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7th Annual Berkshire Salon

Launches North Adams Gallery Season

By: - May 06, 2014

Salon Salon Salon Salon Salon Salon Salon Salon Salon Salon Salon Salon

The artist run Eclipse Mill Gallery at 243 Union Street in North Adams is the foremost non museum space in the Berkshires.

Visitors passing along Route 2 and the Mohawk Trail on their way to Mass MoCA and nearby Clark Art Institute and Williams College Museum of Art can pause and refresh with a taste of locally created work in the 7th Annual Berkshire Salon. (May 9 to June 1)

In addition to the gallery in the artist loft historic building there is also the chance to visit the studio of River Hill Pottery, the gallery of Ralph Brill, and Grover Askins' well stock used bookstore.

The Berkshire Salon was initiated as a way to launch the season of exhibitions at the gallery which run through fall. It was established as a non juried opportunity for artists in the area to show their work.

This is an eclectic, accepting approach that always includes discoveries and provokes lively debates. It is an opportunity for established artists to show examples of their recent work as well as amateur artists to be seen in a professional setting.

There is always a great turn out and a lot of curiosity on opening night which will be Saturday, May 10 from 6 to 8 PM. Through June 1 the gallery will be open from Thursday through Sunday, noon to 6 PM.

In the past the Salon was organized by a committee. This year, however, it is entirely the effort of gallerist Ralph Brill who has taken over creating the season’s program.

The lively season of exhibitions results from selecting from a call for proposals. This is augmented with Brill’s projects which are frequently an aspect of traveling museum exhibitions. The quality of Eclipse exhibitions is consistent with the highest professional standards.

The program of the Eclipse Mill Gallery complements the now annual Downstreet exhibitions in North Adams. During the summer months a number of vacant store fronts become pop up galleries. Some of these, including a cooperative gallery and Gallery 51 of nearby MCLA, have become a year round presence.

It has taken more than a generation of effort but North Adams has been revitalized with an arts/ tourism economy. The former Sprague Electric campus has thrived as Mass MoCA. This summer it is anticipated that attendance at Clark Art Institute may double with the reopening of the museum designed by Tadeo Ando. This will be the first full season of MoCA’s building devoted to work by Anselm Kiefer. Previously the museum opened a building dedicated to work by Sol LeWittt.

There is a bill pending on Beacon Hill that may bring MoCA some $25 million for the final phase of its development. The museum will raise $30 million in matching funds toward creating 120,000 square feet which will double its current gallery space.

The forty loft spaces in the Eclipse Mill are emblematic of a long term commitment to creating a sustainable community of artists in Northern Berkshire County. There are also numerous artists living in other mills and properties in North Adams.

The 7th annual Berkshire Salon provides a sense of what’s going on. Check it out.