A Recital

After a visit to the West Point Foundry with my friend, Ken and some refreshments at The Depot in Cold Spring we went to The Chapel of our Lady Restoration. Inside a woman was playing on a grand piano and we discovered that this was preparation for a free recital to be given the following Sunday. Ken was back in Briarcliff, but my wife and myself decided to go.

The pianist was Cynthia Peterson who according to her bio:

Pianist Cynthia Peterson performs works from a broad solo, chamber, and contemporary repertoire. Her performances include the American Academy in Rome, radio broadcasts in Washington D.C. and Virginia, Anderson House Museum in Washington, D.C., Minnesota, and chamber music touring in Canada. She has appeared at many venues in the New York area including the Brooklyn Museum, the Museum of the City of New York, Bruno Walter Auditorium at Lincoln Center, and the Garden State Center for the Arts. As prize-winner of concerto competitions, she performed the Beethoven First Piano Concerto with the Philharmonic Symphony of Westchester, and the Gershwin Concerto with the Virginia Beach Pops Orchestra, and was soloist with several local orchestras including the Yonkers Civic Orchestra and the Westchester Youth Symphony.

She appeared at Yale University and the Metropolitan Museum with violinist Kyung-Jun Kim, and as the featured pianist in works by John Corigliano at the CUNY Graduate Center Auditorium, her performance hailed by the composer as “extraordinary.”

She received a Masters degree in performance from Juilliard, where she was awarded the prestigious Irwin Freundlich Memorial Scholarship Award, and holds a doctorate from the University of Connecticut. She also received fellowships at Tanglewood, the Banff Centre, the Festival at Sandpoint, and the Ravinia Festival.
Ms. Peterson has taught at the City University of New York/Lehman as head of the piano faculty, SUNY/New Paltz, Dutchess Community College, and at the Barry Tuckwell Institute at Gettysburg College, performing with renowned horn player/conductor Barry Tuckwell and other faculty.

Cynthia has also composed music to “Sabbath Service” in collaboration with choreographer Nina Stein White, which was performed at the Scarsdale Congregational Temple.

She co-directed “PlayWeekend,” an adult amateur chamber music workshop held in Cold Spring, New York.

She is currently the Executive Director of the Chappaqua Orchestra.

The programme included: Mozart, Sonata in F; Debussy: Etude – Pour les degrés chromatiques, Etude – Pour les sonorités opposés; L’isle joyeuse; Hindemith: Sonata No. 2 for Piano; Chopin, Scherzo No. 4 in E major. The piano is a Steinway Grand Piano, once owned by the Livingston family. It was the first recital in the 2016 Sunday Music Series.

The Chapel only sits about 200 people and was completely full. I’d tried to take a few pictures, but it was impossible to get a good angle: the heads of the people in the audience kept getting in the way. Then I realized that we were downstairs and there was also an upstairs. So up I went. The angle was much better from there.

Enid A. Haupt Conservatory at the NY Botanical Garden

We went with some friends to the orchid show at the New York Botanical Garden the other day. First we stopped at the house in Briarcliff to pick up Ken. Next stop was Chita in Pearl River. And then we went via a very circuitous route through New Jersey, and over the George Washington Bridge to the Botanical Garden where we met the fourth member of our party, Menchie. On the way back we discovered that the GPS was again taking us via a tortuous route. It was lucky that I noticed that a journey which should take about fifty minutes was actually projected to take one hour and fifty minutes. It turned out that somehow our GPS settings had been changed to avoid tolls. Once this was changed we got back quickly enough. We very much enjoyed the orchid show and the opportunity to get together with some old friends we don’t see that often.

According to Wikipedia:

The Enid A. Haupt Conservatory is a greenhouse located toward the western end of the New York Botanical Garden. Enid Annenberg Haupt (May 13, 1906 – October 25, 2005) was an American publisher and philanthropist whose gifts supported horticulture, the arts, architectural and historic preservation, and cancer research. Inspiration for the park and the conservatory stemmed from Nathaniel Lord Britton and his wife Elizabeth. The couple had visited the Royal Botanic Garden at Kew on their honeymoon and thought a similar park and conservatory should be built for New York City. The conservatory was designed by the major greenhouse company of the late 1890s, Lord and Burnham Co. The design was modeled after the Palm House at the Royal Botanic Garden and Joseph Paxton’s Crystal Palace in Italian Renaissance style. Groundbreaking took place on January 3, 1899 and construction was completed in 1902 at a cost of $177,000. The building was constructed by John R. Sheehan under contract for the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation. Since the original construction, major renovations took place in 1935, 1950, 1978, and 1993.

Chapel of our Lady Restoration. Restored chapel in Cold Spring, NY

Chapel Restoration Facade.

According to the restoration website (which also has some interesting old pictures).

Like most American stories, ours begins with immigration. Of the multitudes who came to our shores between 1820 and1860, a third were from Ireland. For those who gained employment at the West Point Foundry in Cold Spring, a chapel was established to serve them and their families. Foundry owner Gouverneur Kemble donated land and funds for what would be the first Catholic church north of Manhattan.

On the banks of the Hudson River, in the heart of the Highlands opposite West Point, The Chapel Restoration is a national historic landmark, built in 1833 in the Greek Revival style.

Fifty miles north of New York City, across from Metro North Railroad Station and within walking distance of the charming 19th century village of Cold Spring, the chapel, which has no religious affiliation, hosts the renowned Sunday Music Series and Sunset Reading Series.

A beautiful and serene setting for weddings and other private gatherings, such as christenings, commitment ceremonies, renewal of vows and memorials, it is also a place of repose and contemplation for visitors to its grounds offering spectacular views.

Originally known as Chapel of Our Lady, The Chapel Restoration, Cold Spring, New York, was built in 1833, in the Greek Revival style.

Abandoned in 1906, it was a charred, weather-ravaged ruin until its restoration in the 1970s.
It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

In 1996, with funds from the estate of Hugh Holt, a balcony based on the original was built and a tracker action pipe organ custom-built by George Bozeman was installed.

The chapel also has a Steinway Grand Piano, once owned by the Livingston family.

Its designer was another immigrant, a 19-year-old from England, Thomas Kelah Wharton. Built in 1833 of locally made red brick covered with stucco, the chapel was in the Greek Revival style, then in vogue. Its columns were of the Tuscan order, a simple, unfluted version of the Doric, whose supreme expression is the Parthenon in Athens.

Contemporary press describes a festive dedication, September 21, 1834, with people arriving by boat. A large choir performed, along with a band from West Point, “whose notes might be heard in the recesses of the mountains,” for dignitaries of church and state.

The foundry went on to become a major producer of Civil War armaments. Test firing greatly damaged chapel walls, and Captain Robert P. Parrott, then in charge, paid for repairs. Victorian additions altered the building’s integrity, and the coming of the railroad cut it off from the life of the town. Abandoned in 1906, it fell victim to the forces of nature and time. Ravaged by fire in 1927, it was a ruin until 1971, when, in the words of The New York Sunday News, “A Methodist, a Lutheran, a Jew, a Presbyterian or two, a scattering of Episcopalians and a handful of Catholics,” including actress Helen Hayes, came together, to buy it from the Archdiocese and undertake its restoration.

The work was overseen by architect Walter Knight Sturges, and the chapel was dedicated as an ecumenical site in 1977.

Pianist Cynthia Peterson preparing for her recital today.

Candlesticks

View across the Hudson River from the chapel porch. West Point can just be seen in the background.

Interior.

The busiest and best breakfast in New York

Taken across the street from Grand Central Terminal with a Sony Nex 5N and 18-55mm f3.5-5.6 OSS kit lens outside what I believe is the Pershing Square Cafe. I think there’s something a little surrealistic about this picture with the disembodied head of the woman emerging from the chaos of the reflections.

I’m not at all sure what a “busy” breakfast is, but I am sure that there are many who would dispute that it’s the best!

Old Cameras 

Interesting YouTube channel from Ade Torrent on, as the name implies, old cameras. I’ll leave it to the video to explain what it’s all about, but if you’re interested in camera collecting you’ll certainly find it useful (with certain caveats – see below).

He’s so far considered the following cameras: Zenit-E; Kiev-4; Praktica BX-20; Olympus 35-RC; Ihagee Exa; Lomo Lubitel 166B; Yashica Electro 35 GTN; Lomo Smena 8M; Fotorama PC-500; Holga 120SF; Nikon F-501 AF; Mamiya 16-EE; Zeiss Super Ikonta 530. The videos are quite short (none of them so far are more than about 9 minutes) and fairly basic.

He’s very enthusiastic about his cameras, but this enthusiasm leads him, on occasion, to be less critical than he might be. For example he seems to like the focus free “plastic fantastic” Fotorama PC-500 as much as he likes the Olympus 35-RC, a vastly superior camera. Still if you’re not too familiar with old cameras this basic introduction can be very useful. For example he mentions that on some older cameras (e.g. the Kiev 4) you shouldn’t change with shutter speed until you have wound the shutter. This is certainly useful information as doing it the wrong way can lead to a broken shutter.

You can subscribe on the channel’s home page.