Showing posts with label The Glass House. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Glass House. Show all posts

Friday, May 29, 2026

The Glass House Summer Party Auction ends June 8. See below details. Get your bids in.

The Glass House Summer Party Auction continues with an extraordinary group of artworks, collectible design objects, and unforgettable experiences. 


This year’s auction reflects the spirit of The Glass House itself—a place where art, architecture, design, and experimentation converge. 


Featured items include

  • Contemporary artworks by leading and emerging artists 
  • Special design items and jewelry 
  • Priceless experiences offering unforgettable memories


Every bid helps advance the preservation and interpretation of The Glass House campus while supporting innovative exhibitions and public programming. 

 

As excitement builds toward the Summer Party on June 6, we invite you to explore the auction and support the future of this remarkable site. 


Experience Highlights Include:

Weekend Escape: Two-Night Stay at Piaule

Opening Bid: $1,500

Estimate: $3,000

INDYCAR Two-Seater Ride Experience (Two Rides)

Opening Bid: $500

Estimate: $800

Private Dinner at The Glass House for up to 12 Guests

Opening bid: $8,000

Estimate: Priceless

Browse the Auction and Place your Bids Here.
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Friday, May 1, 2026

It's Spring and the Glass House is open for events all membership drive Month long. Happy May Day!

Happy May day!! Nice to see the news from the Glass House. A beautiful architecture, and setting on view for all!!! Wishing all our fineartmagazineblog.blogspot.com readers a great day!!!  

May is the perfect moment to deepen your connection to one of America’s most significant sites of Modernist architecture. 

 

When you join or renew your membership at The Glass House during the month of May, you’ll be entered to win two complimentary tickets to our Glass House + Galleries Tour, redeemable during the 2026 Season. This signature experience offers an immersive exploration of this iconic site, its remarkable landscape, and the stories of Modernist art, architecture, and design that continue to inspire. 

 

Members enjoy opportunities to engage with the 2026 Season at The Glass House, including exhibitions, programs, and special events presented across the campus throughout the year. 

 

Member Benefits Include: 

  • 10% off Tour Tickets - Enjoy a discount on tours throughout the 2026 Tour Season. 
  • 10% off purchases at the Glass House Design Store - Save on thoughtful gifts, books, and design objects inspired by the site. 
  • Advance notice of programs and events - Be among the first to hear about exhibitions, talks, and special initiatives at The Glass House and partner institutions. 
  • Subscription to Preservation Magazine Stay connected to the work of the National Trust for Historic Preservation through its beautifully produced publication. 

 

Join or renew by May 30 to be entered to win. 

Winners will be notified in early June. 


May Highlight: Golden Hour at The Glass House 

Enjoy a rare opportunity to explore The Glass House and its grounds during the Golden Hour. 

This special twohour guided tour offers an unforgettable experience of the site and its many distinct architectural landmarks as the sun lowers in the sky. 

 

Guests will witness Richard Kelly’s pioneering lighting design - developed in collaboration with Philip Johnson and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe - transforms the Glass House and surrounding structures at dusk. Designed to facilitate personaluse photography, the experience highlights the site’s architectural forms, landscape, and light in a uniquely atmospheric setting. Please note: This experience involves approximately a threequartermile walk over paved, grass, and gravel paths. 

 

Member Benefit 

In the month of May, Glass House Members and Patrons receive 20% off Golden Hour Tour tickets as part of their benefits. 

Join today!

Already a member or patron? Thank you! 

We look forward to seeing you at The Glass House soon, and often.


This giveaway begins on May 1, 2026, at 12:00 AM ET and ends on May 30, 2026, at 11:59 PM ET. A completed Membership or Patron purchase must be received by the end of the promotion period to be eligible.


Photo by Amanda Kirkpatrick

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The Glass House | 199 Elm Street | New Canaan, CT 06840 US

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Tuesday, February 3, 2026

The Glass House Exhibition of Tomashi Jackson, and Robert Rauschenberg ApriL16, - December 14,2025 . See "The Catch One"

The exhibition, " the Catch One" marries the innovative abstract expressionist Robert Rauschenberg with the newer offerings by Tomashi Jackson, and others. Both major artists employ photographs, color blocks, texture as a picturesque collage of iconic dialogue in the current of the time. Works  address diffreing undercurrents of social prejudice, and injustice.  Rauschenberg's work unlike any other artist is the standard of this motif/style. His drive for change coupled with an inventive mentality drives  seems to have sparked the works of Jackson.  Make a trip to New Canaan Connecticut see what you see in the combination of all  the artists displayed at the Glass House, in "The Catch One" exhibition, April 16, -December 14, 2025. 


Tomashi Jackson, Constant Craving (Jewel Thais Willians and Friend at Jewel's Catch One, 1970s/ Spottswood Thomas Bolling, et al., Petitioners, v. C. Melvin Sharpe, President of the District of Columbia Board of Education, et al. 1954), 2025. Photo by Joseph Frantz. Courtesy of the artist and Night Gallery, Los Angeles.

Robert Rauschenberg, Recital (Spread), 1980. Collection of The Glass House. Photo by Andy Romer Photography. Art © 2026 Robert Rauschenberg Foundation / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.



Tomashi Jackson and Robert Rauschenberg: The Catch One

April 16 - December 14, 2026


 - To mark the centennial of Robert Rauschenberg’s birth, The Glass House together with the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation proudly presents Tomashi Jackson and Robert Rauschenberg: The Catch One. Featuring newly commissioned paintings by Jackson in dialogue with works by Rauschenberg from the historic site’s permanent collection, the exhibition contributes to a global slate of 2025–26 initiatives that reexamine Rauschenberg’s legacy, honoring his expansive creativity, spirit of curiosity, and commitment to change.

 

Rauschenberg was one of the most innovative artists of the twentieth century who influenced the trajectory of American art. In 1961, the artist made the Combine First Landing Jump, which Philip Johnson purchased and later gave to the Museum of Modern Art, New York; it was the first painting by Rauschenberg to enter the museum’s collection.  In 1967, Rauschenberg designed costumes for a performance choreographed by Merce Cunningham on The Glass House grounds, set to a score by John Cage and debuted alongside a concert by the Velvet Underground. Three works by Rauschenberg remain in The Glass House’s permanent collection.

 

Drawing inspiration and materials from his surroundings, Rauschenberg famously collaged images and everyday objects into his work. "There is no reason not to consider the world as one gigantic painting," Rauschenberg said. This exhibition includes two artworks from the Spread series (1975–83) by Rauschenberg from The Glass House collection: Ring Master and Recital—both made in 1980 and collected by Johnson and Whitney. These works are composed of plywood panels on which Rauschenberg variously applied acrylic, paper, fabric, solvent-transferred imagery, and commonplace objects, such as a fan. Additional works from The Glass House permanent collection and the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation will also be featured in the exhibition.

 

While distinct in approach and context, Tomashi Jackson’s practice has affinities with Rauschenberg’s: she employs painting, printmaking, photography, and performance to examine how abstraction, color theory, and social histories intersect in shaping perception and everyday life. Rigorous and experimental, her work is rooted in archival research while pushing the material and conceptual boundaries of painting.

 

Jackson was invited to respond to the Spreads in The Glass House collection during a summer 2025 Rauschenberg Foundation residency in Rauschenberg’s former home and studio in Captiva, Florida. While reflecting on the Captiva compound and The Glass House as creative sanctuaries fashioned by white queer men, Jackson recalled memories of her mother’s involvement with sanctuaries for and by Black lesbian women in her native Los Angeles.

Jackson’s new paintings feature archival images related to Jewel’s Catch One, a Black lesbian-owned nightclub in Los Angeles that provided a welcoming space for Black and queer communities, offering cultural programming, health services, and social support when many mainstream clubs excluded them. Under the leadership of its owner, Jewel Thais Williams, The Catch One became a vibrant community institution that fostered a sense of joy, care, and belonging.

 

“At The Glass House, we have long understood the site as a place of exchange between past and present, architecture and art,” says Kirsten Reoch, Executive Director of The Glass House. “This exhibition carries that vision forward by placing Robert Rauschenberg's historic work in dialogue with Tomashi Jackson's powerful contemporary practice; by pairing pieces from our collection with new commissions, we seek to create an experience that deepens engagement with the site and underscores our commitment to exhibitions that provoke reflection, spark dialogue, and invite discovery.”

 

“This exhibition demonstrates the power of dialogue across time, place, and lived experience,” says Courtney J. Martin, Executive Director of the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation. “Bringing Tomashi Jackson’s newly commissioned works into conversation with Rauschenberg’s Spreads invites us to encounter both artists anew, each attuned to the social textures of their moment and to the ways material, image, and history shape how we see and understand the world. Jackson’s response echoes Rauschenberg’s conviction that art is not separate from life, but an active force within it. We are proud to partner with The Glass House on this ambitious project, which honors Rauschenberg’s centennial as a living exchange grounded in care, experimentation, and the enduring capacity of art to foster connection and change.”

 

Tomashi Jackson and Robert Rauschenberg: The Catch One is curated by Cole Akers and organized by The Glass House, a site of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, in partnership with the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation.

 

This project is supported in part by the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation. Special thanks to Night Gallery, Los Angeles.

 

About the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation

The Robert Rauschenberg Foundation builds on the legacy of artist Robert Rauschenberg, emphasizing his belief that artists can drive social change. Rauschenberg sought to act in the “gap” between art and life, valuing chance, and collaboration across disciplines. As such, the Foundation celebrates new and even untested ways of thinking.

 

About Rauschenberg 100

Robert Rauschenberg’s (1925-2008) strong conviction that engagement with art can nurture people’s sensibilities as individuals, community members, and citizens was key to his ethos. Centennial celebrations seek to allow audiences familiar with him and those encountering the artist for the first time to form fresh perspectives about his artwork. A series of global activities and exhibitions in honor of Rauschenberg’s Centennial reexamines the artist through a contemporary lens, highlighting his enduring influence on generations of artists and advocates for social progress. The Centennial’s activation of the artist’s legacy promotes cross-disciplinary explorations and creates opportunities for critical dialogue. For more information and continued updates on Centennial programming and news, visit rauschenberg100.org.


About The Glass House

The Glass House, created between 1949 and 1995 by architect Philip Johnson and curator David Whitney, is a site of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, located in New Canaan, CT. This pastoral 49-acre landscape comprises fourteen structures, including the Glass House (1949), and features a permanent collection of 20th-century paintings and sculptures, along with annual contemporary exhibitions. The campus serves as a catalyst for the preservation and interpretation of modern architecture, landscape, and art, and as a canvas for inspiration and experimentation. The tour season runs from mid-April through mid-December, and advanced reservations are required. Members receive 10% off tour tickets.


About The National Trust for Historic Preservation

The National Trust for Historic Preservation is a privately-funded nonprofit organization dedicated to helping communities maintain and enhance the power of historic places. Chartered by Congress in 1949 and supported by partners, friends, and champions nationwide, we help preserve the places and stories that make communities unique. Through the stewardship and revitalization of historic sites, we help communities foster economic growth, create healthier environments, and build a stronger, shared sense of civic duty and belonging.



Visitor Information:

The Glass House Visitor Center + Design Store         

199 Elm Street, New Canaan, CT. 06840


Open Thursday – Monday, 10:00 am – 5:00 pm

Closed Tuesday + Wednesday

Tour season runs April 16 - December 14, 2026

                                                                                                               

Advance tour tickets are required.

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