For the first time
ever, the doors to the David Rockefeller Creative Arts Center in Pocantico will
be open to you and anyone taking a Road Trip: Close to Home.
"This is named for my father, David Rockefeller. This is
about the performing arts. It’s also about the visual arts. We have an
exhibition space, so it will really be all of the arts, it could be poetry
too," says David Rockefeller Jr.
The historic large greenhouse dates back to the early 1900s,
and it was once the winter home of John D. Rockefeller’s orange
trees. You can still find a couple of those orange trees - that pay
tribute to what this space once was.
Today, you can walk through and experience a unique and diverse
world of art. "Community engagement really involves bringing the artists
and the community together in that creative process- that behind the scenes
look of a work in progress," says Ely Weisenberg, manager public programs
and residences.
In fact, this inaugural exhibition is so special in that it
highlights the work of groundbreaking women artists from the 1960s and beyond.
One noted piece was created in 1963 by Grace Hartigan— which
inspired artist Melissa Meyer in 2021 to create “Nod to Grace.”
"To have a show just about women artists, just focusing and
just highlighting their work and experiencing what a women-led space would feel
like," says Katrina London, curator.