🎟️ Tickets on sale now! Join us for our Annual Benefit Party on June 21st at "The Braes," a spectacular venue set on a hill overlooking the Long Island Sound in Glen Cove. Guests will have a chance to explore the former Herbert L. Pratt estate, now the Webb Institute. In addition, Bentel & Bentel Architects & Planners will lead tours of the Couch Academic Center - the Institute received our 2022 Preservation Award for Project Excellence for the historically sensitive design of the new building. Plus, cocktails, hors d'oeuvres and music! 🥂🎶
Visit our benefit party webpage for details about the party site, buy tickets or a sponsorship package, check out who's on our 2024 Benefit Committee, and see our list of generous sponsors!
#longislandhistory #longislandarchitecture #historicpreservation #glencoveny
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2024 Annual Benefit PartyThe BraesFriday, June 21, 2024 - Preservation Long Island
Preservation Long Island - 2024 Annual Benefit PartyThe BraesFriday, June 21, 2024 Events- likes love 2
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Rick Marchand
📣 PRE-ORDER NOW! Our latest publication, "Promoting Long Island: The Art of Edward Lange, 1870–1889" will arrive early September 2024! This hardback book features over 100 full-color images and is the culmination of The Art of Edward Lange Project. Edited and authored by Preservation Long Island curator, Lauren Brincat, and former curatorial fellow, Peter Fedoryk, the book also includes essays by Jennifer L. Anderson, Thomas Busciglio-Ritter, and Joshua M. Ruff. 📘
"Promoting Long Island: The Art of Edward Lange, 1870–1889" focuses on the life, work, and career of one of Long Island’s most prolific artists of the late nineteenth century. Edward Lange (1846–1912), a German immigrant who grew up in a family of prominent artists, publishers, and printmakers, arrived on Long Island during one of its most critical moments. For nearly two decades, he watched new industry creep into an older agrarian landscape and used his artwork to record the region’s change. With clear entrepreneurial spirit, Lange inserted himself into Long Island’s booming economy, creating advertorial content to promote businesses across the region. His images of main streets, factories, railroad depots, and hotels capture a Long Island undergoing rapid industrial and social transformation.
"Promoting Long Island" demonstrates the valuable insights Edward Lange’s artwork offers into a key moment in Long Island’s history from his unique perspective. By assembling broader historical context around Lange’s life and work, this book draws connections between his art and previously unassociated historical themes—from the plight of factory laborers and Black hotel workers to the unjust treatment of Native communities at the hands of real estate developers and railroad tycoons. Reconciling the carefully edited world Lange depicted with the real historical record, Promoting Long Island builds off decades-old research, study, and institutional collecting to present a more complete view of Edward Lange and the Long Island he knew and painted. 🎨
Generous funding has been provided by The Gerry Charitable Trust and The Decorative Arts Trust
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Exciting!