Showing posts with label Connecticut. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Connecticut. Show all posts
Saturday, July 17, 2010
Old State House, Hartford, CT
Saturday, July 17, 2010: I spent the weekend revisiting Hartford, Connecticut, and I entered the Old State House, 800 Main St. (860-522-6766) for the first time. This late 18th-century building served as the state capitol until 1873. Then from 1873 to 1915, the building functioned as Hartford City Hall. When the city threatened to demolish the building in 1917, the Colonial Dames lobbied to save this building. In time, workers restored the building, and later, it became a museum opened to the public. When I was there, I saw the Representatives Chamber restored to its 1790s appearance. Next, the Senate Chamber looked the way it did in the late 1800s when it served as the City Council Chamber for Hartford. Other rooms in this building included the Courtroom, Comptroller's Office (that showed a video about the building's history), and the Governor's Office. One of the most interesting rooms was a very early (late 1700s) Museum of Curiosities with its usual and unusual exhibits in artworks, science, and natural history. (At that time, seeing those exhibits gave the public a chance to view objects and animals from different corners of the world that they wouldn't have a chance to see otherwise.) Finally, a room in the lower level presented texts, pictures, and exhibit items explaining USA, CT, and Hartford history. After lunch, I walked a few blocks away and revisited the Wadsworth Atheneum art museum. (I visited the Wadsworth during my 1995 visit.) This has been one of the oldest art museums in the USA, and its collection included art in paintings, sculptures, and decorative items dating back to the 1400s into the 21st century from Europe. Its USA collection of art went back from the 17th century to the present.
Saturday, August 8, 2009
Connecticut Hall 2009
Saturday, August 8, 2009: Last year, I could say that I've been to Harvard, and this year, I could say the same for Yale. Of course, to tell the truth, I only visited both places. On the date above, I arrived in New Haven, Connecticut, headed toward the oldest building on campus, the 1752 Connecticut Hall, and took pictures of it. Next, I spent the rest of the day in two nearby museums: the Yale University Art Gallery and the Yale Center of British Art, 1080 Chapel St. at High St. (203-436-3429). The first of these mid-sized art museums showed different mediums of art from around the world: paintings, drawings, and sculptures as well as furniture, coins, and other items dating from ancient times to the present, on five levels. Afterward, the second museum contained the largest collection of British art outside of the United Kingdom. Here, I noticed paintings, sculptures, and other mediums going back to the 16th century and up to the current times, on two levels. The themes for the artworks ranged from portraits, landscapes, and seascapes as well as sporting themes, still life, and other subjects. This made for an interesting day overall.
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