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Please Join Us for a Private One
Hour Tour
of
Dia: Beacon
Sunday, November 7th
11:00am
3 Beekman Street
Beacon, NY 12508
T: 845.440.0100
There will be
2 tours beginning at 11:00am, one for adults and one for
kids. The interactive kids tour is led by Dia Teaching
Artist, Jaanika Peerna, whose work was the subject of
a recent solo exhibition at ARC Fine Art.
The recommended age group for the kids Tour is 7 - 14,
and the tour is limited to 12 participants.
Both tours will last one hour.
Adults need not have children to attend the Adult Tour.
$75/adult and $25/child
(fee includes admission to the museum)
Please email Adrienne Conzelman at arc@arcfineartllc.com
to confirm reservation.
About Dia:Beacon
In May 2003, Dia Art Foundation opened Dia:Beacon, Riggio
Galleries, as a museum to house its renowned permanent collection
of major works of art from the 1960s to the present. Located
on the Hudson River in Beacon, New York, Dia:Beacon occupies
a nearly 300,000-square-foot historic printing factory.
The galleries are named in honor of Louise and Leonard Riggio
for their extraordinary generosity, which has helped make
possible the realization of this museum.
Since its founding in 1974, Dia has been dedicated to supporting
individual artists and to providing long-term, in-depth
presentations of their art. Dia:Beacon's expansive galleries
have been specifically designed for the display of the artworks
to which Dia is committed, many of which, because of their
character or scale, could not be easily accommodated by
more conventional museums. Each artist's work is displayed
in a dedicated gallery or galleries, many of which were
created in collaboration with the artists whose works they
will hold.
The Building and Site
Dia:Beacon occupies a former Nabisco (National Biscuit Company)
box printing facility built in 1929 and designed by Nabisco's
staff architect Louis N. Wirshing, Jr. In The building's
most recent owner, International Paper, donated the property
to Dia in 1999.
The former factory is built of brick, steel, concrete, and
glass, and is considered a model of early twentieth century
industrial architecture. Design elements include broad spans
between supporting columns, and more than 34,000-square-feet
of skylights which create an exceptional environment for
viewing works of contemporary art in natural light. These
features were an important part of Dia's decision to site
the museum there, as was its location on the banks of the
Hudson River only a five-minute walk from the Metro-North
Hudson Line train station in Beacon, sixty miles (eighty
minutes travel time) north of New York City.
To renovate the building, Dia asked American artist Robert
Irwin to formulate a plan that would retain the original
character of the factory, while accommodating its twenty-first
century museum function. In collaboration with the architecture
firm OpenOffice, a sensitive masterplan was devised for
the museum building and its exterior setting that accommodates
nearly 240,000 square feet of gallery space. Additionally,
Irwin designed seasonally-changing gardens and a parking
lot in which each car is matched with a flowering fruit
tree.
Following the renovation, the building was listed on the
State and National Register of Historic Places, and Dia
is currently undertaking steps to restore the exterior's
brick façade. Dia is also working with state and
local government officials and Scenic Hudson, a nonprofit
environmental organization, on a master plan to connect
Dia:Beacon facility with the adjacent riverfront land.
The Collection
Assembled largely during the 1970s and early 1980s by Dia's
founders, Philippa de Menil and Heiner Friedrich, the original
collection included works by some of the most important
artists of the 1960s and 1970s including Joseph Beuys, John
Chamberlain, Walter De Maria, Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, Imi
Knoebel, Blinky Palermo, Fred Sandback, Cy Twombly, Andy
Warhol, and Robert Whitman.
Anticipating the creation of Dia:Beacon, the collection
was significantly augmented beginning in the late 1990s
with works by artists of the same generation as those Dia
historically supported. These include Bernd and Hilla Becher,
Louise Bourgeois, Michael Heizer, Robert Irwin, On Kawara,
Sol LeWitt, Agnes Martin, Bruce Nauman, Robert Ryman, Gerhard
Richter, Richard Serra, Robert Smithson, and Lawrence Weiner.
All images on this site © the Artists. Reproduction
of images is prohibited without written permission.
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