Clark Art Hosts Event For Area College Students

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — On Wednesday, Sept. 3, the Clark Art Institute hosts "Night at the Clark," an evening of special activities and exclusive gallery access to celebrate the arrival of the Class of 2029 to the Berkshires.
 
Students from Williams College, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, Berkshire Community College, Bennington College, State University of New York at Albany, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Smith College, and more are invited come together to explore, connect, and make memories on the Clark's campus.
 
Activities:
 
On Air with WCFM 91.9 and Belltower Records
5–7 pm
Reflecting Pool Lawn
Join a collaborative vinyl session hosted by WCFM 91.9 and Belltower Records. Choose records from WCFM 91.9 and Belltower Record's collection for a live-mixed set.
 
Print Room Pop-Up Exhibition: Paper Trails of the Clark's Collection
5–7 pm
Manton Study Center for Works on Paper
Enjoy a special display of prints, drawings, and photographs selected from the Clark's collection of 6,500+ works on paper. From Albrecht Dürer to Doris Ulmann, this drop-in showcase spans more than 500 years of creativity and craftsmanship over a wide range of artistic techniques on paper.
 
PRESS on the MOVE! with Melanie Mowinski
5–7 pm
Bold by Design: Mid-century Modern Graphic Art, Manton Research Center
PRESS on the MOVE! is a traveling letterpress studio and an offshoot of artist Melanie Mowinski's project PRESS: Letterpress as a Public Art Project. Be inspired by the works featured in Bold by Design: Mid-century Modern Graphic Art and create prints using vintage type and presses—no experience needed!
 
Pages to Pins: Button-Making Workshop
5–7 pm
Manton Research Center reading room
Repurpose dust jackets, periodicals, and other extras from our library into one-of-a-kind buttons!
 
From Ground to Cup: Lemon Balm, Milky Oats, and Catnip
5:30–7 pm
Schow Pond
Join herbalist Rebecca Guanzon to learn about wild herbs, then brew your own custom tea.
 
Mariel Capanna: Giornata Rapid Painting
6 pm, 6:30 pm, 7 pm & 7:30 pm
Family Room
Try fast-paced, collaborative painting inspired by this artist's practice—one minute per round, endless creativity. Guided by Williams College Museum of Art SPA interns, respond in paint to abstract visuals or found footage before passing the canvas on for others to add their own interpretation.
 
A Room of Her Own Embroidery Workshop
6–8 pm
Clark Center lower lobby
Join us in the gallery for a hands-on embroidery workshop inspired by A Room of Her Own: Women Artist-Activists in Britain, 1875–1945. Learn foundational stitches featured in the exhibition and described in May Morris's Decorative Needlework (1893) and create your own embroidered bookmark in homage to the era's craft revival.
 
Berenice Abbott's Modern Lens Curator-led Tour
6:15 pm, 6:45 pm and 7:15 pm
Eugene V. Thaw Gallery for Works on Paper
Exhibition curator Grace Hanselman presents a tour of photographer Berenice Abbott's work, focusing on her portraits of the Parisian avant-garde and her visual chronicles of New York City's dynamic urban landscape.
 
Berenice Abbott's Modern Lens Curator-led Tour and Mariel Capanna: Giornata Rapid Painting require a free ticket that can be collected by students at the main admissions desk. Tickets are available on a first-come, first-served basis starting at 5 pm.
 
Works in Progress: Astral Sea Performance with Tsedaye Makonnen and Williams College
7:15 pm
Fernández Terrace
Watch an experimental in-progress performance directed by visiting artist Tsedaye Makonnen with Williams' dance faculty member Sandra Burton. Featuring students from Kusika, the Williams College African dance and percussion ensemble.
 
The full-length performance will debut as part of the Clark's programming on Saturday, October 4 at 4 pm on the grounds.
 
Outdoor Film: Night at the Museum (2006)
8–10 pm
Reflecting Pool Lawn
Watch the ultimate museum adventure under the stars. Presented by Images Cinema.
 
Stargazing & S'mores
8–10 pm
Thomas Shütte's Crystal, Stone Hill
Gaze at the night sky with PULSAR Astronomy Club while enjoying s'mores by the bonfire.
 
All activities are free. No registration is required to attend Night at the Clark. Select timed activities require a free ticket that can be collected by students at the main admissions desk. Tickets are available on a first-come, first-served basis starting at 5 pm. Food from the outdoor grill is available for purchase until 8 pm. For accessibility questions, call 413 458 0524.

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Williamstown Board of Health Backs Plastic Bag Amendment, Biosolids Bylaw

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Board of Health on Monday unanimously recommended the annual town meeting approve articles that would amend the town's existing plastic bag ordinance and ban the land application of materials derived from sewage sludge.
 
Stephanie Boyd, author of Article 19 on the town meeting warrant to prevent the use of biosolids as soil amendments, and Susan Abrams, author of Article 20 on the reduction of single-use bags, each addressed the board at its monthly meeting.
 
The biosolid and plastic bag bylaws are two of three that were placed on the warrant for the May 19 meeting by way of citizens' petition.
 
Earlier this month, the Select Board voted to recommend town meeting approve two of the three: the biosolids bylaw and one that would ban the use of second generation anticoagulant rodenticides (SGARs). But the elected board declined to recommend passage of the article that seeks to amend a 2015 bylaw on single-use bags, finding that it needed more time to evaluate the complicated article.
 
On Monday, Abrams acknowledged its lack of clarity.
 
"The way I wrote the article was very confusing," Abrams said. "What this petition actually is is a very small change to the town's existing plastic bag regulation passed in 2015. When towns were doing that, there were a lot of loopholes and exceptions because people were nervous about the idea of doing this.
 
"Ten years later, we've discovered that, A) people are doing well with it, the communities are thriving and, in fact, some of the loopholes, as discovered by [the California Public Interest Research Group] in a 2024 study, one loophole which allows thicker plastic bags as considered 'reusable' bag — they're not getting reused and, in fact, are increasing the amount of plastic waste."
 
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