essex Institute in 1959, and the house was moved to its present location.

Under the curatorial leadership of Dean Lahikainen, PEM’s Carolyn and Peter Lynch Curator of American Decorative Arts, the house has been restored to its 1794 appearance with the exterior and all public spaces repainted. Restoration efforts thus far included restoration of objects and window treatments, new chimneys, refurbished interior décor and site upgrades.

The next phase of the ongoing Crowninshield-Bentley restoration will include Reverend William Bentley’s library and study. Bentley, whose fame spread far beyond Salem, was a pastor, politician, linguist, naturalist, antiquarian, and diarist. The diary kept by Bentley is considered one of the most important New England diaries of the period.

Tours featuring Crowninshield-Bentley and other PEM historic houses are offered on a daily basis. Further information is available at http://pem.org/visit/tours.

ABOUT THE PEABODY ESSEX MUSEUM
The Peabody Essex Museum presents art and culture from New England and around the world. The museum’s collections are among the finest of their kind, showcasing an unrivaled spectrum of American art and architecture (including four National Historic Landmark buildings) and outstanding Asian, Asian Export, Native American, African, Oceanic, Maritime and Photography collections. In addition to its vast collections, the museum offers a vibrant schedule of changing exhibitions and a hands-on education center. The museum campus features numerous parks, period gardens and 22 historic properties, including Yin Yu Tang, a 200-year-old house that is the only example of Chinese domestic architecture on display in the United States.


HOURS: Open Tuesday-Sunday and holiday Mondays, 10 am-5 pm. Closed Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Day.

ADMISSION: Adults $15; seniors $13; students $11. Additional admission to Yin Yu Tang: $5. Members, youth 16 and under and residents of Salem enjoy free general admission and free admission to Yin Yu Tang.

INFO: Call 866-745-1876 or visit our Web site at www.pem.org.

6th Annual Wacky Cardboard Boat Race Fundraiser

This year, the Tryian-Ashler-Acacia Lodge is holding our 6th Annual “Race To The Bottom” Wacky Cardboard Boat Race Fundraiser and would like to extend an invitation to all that are interested in participating. This year’s event will be on Saturday, July 10, 2010, from 11am to 3pm at Back Beach in Rockport, MA. This time frame allows you to build your boat from a prepackaged kit (cardboard, duct tape, etc) and then race it. There is a donation of $100 per team, which is used for scholarship funds and community charity within the Cape Ann Area.  Come and enjoy a wacky and fun filled day in the sun and on the water. If your team does not want to, or can not find a captain for your boat, the Rockport Boy Scouts will provide a captain to race your boat for you.
Spectators are welcomed and encouraged! Don’t forget your cameras!! The Tyrian-Ashler-Acacia Lodge will be serving refreshments to supplement this fund raising event.

If you need more information or would like a registration form, please contact Gary Lucas at 978-546-6788 or 978-852-1005 .  The Tyrian-Ashler-Acacia Lodge would like to take this opportunity to thank everyone who participated and supported our “Race to the Bottom” Wacky Cardboard Race for the last five years.  Hope to see you on Saturday, July 10!

Family Film Event: Dinosaurs at the Museum

SALEM, MA –– Delight in a free daytime screening of the classic animated film The Land Before Time at the Peabody Essex Museum (PEM) on July 15 at 10 AM. Follow the adventures of Littlefoot and his dinosaur friends as they make their way towards the mythical Great  Valley. Following the film, kids are invited to create their own dinosaur feet and explore PEM’s newest photography exhibition Imprints: Photographs by Mark Ruwedel, featuring 41 spectacular images of dinosaur tracks and ancient human footpaths found in the American West. This event is suitable for accompanied children ages 3 and up. Reservations should be made before July 13 by calling 978-745-9500 x3011 or visiting www.pem.org/events .

THURSDAY, JULY 15 | 10 AM – NOON | FREE WITH MUSEUM ADMISSION

The Land Before Time (1988) | 70 minutes | Rated G

When an earth-shattering quake kills both of his parents, a young brontosaurus named Littlefoot teams up with other orphaned dinosaurs to survive. Learning to work together, the youngsters embark on a quest for the legendary Great  Valley — a place of abundant resources where their species can thrive. Along the way, the orphans evade sharp-toothed Tyrannosaurus Rexes, tar pits and other dangers — but hope and cooperation keep them alive!


About the Peabody Essex  Museum

The Peabody Essex Museum presents art and culture from New England and around the world. The museum’s collections are among the finest of their kind, showcasing an unrivaled spectrum of American art and architecture (including four National Historic Landmark buildings) and outstanding Asian, Asian Export, Native American, African, Oceanic, Maritime and Photography collections. In addition to its vast collections, the museum offers a vibrant schedule of changing exhibitions and a hands-on education center. The museum campus features numerous parks, period gardens and 22 historic properties, including Yin Yu Tang, a 200-year-old house that is the only example of Chinese domestic architecture on display in the United   States.

HOURS: Open Tuesday-Sunday and holiday Mondays, 10 am-5 pm. Closed Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Day.

ADMISSION: Adults $15; seniors $13; students $11. Additional admission to Yin Yu Tang: $5. Members, youth 16 and under and residents of Salem enjoy free general admission and free admission to Yin Yu Tang.

INFO: Call 866-745-1876 or visit our Web site at www.pem.org <http://www.pem.org/> .

10 Quail Run in Andover

Pretty south facing cape in wonderful end of cul-de-sac setting. Greenhouse features all new e-rated glass providing passive solar heat greeting you @ the front door and opens into cozy sitting area spotlighted by beautiful brick hearth set up for pellet stove. First flr features oversized kitchen loaded w/gorgeous custom cabinetry and eating area overlooking wrap-around deck and private fenced-in backyard. BR, office, FR and laundry/mudroom complete 1st flr. Too many details! Call for more!

Keller-Morris: Your Hometown Team
Phone: 978-697-7904 or 978-886-1324
Email: kellermorris@gmail.com

4 Foster’s Pond Road in Andover

This beautiful waterfront Colonial within 10 minutes of Andover center features 4 bedrooms, 2 full bathrooms & one half bathroom, spread out over 2,800 square feet on 34,500 SF of property with its own private beach on quiet & secluded Foster’s Pond. This home is quality constructed with Andersen windows & cedar clapboard. A functional flr plan features a 30′ granite kit. w/custom cabinets opening to a 22×24 FR w/a stunning stone FP & an abundance of windows.A 3-season porch w/views of the pond!

Keller-Morris: Your Hometown Team
Phone: 978-697-7904 or 978-886-1324
Email: kellermorris@gmail.com

Lecture and Book Signing on the East Indies Trade, Salem Visitor Center

Salem Maritime National Historic Site will present a lecture and book signing by Dr. James R. Fichter, Assistant Professor of History at Lingnan University in Hong Kong, at the Salem Visitor Center on Sunday, June 13 at 2:00 PM. Dr. Fichter’s recent book So Great A Proffit: How the East Indies Trade Transformed Angle-American Capitalism, sheds new light on the American-Asian trade that made Salem and other port towns in Essex County very wealthy in the years after the American Revolution.

In his lecture, Dr. Fichter will discuss the role of Salem and Essex County in the American trade to the East Indies between 1793 and 1815. Essex County merchants provided crucial support in the American challenge to the East India Company`s Asian trade. Beverly`s Israel Thorndike, for example, worked with London merchants to create a rival system of trade which linked the United States to India, China, Java and other parts of the Indies. These new links spurred the development of capitalism in the United States and helped bring down the East India Company monopoly on British-Indian trade. Using little-known archival sources from the United States, Great Britain, France, Spain, the Netherlands, South Africa, Mauritius, and Indonesia, Fichter will draw a new picture of Salem`s contribution to the international history of the early republic.

The lecture and the book signing will take place at the Salem Visitor Center, 2 Liberty Street, Salem at 2:00 PM on Sunday June, 13. Copies of Dr. Fichter’s book So Great A Proffit: How the East Indies Trade Transformed Anglo-American Capitalism will be available to purchase at the Visitor Center bookstore. For more information, visit Salem Maritime’s web site at www.nps.gov/sama or call 978-740-1691.

Downtown Gloucester Block Party Saturday Night!

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Check Out The Downtown Gloucester Block Party Schedule and Info Here-

http://www.downtowngloucester.com/Index.cfm

blockpartyscedule2010

North Shore Music Theatre’s 2003 World Premiere Musical ‘Memphis’ Wins The 2010 Tony Award For Best Musical

Beverly, MA–  And the Tony goes to, MEMPHIS! It was a very proud night for North Shore Music Theatre (NSMT) as the Broadway musical MEMPHIS, which premiered at NSMT in 2003, won 4 Tony Awards, including the award for Best Musical.

“I could not be more excited about this win, both for my friends involved tonight and for those who helped create this show at North Shore Music Theatre in 2003,” said Bill Hanney, the new owner and producer of North Shore Music Theatre, who attended the awards ceremony at NYC’s Radio City Music Hall on June 13. “This is an inspiration for me as move forward towards the reopening of NSMT.  Tonight’s honor will help me to remember that what we do here at NSMT can enrich both the local Arts community, and also make an impact on a national level as well.”

In 2003, NSMT audiences saw MEMPHIS for the very first time at the World Premiere in Beverly, MA.  Jon Kimbell, NSMT’s former Artistic Director and Executive Producer took a leap of faith to produce the unknown musical by Joe DiPietro (I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Chang, All Shook Up) and David Bryan of Bon Jovi fame.

“Developing new musicals has always been my passion, and I am thrilled to see the evolution of MEMPHIS from its World Premiere at North Shore Music Theatre to it’s Tony Award winning status,” said Kimbell.  ”I am honored to have been part of the process that brought MEMPHIS from the workshop phase, to the NSMT stage and finally to Broadway.  It has been a tremendous experience for everyone involved with the project.”

In addition to Best Musical, MEMPHIS took home Tony Awards for Best Book of a Musical (Joe DiPietro), Best Original Score (David Bryan), and Best Orchestration (David Bryan and Daryl Waters).  MEMPHIS had received 8 Tony nominations.

Currently under the new ownership of Bill Hanney and his management team, NSMT’s 2010 season opens in July with GYPSY, followed by JOSEPH AND THE AMAZING TECHNICOLOR DREAMCOAT, DIRTY ROTTEN SCOUDRELS, A CHORUS LINE and A CHRISTMAS CAROL.  For tickets and information call 978-232-7200 or visit www.nsmt.org.


Since 1955, NSMT has become one of the most attended theatres in New England, with approximately 250,000 patrons annually. With a national and regional reputation for artistic achievement and the development of new musicals, NSMT has received numerous industry awards including Elliot Norton Awards, IRNE Awards, the Rosetta Le Noire Award from Actors’ Equity, and the Moss Hart Award. Under new ownership in 2010, NSMT continues to annually produce a musical subscription series and an annual production of A Christmas Carol along with celebrity concerts and children’s programming.


So You Want To Understand How Fish Gets Distributed Locally In Modern Times?

Let Your Boy Joey Explain it For You The Best Way I Know How- Through Pictures and Video

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I was digging through the archives and found these posts from 2008 and sooner that are essential if you want to understand how fresh fish is distributed in Gloucester in modern times-

Gloucester Seafood Display Auction- Market Cod
Grading Fish Inside The Gloucester Seafood Display Auction Video
Gloucester Seafood Display Auction- Monkfish Tails
Gloucester Seafood Display Auction- Grey Sole
Gloucester Seafood Display Auction Display Floor Video
Getting Ready To Offload 4:45AM Gloucester Seafood Display Auction
Gloucester Seafood Display Auction With Paul Vitale Part II
Gloucester Dragger Angela Rose Gets Offloaded at The Gloucester Seafood Display Auction
Gloucester Seafood Display Auction-Hake

View From The Western Venture Wheelhouse

General Excellence

Some of the most ambitious, authentic, and skillfully crafted dishes available anywhere can be found at Sixty 2 on Wharf in Salem. Chef and owner Antonio Bettencourt cooks like an obsessive Italian grandmother while the wait staff is comprised of convivial, articulate, well-informed food aficionados who love their jobs, love the restaurant, and, above all, love the food. You will, too. With plenty of house-made items (charcuterie, cheeses, pasta) and thoughtful portions, this relative newcomer on the Salem culinary scene has quickly raised the bar as the top dining destination.

Sixty2 on Wharf,
62 Wharf St., Salem
978-744-0062, sixty2onwharf.com

Readers’ Choice:
The Grapevine
26 Congress St., Salem
978-745-9335, grapevinesalem.com

Black Cow in Hamilton Welcomes New Head Chef

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: June 8, 2010

For additional information, contact Joe Leone at: joe@blackcowrestaurants.com

BLACK COW OF DOWNTOWN HAMILTON WELCOMES NEW HEAD CHEF

HAMILTON, MA – Black Cow Tap & Grill restaurants is pleased to announce that William Fogarty has come on board as Head Chef at Black Cow of downtown Hamilton.

“Black Cow is a great fit for my culinary philosophy,” explained Fogarty, a graduate of Johnson and Wales University. “I feel that as a chef, I have a responsibility to the community to not only take care of our customers, but to work with local farmers, growers, suppliers, and fisherman. By supporting the community, you grow stronger together. It’s a win-win situation.”

Known for utilizing regional seafood, meats, and poultry and fresh local produce and baked goods, Black Cow of Hamilton combines contemporary charm with the warmth of a historic New England public house. “This restaurant is already so well-known for its high quality food and beautiful interior architecture,” noted Fogarty. “I’m just here to help continue to strive for everyday excellence,” he added.

Fogarty has plans to add some delicious new items to the menu, starting with fire-grilled pizza specials from the restaurant’s newly installed pizza oven. “I like to play with simple, classic dishes that showcase ingredients with a modern twist,” he said. “I love creating dishes that are unique, but approachable – something that diners can get excited about that will meet their diverse tastes and exceed their expectations.”

“We are proud to have Bill come on board as a member of our team,” said Joe Leone, founder and owner of Black Cow. “His culinary expertise, his contemporary innovation, his interest in the community – it all truly goes hand in hand with what Black Cow is all about. Our patrons are in for a real treat!”

“I really love doing what I do,” Fogarty noted. “This is a great community, a great location, and a wonderful opportunity. I feel lucky to be part of such a friendly and knowledgeable staff.”

Fogarty has previously worked as Head Chef at Alchemy Café & Bistro in Gloucester, Executive Sous Chef at Excelsior Restaurant in Boston, and Sous Chef at Harvest Restaurant in Cambridge.

Black Cow of Hamilton, located at 16 Bay Road, is open for dinner seven days a week, Sunday through Thursday from 5pm to 9:30pm and Friday and Saturday from 5pm to 11pm. Lunch is served Monday through Saturday from 11:30am to 4pm, and Brunch is available on Sunday from 11:30am-3pm. Seating is available in both the dining room and the tap room, which offers a full-service bar. To make a reservation, call: (978) 468-1166.

Black Cow Tap and Grill also has a waterfront location in Newburyport, MA at 54R Merrimac Street offering expansive ocean views and indoor and outdoor seating options.  Black Cow of Newburyport is open for lunch and dinner seven days a week and can be reached by calling (978) 499-8811. For more information about Black Cow, visit: www.blackcowrestaurants.com

The Stripers Are Here

The Stripers are all over the place.  Head to your local tackle shop and ask them for some pointers on what type of rod and reel you need and to point you in the direction of some good fishing spots.  Not much more fun to be had with your clothes on than catching a big ‘ol striper!

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