September 6, 2017

September Programs at Morven Museum & Garden

Storytime at Morven is featured on select Thursdays at 10 a.m. in Morven’s Garden Room for ages 2 to 5; $10 per family, free with family membership. Themes include gardens, art, New Jersey history, and more. September 7 brings a garden-themed reading of Kevin Henkes’ Chrysanthemum along with a stroll through the Morven gardens with Debi Lampert-Rudman, curator of education and public programs, to pick flowers and create a take-home craft.

On September 28, Goodnight, Goodnight, Construction Site and Mighty, Mighty Construction Site, both by Sherri Duskey Rinker, will be featured. Yellow “construction” hard hats and small construction trucks will be given to all participants, who will walk through the garden after the stories and take a peek at the Stockton Education Center construction site with Brian Mackiw, Morven facilities manager.

Garden Tours will be held on September 15 and 29 at 11 a.m.; free and open to the public. Join Morven Museum & Garden’s own horticulturist Pam Ruch or chief gardener Nancy Nicosia for a 45-minute tour of what’s in bloom in the gardens. Explore the restoration of Helen Hamilton Shield Stockton’s Colonial Revival garden, which dates to the early 20th century, and learn about the demonstration cutting and dried flower garden. Your tour will also cover some of Morven’s other landscape features, which were restored in 2000.

Kids Collage a la Stuart Davis with Deborah Hockstein is on Saturday, September 9,  at 11 a.m. in Morven’s Garden Room. Ages 7-12, $10; $8 Friends of Morven. Morven’s latest exhibition, “Newark and the Culture of Art: 1900-1960,” explores the unique combination of art and industry that made Newark, New Jersey a magnet for modern artists in the early twentieth century.  One of the exhibition’s featured artists, Stuart Davis, was widely known for his collages and use of brilliant color, abstraction, lettering, movement, and musicality.

Inspired by both Mr. Davis’ work and the current show, award-winning artist Deborah Hockstein has created a special collage workshop just for Morven. Each child’s art will be based on words and objects of their choice and created while listening to music of the jazz period — wrapped up with a group “showing.”  No previous art experience required and each artist will take home his/her creation.

Yoga in the Garden with Gemma, Saturday, September 9 at noon. Free to all ages — public welcome. Morven will host its annual series of yoga classes in Morven’s gardens with Gemma Farrell of Gratitude Yoga in Princeton. Ms. Farrell, a longtime yoga practitioner, invites the community to join her. No registration required. Yoga-lovers of all ages and skill levels welcome. Don’t forget your yoga mat, towel, and bottle of water. In the event of rain, the practice will take place at Gratitude Yoga.

Discussion with Louise Feder: 1913 Armory Show’s Influence on Select New Jersey and Pennsylvania Artists, September 14 at 7 p.m.; $10; $8 Friends of Morven. The 1913 Armory Show, considered one of the most influential events in the history of American Modern Art, served as a springboard for American artists, who became more independent, creating their own artistic language. Louise Feder, assistant curator of the James A. Michener Art Museum, will discuss the Armory Show’s impact on artists from both Pennsylvania’s Delaware Valley and New Jersey including Stuart Davis, John Grabach, Bernard Gussow, and John Marin, among other artists who are featured in Morven’s current exhibition.

For more information, call (609) 924-8144, or visit online morven.org/programs. Morven Museum & Garden is located at 55 Stockton Street, Princeton. It is open

Wednesday through Sunday, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m.