December 12, 2008

Mass MoCA in the Berkshires: Time Magazine's #1 Art Exhibit in America, 2008

26018705.JPGMass MoCA's Sol LeWitt exhibit has been named the No. 1 art exhibit in America for 2008 by Time Magazine, which hailed it as "a great new American art-world destination."

The exhibit is located in the Berkshires, a short drive from Hampton Terrace, a top-rated inn located in Lenox.

The honor comes on the heels of a rave review for the exhibit from The New York Times last week, among other raves since its Nov. 16 opening in the Boston Globe, The Hartford Courant and various art and design Web logs — all of which bode well for Mass MoCA and the city, local officials say.

The LeWitt retrospective, which will be on display until 2033, outshone several worthy opponents for Time's top honor, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Gustav Courbet exhibition earlier this year, along with two showings of the Terra Cotta Warriors from Japan.

"The wall drawings of Sol LeWitt are art's equivalent of gifts that come with 'some assembly required,'" wrote Richard Lacayo, Time Magazine critic. "The plan is for the drawings to remain in place for a minimum of 25 years. So, this isn't just an exhibition. It's a great new American art-world destination."

Among the museums included on the magazine's "Top Ten Museum Exhibits" were Boston's Museum of Fine Art, the Los Angeles Museum of Contem-porary Art and The Paul Getty Museum.

"It's deeply gratifying and a real honor to be chosen as the top exhibition of the year, ahead of shows presented by major institutions like the Met, MoMA and the Getty," Katherine Myers, the museum's marketing and public relations, said.

"So many people put long hours into the installation, and everyone associated with it is delighted and honored," Myers said. "Despite the economic news, our visitation numbers have been high, and we're cautiously optimistic that this amazing installation will continue to drive visitors to North Adams for years to come."

Lisa Corrin, director of the Williams College Museum of Art, who helped coordinate the exhibit, said the honor demonstrates the impact local museums have on the art world at large.

"This honor demonstrates yet again that the museums in our community are operating at a level of international importance," Corrin said. "While we in the Berkshires have great affection for Mass MoCA as a home-grown institution, it is a cultural treasure that has an impact on art lovers worldwide."

Mayor John Barrett III said the attention being paid to the newly opened exhibit has been outstanding.

"When we first announced this project over a year ago, we knew it would be big, but not like this," he said. "This (the Time recognition) is one of the most prestigious honors any cultural institution can receive. It's a feather in the museum's cap and a feather in the city's cap as well."

Barrett said the announcement couldn't have come at a better time for the museum or North Adams.

"It's great for the museum, but even better for the city," he said. "In these hard economic times, it's going to bring more and more people to the city."

Myers said the museum's attendance has been "strong" since the opening of the LeWitt gallery.

"We had our best Thanksgiving weekend ever — more that twice as many visitors as some of the previous 10 years," she said. "It was also our best November ever, by far."

The LeWitt retrospective is an ongoing collaboration between the museum, Yale University Art Gallery and Williams College Museum of Art. Students from Yale, Williams College and Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts worked as interns during the six-month installation process of LeWitt's conceptual drawings, which exist as sets of directions. The completed Mass MoCA installation is the largest in the world of LeWitt's work.

"The partnership between Mass MoCA, WCMA and Yale provides a new model for how museums with very different missions can come together to do together, as a group, what they could not do alone," Corrin said. "At a time of economic downtown, we will need to work together in order to achieve great things without lowering our standards of excellence."

LeWitt, who died in April 2007 after a prolonged battle with cancer, first began planning the exhibition after a nearly six-hour visit to the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art in 2003. His vision quickly became a 27,000-square-foot, three-floor installation featuring 105 of his wall drawings in Building 7 at the MoCA complex.

"The setting is close to perfect," wrote New York Times art critic Holland Cotter in a Dec. 4 review of the exhibition. "The space, with its generous windows, is large and flexible enough to accommodate more than a hundred of the ink-painting murals LeWitt designed between 1969 and 2007.

Permalink Print

Filed under Blog, General, local attractions by stan

December 11, 2008

Blantyre Chef Earns World Class Honor

Dining-Room-Set-Up.jpgGuests of Hampton Terrace typically consider their dining experiences in the Berkshires to be a key ingredient of their stay.   So we spend a lot of energy making sure our guests' choices are informed.

Our confirmations include a seriously edited-down list of the better local restaurants…a list based on our personal experiences, but also based on the fact that our guests have had literally over 15,000 dinners in the area….and we hear about them at breakfast.  We also keep copies of those menus in a binder in our front hall.

No doubt, the top of the list includes Blantyre, Wheatleigh, The Inn on the Green, and several other highly-rated Zagat choices.   Blantyre is located just one mile from us….and this week, their chef now belongs to a rarefied group of culinary craftsmen.

Christopher Brooks, Blantyre's top chef for the past eight years, has received a Grand Chef Trophy. The award was presented last month by the International Congress of Relais & Chateaux at its annual gathering in Vienna.

The Relais & Chateaux association is comprised of 480 of the world's finest hotels and gourmet restaurants.

The designation of Grand Chef is awarded annually to the "contemporary elite" of fine dining. This year, the honor went to Brooks and three other chefs from around the world.

For restaurateurs, the honor is tantamount to earning an Oscar for best director or a Pulitzer for commentary. Even for Blantyre — an establishment accustomed to racking up culinary accolades — the honor has special meaning.

"I was pleasantly surprised," Brooks said in an interview with The Eagle on Friday.

Brooks credited his "dedicated team at Blantyre" and singled out Arnaud Cotar, his No. 2 man — or chef de cuisine — for special praise.

Brooks, who has worked in tony kitchens around the world, remains passionate about cooking. "It's a love," he said. "It's a way of life."

Born in North London, he spent much of his youth on England's South Coast, where began his career at Chewton Glen, an exclusive hotel in Hampshire, England.

That's where he served an apprenticeship, from 1984 to 1988, with chef Pierre Chevillard, whom he still credits with teaching him the fundamentals of cooking.

"He was the person who trained me, (and) I still look up to him today," Brooks said.

In addition to the Grand Chef Trophy, Brooks has received kudos from the Zagat restaurant guides and Condé Nast Traveler.

Meanwhile, Blantyre is the No. 1 ranked dining establishment in the Berkshires, according to Zagat's 2008/2009 Restaurant Guide. Forbes.com included the Lenox landmark on its "50 Best in the World" list, while Travel & Leisure listed it among "The World's Best Hotels."

Brooks' recipes are included in a new book, "The World of Blantyre & The Cookery of Christopher Brooks. He and the book's author, Claire Hopley, will sign copies at The Bookstore in Lenox on Dec. 21, from 2 to 4 p.m.

Blantyre is an extraordinary experience.   At Hampton Terrace we encourage our guests to "Turn Back the Clock to the Gilded Age" and that is true….but Blantyre represents a walk into a true Baronial castle, and the room rates there reflect that experience.  Off-season rates run from $600 to $1,300/night mid-week.   I won't say an experience at Hampton Terrace, the #1 rated Lenox inn on Trip Advisor, will compare…but then again, we are charging roughly 15% of that.    So we encourage those of you who would like a Blantyre experience, to let us find a great room for you here, and then we'll send you five minutes down the road for a "destination" meal.

 

Permalink Print

Filed under Blog, local attractions by stan

November 21, 2008

2009 Tanglewood Season Announced

tanglewood.jpgThe Boston Symphony Orchestra announced an 11-week 2009 summer season, longer than in past years, and featuring Lenox native James Taylor four successive nights.    Highlights also include two opera programs conducted by James Levine, two Mark Morris dance premieres, three birthday celebrations and the return of Michael Tilson Thomas, after a 20-year absence.

And keeping with recent tradition, the BSO season will be preceeded by Garrison Keillor's "Prairie Home Companion" and ended with the Labor Day Weekend Jazz Festival.   IMPORTANTLY, all ticket prices are being frozen at last season's rates ($18 for lawn seats and up to $99 for the Shed)….and free lawn tickets for children are being extended from age 12 up through age 17.   As the parents of twin 15-year-old boys, we are personally excited about that.

Public ticket sale begins February 15th, but most of you know that early purchases are available by being a "Friend of Tanglewood" at various donation levels.   Even for an annual donation of just $50, it is possible to purchase tickets in advance of the public sale date.   To get a brochure mailed, call 617-638-9467, or 617-266-1492.   Information about supporting Tanglewood and becoming a "friend" can be found on the website at www.tanglewood.org.

For a detailed listing of the 2009 schedule: CLICK BELOW

2009 TANGLEWOOD SCHEDULE

But in the interim, some highlights:

June 27     "A Prairie Home Companion" with Garrison Keillor

July 3        BSO Opening Concert:  Tchaikovsky Symphony #6 "Pathetique" and Piano Concerto #1 with Yefim Brofman

July 4        Jazz Singer and Pianist Diana Krall

July 11      Wagners "Die Meistersinger von Nurnburg, " Act III (concert presentation)

July 12   ` Joshua Bell, Bruch Violin Concerto #1

July 15    "Stage Music in the Play of William Shakespeare" with actor F. Murray Abraham and Le Concert des  Nations

July 18    Boston Pops Film Night with John Williams:  The Warner Brothers Legacy

July 25     Brahms "A German Requiem," James Levine conducting

July 26     Mozart's "Don Giovanni" (fully staged)

July 28    Tanglewood on Parade

Aug 5,6   Mark Morris Dance Group with Emanuel Ax and Yo-Yo Ma

Aug 7      Boston Pops with Keith Lockhard, trumpeteer Chris Botti

Aug 7-11   Festival of Contemporary Music

Aug 9    Yo-Yo Ma, cello, Shostakovish Cello Concerto #1

Aug 14    Shostakovitch Symphony #1 and Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto #3, Yefin Brafman, Michael Tilson Thomas conducting

Aug 19    Michael Tison Thomas presents "The Thomashefskys:  Music and Memories of a Life in the Yiddish Theater"

Aug 23    Beethoven Symphony #9 with Michael Tilson Thomas

Aug 27-30    James Taylor

Sept 4-6    Tanglewood Jazz Festival

Hampton Terrace, the top-rated Lenox inn based on Trip Advisor reviews, has been hosting Tanglewood patrons since 1937…the very year that Tanglewood became the summer home of the Boston Symphony.  We are located one mile from the Tanglewood gate and less than two blocks from all Lenox restaurants and shops.   More than 50% of our summer guests are repeat, so if you are considering a stay with us, please contact us early.   For the 2007 and 2008 summers, we held our rates level, and plan to offer the same rates for the 2009 summer until February, 2009.   At that point, we will implement a 5% across the board increase, so we encourage our existing guests…and those of you who want to give us a try, to contact us as soon as you have chosen a weekend.

We will continue to offer our popular mid-week special, which brings a multiple-night stay down to $190/night, a 30% discount.

 

Permalink Print Comment

Filed under Blog, Specials, local attractions by stan

November 10, 2008

Dr. Mark A. Hyman, The UltraWellness Center and Hampton Terrace

923-2.jpgAt Hampton Terrace in Lenox, MA, we are becoming increasingly aware of our neighbor, Dr. Mark Hyman.   His office, and the UltraWellness Center, are located just two doors down Walker Street from us, and more and more of his patients are staying with us every month.
 
Respected medical consultant, New York Times -bestselling author, lecturer, and practicing physician Mark A. Hyman, M.D., is a leader in the emerging field of functional medicine.

Functional medicine is ideal medicine made real; it is a new medical model—a more successful way of treating human illness and disease—born of recent technological and clinical advances applied in a fresh methodology.

As Dr. Hyman says, "the future of medicine, available now." Functional medicine moves beyond diagnosis-based medicine to incorporate new research that for the first time allows treatment of the underlying causes of disease.

It works with the body’s natural forces to achieve a state of what Dr. Hyman calls UltraWellness—lifelong good health and vitality. Functional medicine creates UltraWellness by combining a broad range of treatments to help restore and optimize normal function and health, including conventional therapies, herbal treatments, and alternative methodologies, in one encompassing, patient-centered approach.

In his work, Dr. Hyman applies the best of conventional and alternative medicine with cutting-edge science, placing him at the forefront of progressive medical care and education in the United States. A strong and pioneering voice for change in the fundamental way health care is perceived and delivered, as well as for a new paradigm for physicians, he has launched an innovative approach that taps into years of medical research that has not, until now, been translated into clinical practice in hospitals, homes, and the community.

Dr. Hyman is the Editor-in-Chief of Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine, the premiere peer-reviewed professional journal in the fields of integrative medicine and alternative medicine; and is the Medical Editor of Alternative Medicine Magazine, which is dedicated to helping consumers improve their health and the quality of their lives. He is on the editorial board of Integrative Medicine : A Clinician's Journal.

Dr. Hyman collaborates with Harvard Medical School 's Brigham and Women's Hospital and its Center for Complementary and Integrative Medicine.

Dr. Hyman has testified regarding health promotion and wellness for the White House Commission on Complementary and Alternative Medicine and has consulted with Surgeon General Richard H. Carmona on his diabetes prevention initiative.

Dr. Hyman was co-Medical Director for eight years at Canyon Ranch Lenox, one of the world's leading health resorts; co-authored the New York Times bestseller Ultraprevention: The 6-week Program That Will Make You Healthy for Life (Scribner), winner of the Books for a Better Life Award, which honors the best self-improvement books published each year; and wrote the New York Times bestseller UltraMetabolism:  The Simple Plan for Automatic Weighloss for which Dr. Hyman also created a public television special that is currently airing nationwide.

He is also author of The Five Forces of Wellness: The Ultraprevention System for Living an Active, Age-Defying, Disease-Free Life (Nightingale) and creator of The Detox Box (Sounds True), a unique, easy-to-follow program designed to help people significantly rejuvenate their health and vitality by cleansing their bodies from toxins in the environment, diet, and spirit.

A guest on the Today show, Good Morning America, The Early Show, and The View with Barbara Walters, Dr. Hyman has also appeared on CNN, FOX, PBS, and NPR, as well as many other television and radio stations. He is quoted regularly in leading consumer magazines including Parade, Elle, Fitness, Glamour, Family Circle, Health, Natural Health, Self, Shape, and Town & Country.

Dr. Hyman serves on the Board of Directors and faculty of the Institute for Functional Medicine, a pioneering educational center for training health professionals in the science and practice of nutritional biochemistry, molecular medicine, and preventing and treating the diseases of aging. He is on the Board of Advisors and faculty of Georgetown University School of Medicine's Food as Medicine training program.

A popular lecturer, Dr. Hyman speaks on a wide range of topics, including natural approaches to common health conditions, optimal health, cardiovascular health, menopause and women's health, brain wellness, obesity and weight loss, optimal aging, and longevity medicine. His website, www.ultrawellness.com, empowers health care consumers and practitioners, enabling them to benefit from the wealth of information and scientific articles he has gathered on the fundamental causes of illness, wellness promotion, vitamin and herbal supplements, and more.

Earlier in his career, Dr. Hyman worked as a rural family physician in the mountains of Idaho, and in China as the Medical Director for development and planning of an international medical center in Beijing. He also consulted in Hong Kong on medical centers for expatriates in Asia. Before joining Canyon Ranch, Dr. Hyman served in an inner city emergency room in Springfield, Massachusetts.

Dr. Hyman graduated with a B.A. from Cornell University, magna cum laude from the Ottawa University School of Medicine, and from the University of San Francisco 's program in Family Medicine at the Community Hospital of Santa Rosa. He is board certified in Family Medicine, and resides in western Massachusetts with his family.

 

Permalink Print Comment

Filed under Blog, local attractions by stan

August 4, 2008

Lodging in Lenox

WelcomeLenox.jpgThere's lots to choose from for lodging in Lenox, MA, so we feel really flattered to be ranked #1 for lodging in Lenox, MA by TripAdvisor.com.

Let us start by saying that we KNOW we cannot please all of the people all of the time….although we try very hard.   It is especially difficult to do that in a 110-year-old historic home, where every room is different and expectations are hard to manage.   For those who are looking for the uniformity and guarantees of a cookie-cutter hotel chain, they may not be prepared for what they find in an inn….a place where such guarantees are replaced by distinct experiences, authenticity and the warm embrace of an innkeeper hoping to earn a repeat guest.

The most reliable source for unsolicited guest reviews has become TripAdvisor.com, a neutral website where every review is published and unedited.   From those public submissions come rankings by city…and we are VERY PROUD that Hampton Terrace has always been listed among the top handful and is now actually rated #1 out of more than 30 inns.

This is to take nothing from the inns ranked with us at the top.   We all know that positive reviews are something to be treasured….the average guest who has had a nice stay moves along with his/her life…but the one who found some issue will seek out a place to share that with the world.   So for every negative review posted, every innkeeper knows that there are dozens or hundreds of positive experiences which won't materialize in print to reflect an accurate balance.    So a hearty congrats to those inns who also share our passion to do the best we can by our customers.   And thanks to those of you who have stayed at Hampton Terrace B&B in the Berkshires, have told their friends, have taken the time to post a review, and who compliment us by returning year after year.

Spread the Word!

Bookmark

 

Permalink Print

Filed under Blog by jenny