***FOUR NEW SITES NAMED TO HAHS MEMBERSHIP that CELeBRATE WOMEN’S ARTISTIC LEGACY***
(Read press release)

THE GROWING LIST
OF HAHS SITES:

Albin Polasek Museum
& Sculpture Gardens
,
Winter Park, Florida

Alice Austen House,
Staten Island, New York

Andrew Wyeth Studio,
Brandywine River Museum of Art,
Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania

Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens,
West Palm Beach, Florida

Arthur Dove/Helen Torr Cottage,
Centerport, New York

Burchfield Homestead Society,
Salem, Ohio

Bush-Holley Historic Site,
Cos Cob, Connecticut

C. M. Russell Museum,
Great Falls, Montana

Chesterwood (Daniel Chester French)
Stockbridge, Massachusetts

Couse-Sharp Historic Site,
Taos, New Mexico

David Ireland House,
San Francisco, California

Demuth Museum,
Lancaster, Pennsylvania

Edward Hopper House Museum
and Study Center,

Nyack, New York

Edward V. Valentine Sculpture Studio,
Richmond, Virginia

Elisabet Ney Museum,
Austin, Texas

Florence Griswold Museum,
Old Lyme, Connecticut

Frelinghuysen Morris House & Studio,
Lenox, Massachusetts

Gari Melchers Home and Studio,
Fredericksburg, Virginia

Georgia O'Keeffe Home & Studio,
Abiquiu, New Mexico

Grace Hudson Museum & Sun House,
Ukiah, California

Grant Wood Studio,
Cedar Rapids, Iowa

Hilltop House (Dorothy Riester),
Cazenovia, New York

James Castle House,
Boise, Idaho

John F. Peto Studio Museum,
lsland Heights, New Jersey

Judd Foundation (101 Spring Street)
New York, New York

Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art, 
Denver, Colorado

La Mansana de Chinati (The Block)Judd Foundation,
Marfa, Texas

Manitoga/The Russel Wright Design Center, 
Garrison, New York

Melrose Plantation (Clementine Hunter)
Natchitoches, Louisiana

Mercer Museum & Foothill Castle,
Doylestown, Pennsylvania

N. C. Wyeth House and Studio, Brandywine River Museum of Art,
Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania

Olana State Historic Site
Hudson, New York

Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center, 
East Hampton, New York

Pond Farm (Marguerite Wildenhain),
Russian River Valley, California

Renee and Chaim Gross Foundation, 
New York, New York

Rockwell Kent-James Fitzgerald Historic Artists' Home and Studio,
Monhegan Island, Maine

Roger Brown Study Collection, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, 
Chicago, Illinois

Saarinen House
Bloomfield Hills, Michigan

Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site,
Cornish, New Hampshire

Sam and Alfreda Maloof Foundation for Arts and Crafts,
Alta Loma, California

T. C. Steele State Historic Site,
Nashville, Indiana

Thomas and Mary Nimmo Moran Studio,
East Hampton, New York

Thomas Cole National Historic Site,
Catskill, New York

Thomas Hart Benton Home & Studio State Historic Site, 
Kansas City, Missouri

Victor D’Amico Institute of Art,
Long Island, New York

Weir Farm National Historic Site,
Wilton, Connecticut

Wharton Esherick Museum,
Malvern, Pennsylvania

Winslow Homer Studio,
Portland, Maine

historic artists' homes and studios

The Historic Artists’ Homes and Studios (HAHS) program consists of more than 55 museums that were the homes and studios of American artists. Each site is dedicated to preserving and interpreting the places where art was made. HAHS, a program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, is a peer-to-peer coalition of sites that brings these museums together to conserve the legacy of creativity in the visual arts in America.

Artists’ workplaces and homes reveal the inner workings of the creative process and insights into artists’ sources of inspiration. In these places, one discovers the specific, demonstrable relationship between the artist, the artwork, and the environment of art-making. With much dedication and hard work, many artists’ homes and studios across the United States have been preserved as museums, offering visitors the opportunity to experience these powerful places and providing scholars with rich primary-source material.

Since its establishment by the National Trust for Historic Preservation in 1999, HAHS has developed into a successful community of practice, working with 55 member sites that serve more than half a million visitors in nearly every part of the United States. This network of sites leverages the knowledge and experience of individual members to benefit the entire coalition in critical areas, including historic preservation, visitor and community programming, and communications.

Learn more about the HAHS program at the HAHS website and stay connected here through our blog SITE SPOTLITE.

Support for HAHS is made possible through grants from the Terra Foundation for American Art, Wyeth Foundation for American Art and the Henry Luce Foundation.

Take a peek at some of our member sites!

Take a peek at some of our member sites!


Page Header Images: Left: Andrew Wyeth, with Battleground on the easel. Photo credit: © Peter Ralston, 1981; Right: Andrew Wyeth’s studio, with a reproduction of Raccoon (1958) on the easel and reproduction drawings taped to the wall. Photo credit: Carlos Alejandro. Both images courtesy Brandywine River Museum, Chadds Ford, PA.

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