The Museum at Bethel Woods to re-open Saturday, April 6
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The Museum at Bethel Woods to re-open Saturday, April 6
The traffic jams that went on for miles and young people abandoning their cars to walk for miles to reach the festival are lasting images of Woodstock. Photo © Baron Wolman, www.baronwolman.com



BETHEL, NY.- On Saturday, April 6 The Museum at Bethel Woods will re-open with a weekend jam-packed with events, including the opening of the special exhibit On Assignment: Woodstock - Photos by Rolling Stone Photographer Baron Wolman, on display from April 6 to August 18.

In 2012, Baron Wolman agreed to donate a selection of his Woodstock festival images to the museum’s permanent collection. One hundred of the best of those photographs were selected, and The Museum is proud to share them with the public in its Spring 2013 special exhibition.

The Woodstock Music and Art Fair was photographed by scores of professional photographers and photojournalists, but only Baron Wolman’s images of the festival told the story in Rolling Stone magazine immediately following the event. Wolman’s photos focus on the attendees and behind-the-scenes action, rather than the performers on the stage. “I spent more time photographing the festival ‘experience’ than I did the musicians,” Wolman writes. “I had shot most of the bands before so I thought why would I want to photograph them again? I didn’t need any more band pictures. But all those people…that was something else. I had never seen anything like this before in my life.” His iconic images helped to create the long-lasting, idealized myth of the festival.

Museum Director Wade Lawrence explains, “Baron Wolman has been a pleasure to work with and we are honored that he has decided to donate his Woodstock festival images to the Museum. We are excited for the opening of this special exhibit, and even more so for the opportunity to share his extraordinary images with the public.”

As part of Bethel Woods’ 2013 Speaker Series, join Baron Wolman for Forever Young: Baron Wolman and the Early Rolling Stone Years on Saturday, April 6 at 4 p.m. for a highly-illustrated, personalized exploration of his experiences during the late 1960s. The talk will cover everything from Haight-Ashbury during the Summer of Love, the early days of Rolling Stone magazine, and his personal reflections covering the Woodstock festival for the magazine. The talk will be followed by an audience Q&A and a signing of Wolman’s new book Baron Wolman: The Rolling Stone Years. Admission to the Speaker Event is $5.00, free for members and free with Museum admission.

Also supporting the opening of the spring 2013 special exhibit, a screening of the film Taking Woodstock will conclude opening day. Based on Elliot Tiber’s memoir Taking Woodstock: A True Story of a Riot, a Concert, and a Life, and directed by filmmaker Ang Lee, the film takes a humorous look at the story behind how one of the greatest concerts came to be. After the film, stay for a discussion about the film’s accuracies and inaccuracies in telling the story of the 1969 Woodstock concert. This film is rated R by the MPAA. Admission to the films is $8.00 regular admission, $6.00 for members. Doors open at 6:45 p.m. with a 7:00 p.m. show time.

In conjunction with On Assignment: Woodstock, The Museum will display the first seventy-five covers of Rolling Stone magazine, in the Corridor Gallery exhibit On the Cover of the Rolling Stone on display April 6 thru August 18. The covers feature the photography and artwork of Baron Wolman, Robert Altman, Annie Leibovitz, Jim Marshall, and Rick Griffin, among others, documenting the first five years of the venerable music, pop culture, and political newspaper/magazine.

What better way to celebrate peace than with the deep, resonant sound of hand-crafted, large-scale bells? The Museum at Bethel Woods presents the 2013 Outdoor Sculpture exhibit, Shohola Bells: The Sound of Peace this spring along the entrance plaza—a sculptural and aural art installation by renowned potter David Greenbaum. Embodying the magic of meditative sound and a graceful, restrained aesthetic, Shohola Bells have a profound transformative presence. The installation will consist of four handmade ceramic bells—which have been fired to over 2100° F—mounted in beautiful wooden stands. The sculptures will be on display on the Bethel Woods entry plaza April 6 thru October 14.

Concluding the weekend, don’t miss the first installment of the 2013 Chamber Music Series Sundays with Friends in the intimate Event Gallery. Spearheaded by Zarin Mehta, the former president and executive director of the New York Philharmonic, and presented by curator Eileen Moon, Associate Principal Cello of the New York Philharmonic, the series will feature five eclectic recital and small ensemble performances by world-renowned classical musicians. The series opens on Sunday, April 7 at 3 p.m. with violinist Jennifer Koh, recognized for her intense, commanding performances and pianist Benjamin Hochman, who has achieved widespread acclaim for his effortless and thoughtful performances. Stay after the show for a post-concert “Meet the Musicians.”











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