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Mystic Seaport Museum Celebrates 40 Years of Sea Music

Annual Sea Music Festival Gathers Performers Old and New for 4 Days of Concerts, Workshops, and Demonstrations June 6-9

Mystic, Conn. (May 24, 2019) — Mystic Seaport Museum will host its 40th annual Sea Music Festival June 6-9, featuring concerts, workshops, hands-on demonstrations, and a scholarly symposium – all celebrating the music of the sea. From songs of the golden age of sail to contemporary compositions, the festival includes a wide variety of sea music both modern and traditional, a children’s stage with special performances for families, and demonstrations of maritime work songs – or chanteys – aboard the Museum’s historic vessels.

As a premier sea-music event, performers come from around the world and across the United States to perform at the festival. This year’s highlights include the music of Ron and Natalie Daise (the duo behind the music of the Nickelodeon TV show “Gullah Gullah Island”), Cliff Haslam, The Johnson Girls, The Rum-Soaked Crooks, The Rix, Between Two Thorns, and 19 other individuals and groups. They will be joined by the Mystic Seaport Museum Chantey Staff, including Geoff Kaufman, Craig Edwards, Don Sineti, David Littlefield, Marc Bernier, Chris Koldeway, Denise Kegler, Barry Keenan, Jesse Edwards, Anayis Wright, Chris Maden, Johann Heupel, B.J. Whitehouse, and Genevieve Corbiere.

“As we celebrate the festival’s 40th year of existence, we are taking the opportunity to look back and look forward at the same time and our roster of performers features many who were with us from the start, as well as new artists who are carrying this tradition forward, “ said Erik Ingmundson, the director of Interpretation at Mystic Seaport Museum. “Forty years is a remarkable lifespan for any music event and the longevity of the Sea Music Festival is a testament to the power and richness of the musical tradition and our shared fascination with the sea.”

All workshops and daytime concerts at the festival are included in regular Museum admission. Special tickets are required for evening concerts and can be purchased online, in person at the Museum’s entrances, or by calling 860.572.0711. Weekend passes are also available. College students will be admitted into the festival for the youth rate upon presentation of a current student ID.

As part of the festival, the Museum will also host the annual Music of the Sea Symposium Friday and Saturday, June 8-9. The symposium, co-sponsored by Mystic Seaport Museum, Williams College, and the Williams-Mystic Maritime Studies Program, features presentations of themed papers by some of the country’s leading maritime music scholars and explores subjects from history and folklore, to literature and ethnomusicology, along with many other related topics. Admission to the symposium is included with Museum admission and festival passes.

For more information, including ticket packages, musicians’ bios, and a schedule of performances, visit mysticseaport.org/seamusicfestival

The evening concerts will be streamed live by iCRV radio at www.icrvradio.com.

This event is made possible by the Friends of the Festival, who raise funds each year to generously support sea music at Mystic Seaport Museum.

About Mystic Seaport Museum

Mystic Seaport Museum, founded in 1929, is the nation’s leading maritime museum. In addition to providing a multitude of immersive experiences, the Museum also houses a collection of more than two million artifacts that include more than 500 historic vessels and one of the largest collections of maritime photography. The new Thompson Exhibition Building houses a state-of-the-art gallery that will feature J.M.W. Turner: Watercolors from Tate, the most comprehensive exhibition of Turner watercolors ever displayed in the U.S. opening October 5, 2019. Mystic Seaport Museum is located one mile south of Exit 90 off I-95 in Mystic, CT. For more information, please visit https://mysticseaport.wpengine.com/ and follow Mystic Seaport Museum on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram.

 

 

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Viking Days Returns to Mystic Seaport Museum June 1-2

Weekend Celebrates Scandinavian Culture with Live Performances, Food, Demonstrations, and Family Fun

Mystic, Conn. (May 17, 2019) — On June 1-2, Mystic Seaport Museum will be transformed into a celebration of Viking culture, complete with craft demonstrations, live performances, and on-the-water activities.

Visitors can explore a Viking village encampment by living historians Draugar Vinlands and the clinker-built Viking longship, Draken Harald Hårfagre, a reconstruction of what the Norse Sagas refer to as a “Great Ship.”

Scandinavian food and drink will be available for purchase and the waterfront with traditional faering sailing and a Nordic boat-building demonstration. There will be hands-on activities and games for children and adults throughout the day, and a special Planetarium show on Viking navigation.

Activities include:

  • Public deck tours of the Draken Harald Hårfagre
  • Screenings of the full length Draken documentary Expedition America – a Modern Viking Adventure 
  • Viking encampment with Draugar Vinlands
  • Hands-on activities including traditional Viking games, crafts, and tug of war
  • Build a toy Viking longship
  • Lectures on various aspects of Viking history by Dr. William Short and Lynn Noel, and talks about the Draken’s adventures by her captain Björn Ahlander.
  • Musical and stage performances
  • Mead-making demonstrations
  • Gotland sheep and woolen crafts
  • Special Planetarium show, “Stars of the Vikings”
  • Norse boat building and faering demonstrations (a faering is a traditional Norse boat)

Viking Days activities are included with regular Museum admission (separate charge for food, beverages, Planetarium shows, toy boat building, and children’s crafts).

For a complete list and schedule of all activities, please visit mysticseaport.org/vikingdays.

Evening Concert: The American Rogues

Saturday evening features a concert by the American Rogues, who are returning to the Museum for their second appearance. The Rogues are an American-Canadian Celtic rock band that crosses the musical landscape to include jigs, reels, hornpipes, ballads, originals, covers, soundtracks, patriotic and military music, Irish foot-stompers, and more. The concert begins at 6:30 p.m. and requires a separate ticket. Advance tickets are $25 (up to 3 p.m., May 31). Day-of tickets are $35 ($30 for Museum members and $30 for Viking Days general admission ticket holders).

Tickets may be purchased online at https://mysticseaport.wpengine.com/ or by calling 860.572.5331.

About Mystic Seaport Museum

Mystic Seaport Museum, founded in 1929, is the nation’s leading maritime museum. In addition to providing a multitude of immersive experiences, the Museum also houses a collection of more than two million artifacts that include more than 500 historic vessels and one of the largest collections of maritime photography. The new Thompson Exhibition Building houses a state-of-the-art gallery that will feature J.M.W. Turner: Watercolors from Tate, the most comprehensive exhibition of Turner watercolors ever displayed in the U.S. opening October 5, 2019. Mystic Seaport Museum is located one mile south of Exit 90 off I-95 in Mystic, CT. For more information, please visit https://mysticseaport.wpengine.com/ and follow Mystic Seaport Museum on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram.

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Community Conveners Make Earth Day Announcement in Preparation for Golden Anniversary

Mystic, Conn. (April 22, 2019)— Mystic Aquarium, Mystic Seaport Museum and the Denison Pequotsepos Nature Center are proud to announce plans for a multi-day, community-wide Earth Day 2020 event in celebration of the movement’s 50th anniversary. The events, which will be announced in detail in the coming months, will engage a host of like-minded community partners as well as the general public in support of habitat restoration, conservation and overall collective action. The announcement was made on April 22, Earth Day 2019.

The first Earth Day, held on April 22, 1970, activated 20 million Americans from all walks of life and is widely credited with launching the modern environmental movement.  Earth Day Network reports that today more than 1 billion people now participate in Earth Day activities each year, making it the largest civic observance in the world.

“Conservation is at the heart of our mission to protect the ocean planet,” said Dr. Stephen M. Coan, President and CEO of Mystic Aquarium. “Our teams of animal care professionals, educators and scientists actively engage nearly 100,000 ocean ambassadors each year in support of Long Island Sound and beyond. We are eager to expand that program in 2020 through this grand celebration with our community and in our community with our partners.”

Long Island Sound is an estuary (where saltwater from the ocean mixes with fresh water from rivers) and like the Mystic River, drain from the land. While estuaries are among the most productive ecosystems on Earth, Long Island Sound is among the most important and valuable estuaries in the nation. In fact, it received Congressional designation in 1987 as an “Estuary of National Significance.”

“The Earth needs our attention now more than ever, and we recognize our obligation specifically to the Mystic River and watershed,” said Stephen C. White, President of Mystic Seaport Museum. “Mystic Seaport Museum strives to inspire an enduring connection to the American maritime experience, and in the spirit of the Earth Day Network’s mission to diversify, educate, and activate the environmental movement worldwide  we look forward to bringing that focus and awareness to our home community.”

Together the community organizations look to share information about the history of the local watershed including human impacts and offer educational opportunities and activities to shed light on ways we all can become better stewards of the planet. It is critically important to protect Long Island Sound and maintain its water quality as a living resource to more than 1,200 species of invertebrates, 170 species of fish and dozens of species of migratory birds.

“At the Denison Pequotsepos Nature Center, every day is Earth Day, but the 50th anniversary of the Earth Day movement is especially significant,” said Maggie Jones, Senior Director of Conservation and Philanthropy at the Nature Center. “We are looking forward to collaborating with Mystic Seaport Museum and Mystic Aquarium to inspire the next generation of environmental stewards. This opportunity will bring our unique but complementary contributions together, to create a Mystic-wide partnership of activities and events that reimagine what we can collectively do to protect our global environment.”

Mystic Aquarium, Mystic Seaport Museum and the Denison Pequotsepos Nature Center are encouraging broad participation from area businesses and organizations to join activities during the week of April 18-26, 2020. The Mashantucket Pequot Tribe, Olde Mistick Village, Clean Up Sound and Harbors (CUSH) and Pine Point School have also pledged their participation in Earth Day 2020.

The series of events will include the fifth Annual Mystic-Wide Cleanup, a town-wide, large-scale debris removal event, on April 25, 2020.  Since its inception, the event has resulted in the removal of more than 500 pounds of debris each year from more than 10 miles of riverside property in Mystic.

Environmental stewards are encouraged to ‘warm up’ for the big event by participating in this year’s Earth Day Celebrations. On April 28, join Mystic Aquarium for an Earth Day Cleanup at Bluff Point State Park in Groton, CT. Details are available at MysticAquarium.org.

The Denison Pequotsepos Nature Center is hosting a week-long series of programs called “Celebrate Earth” from April 22 to 28 that engage and educate all ages, from “acorn to oak”, to inspire an understanding of the natural world and ourselves as part of it – past, present, and future.  Details are available on their website.

About Mystic Seaport Museum

Mystic Seaport Museum, founded in 1929, is the nation’s leading maritime museum. In addition to providing a multitude of immersive experiences, the Museum also houses a collection of more than two million artifacts that include more than 500 historic vessels and one of the largest collections of maritime photography. The new Thompson Exhibition Building houses a state-of-the-art gallery that will feature J.M.W. Turner: Watercolors from Tate, the most comprehensive exhibition of Turner watercolors ever displayed in the U.S. opening October 5, 2019. Mystic Seaport Museum is located one mile south of Exit 90 off I-95 in Mystic, CT. For more information, please visit https://mysticseaport.wpengine.com/ and follow Mystic Seaport Museum on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram.

 

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Mystic Seaport Museum, in Partnership with Tate, Presents the Most Comprehensive Exhibition Ever in U.S. of Watercolors by J.M.W. Turner

A Survey Signals Ambitious New Exhibitions Program at Connecticut Maritime Museum

Mystic, Conn. (April 18, 2019) –  In partnership with Tate, from October 5, 2019, to February 23, 2020, Mystic Seaport Museum presents J.M.W. Turner: Watercolors from Tate, a major exhibition drawn from the renowned Turner Bequest of 1856, the vast legacy of art donated to Great Britain by J.M.W. Turner (1775-1851), which resides today in Tate Britain. Mystic Seaport Museum is the only North American venue for the exhibition.

The exhibition spans the entirety of Turner’s long career and, by focusing on the artist’s watercolors, provides insight into the private visionary behind the public figure. The viewer will see Turner’s watercolor practice evolve from aide to memory to a way of thinking with his brush–`for his own pleasure,’ to borrow a phrase from a contemporary admirer, the critic John Ruskin.

“Joseph Mallord William Turner is one of the great artists of the Western Canon,” notes Stephen C. White, president, Mystic Seaport Museum, the preeminent maritime museum in the United States. “In building our new exhibition center, the Thompson Building, which opened in 2016, we prepared for loans of this caliber. Now we are thrilled to be able to bring Turner’s watercolors here for visitors throughout the region and country.”

Tate rations display of Turner’s watercolors, given the fugitive quality of the medium. But Tate balances conservation considerations with the mission to serve new audiences. “We are exceptionally pleased to send this intimate and powerful selection of works to Mystic Seaport Museum – the result of an ambitious and rewarding collaboration between the two organizations,” says Dr. Maria Balshaw, CBE Director, Tate.

Watercolors from Tate brings together 92 watercolors, four oil paintings and one of the artist’s last sketchbooks.  “Not one of these watercolors or the sketchbook would have survived had Turner had anything to do with it,” notes exhibition curator David Blayney Brown, the Tate’s Manton Senior Curator of British Art 1790-1850. Before his death, Turner sought to cement his place in history by bequeathing the contents of his studio to the British nation. He envisioned that the finished oil pictures would hang in rotation in a Turner Gallery inside the National Gallery at Trafalgar Square. But that dream never came to pass and, in 1856, the Chancery Court overruled the artist’s wishes, saving the entire contents of the studio, including more than 30,000 watercolors and sketches stashed haphazardly in cupboards, crammed in drawers, and rolled between canvases.

Nicholas Bell, senior vice president for Curatorial Affairs, Mystic Seaport Museum, says, “Watercolor has always been central to Turner’s art and its inspiration to others. Perhaps surprisingly for a North American audience, which has always had greater access to his oils, the watercolors have long competed in Britain with their weightier oil counterparts for museum-goers’ affections. What’s so marvelous about this gathering of loan works is that its very size makes it possible to follow Turner’s career trajectory in all its complexity.”

“Here we see not the public Turner, whose large oil paintings hung prominently in the Royal Academy, but the private artist who continually tested compositions, color, and tactile effect,” says David Blayney Brown.

Watercolors from Tate brings together luminous landscapes and atmospheric seascapes, architectural and topographical sketches, travel drawings, and even a number of intimate interior views. Some watercolors were completed in the studio; others, sketched en plein air. A number appear to have been dashed off on tiny slips of paper; others are finished works, conceived for display, incorporating ink, pencil and gouache. The earliest work on view  is a romantic scene of a gorge painted in 1791 when Turner was 17 years old; the latest, painted 55 years later and exhibited at the Royal Academy five years before the artist’s death, is Whalers (Boiling Blubber) Entangled in Flaw Ice, Endeavoring to Extricate Themselves (1846).

Turner’s career coincided with the emergence of the picturesque and the establishment of watercolor as an independent art form. Watercolors from Tate impresses upon the viewer his unceasing curiosity and the prodigious effort he expended to ascend to greatness. Turner rarely left home without a rolled-up loose-bound sketchbook, pencils, and a small traveling case of watercolors. By way of his sharp visual memory and sketches, he created a repertoire of lakes, mountains, rolling hills, and bridges as subject matter for salon paintings and print series. Early tours to Wales and Scotland and later wanderings in continental Europe, the Swiss Alps, and England, and the Grand Tour, resulted in such brilliant drawings as the featured Shields Lighthouse (c.1823-6), Arundel Castle on the River Arun (c. 1824), and Venice: Looking across the Lagoon at Sunset (1840).

As art was becoming increasingly democratized, even an artist as successful as Turner would have been mindful of the marketplace. Although often perceived in this country as solely a painter of the timeless sublime, Turner was in continuous dialogue with his public. In 1846, for instance, Londoners encountering the Whalers at the Royal Academy likely would have recalled a recent incident of a whale being caught in the Thames. Fashionable types would have registered the name William Beckford when seeing View of Fonthill Abbey (1799-1800); considered Funeral of Sir Thomas Lawrence (1830) almost an on-scene dispatch, and viewed Venice, San Giorgio Maggiore, Early Morning (1819) as a stunning depiction of the continental wonders finally once more accessible to British travelers following the end of the Napoleonic Wars.

Many of the bold, vivid watercolors featured in Watercolors from Tate were created by Turner for commercial subscription–only print series–etched, engraved, and mezzo-tinted on copper–or for printed poems by contemporaries like Lord Byron and Samuel Rogers. A slip found in one of Rogers’ own chapbooks noted that Turner’s original designs were returned after engraving because, “The truth is, they were of little value as drawings.” “This is not a view borne out by posterity,” notes exhibition curator David Blayney Brown.

The exhibition concludes on a high note with a selection of 17 watercolors, oils, and a sketchbook of scenes of the sea–shipwrecks, a beached boat, coastal views and purely atmospheric images. Highlights here include a graphite and watercolor drawing evoking with stark economy a vessel or whale stranded on a mountainous coast and Stormy Sea with Dolphins (c. 1835-4), a major painting that last traveled to the U.S. in 1966 as part of a notable monographic exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art.

Publication

Conversations with Turner: The Watercolors, edited by Nicholas R. Bell, accompanies Watercolors from Tate.

The book’s format is inspired by this introduction of Britain’s seminal visual artist to new audiences. Following an introductory essay on Turner’s lifelong pursuit of excellence in watercolor by David Blayney Brown, an international cadre of established and rising scholars and artists meet in dialogue in a series of thematic “conversations” in print.

Addressing such areas as the evolution of Turner’s art in watercolor, evidence of rapid changes to England’s industry and culture in the early 19th century, his treatment of time and memory, and the question of how his works influence contemporary artists working today, these conversations are intended to offer the reader accessible entry points into the medium central to Turner’s development as an artist. Ranging from precocious landscapes of the 1790s to the impatient yet critical color experiments of the 1840s, more than 90 watercolors illustrate the genius that led Turner to tower over Western painting in his day, and arguably in ours.

For the volume, 16 scholars and artists participate in conversations about Turner’s painting and its continued relevance today, including Brown; filmmaker John Akomfrah, CBE; Olivier Meslay of The Clark Art Institute; Timothy Barringer of Yale University; Susan Grace Galassi of The Frick Collection; Alexander Nemerov of Stanford University; and Sam Smiles of the University of Exeter. The book will be co-published by Mystic Seaport Museum and Skira Editore.

About Mystic Seaport Museum

Mystic Seaport Museum, founded in 1929, is the nation’s leading maritime museum. In addition to providing a multitude of immersive experiences, the Museum also houses a collection of more than two million artifacts that include more than 500 historic vessels and one of the largest collections of maritime photography. The new Thompson Exhibition Building houses a state-of-the-art gallery that will feature J.M.W. Turner: Watercolors from Tate, the most comprehensive exhibition of Turner watercolors ever displayed in the U.S. opening October 5, 2019. Mystic Seaport Museum is located one mile south of Exit 90 off I-95 in Mystic, CT. For more information, please visit https://mysticseaport.wpengine.com/ and follow Mystic Seaport Museum on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram.

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Streamlined: From Hull to Home Opens June 15

Major Exhibition Draws from Museum’s Vast Maritime Collection
to Explore the Nautical Roots of America’s Iconic Style

Mystic, Conn. (April 10, 2019) — Mystic Seaport Museum explores the maritime origins of streamlined design and its journey from naval architecture and engineering into our everyday vocabulary in a new exhibition, Streamlined: From Hull to Home, which will open June 15, 2019.

Streamlining in design refers to a style applied to manufactured objects in the 1930s and 40s. Designers and manufacturers were eager to increase depression-era sales by harnessing the era’s enthusiasm for speed. Rounded forms, shiny chromed surfaces, low, horizontal shapes enhanced by parallel lines were used to suggest speed and infuse static objects like toasters, cameras, and even butter dishes, with a sense of modernity and movement.

Streamlined objects make obvious references to speeding trains and airplanes, but the origin of all advances in speed, and the creation of the shapes that allowed them, came from boats. The scientific study of wind and water resistance was developed for naval architecture and perfected there before migrating to aeronautics and automobile design. Fast car and airplane engines were developed and tested by marine engineers. Ideas and technologies advanced through boating quickly migrated to all other forms of transportation, allowing them to mature and eventually eclipse boats as our main method of fast transportation.

“There have been scores of museum exhibitions about Streamlining as a design style and they have all made the connection from the visual references to speed in things like radios and desk fans to airplanes, which were the best evidence of 1930s advances in speed,” says exhibition curator Matthew Bird, who teaches design and design history at Rhode Island School of Design. “But all have ignored the true origins of streamlining, which was being investigated and perfected in boat design long before it migrated to other forms of travel. Early passenger airplanes were called ‘flying boats’ for a reason; aeronautic engineers used hull designs, pontoons, and construction methods that were perfected by naval engineers. This exhibition shows the progression from boat to airplane to toaster, and tells the complete story in a way that hasn’t happened before.”

Streamlined: From Hull to Home features objects, photographs, print advertisements, and video content that illustrate the progression of streamlining from shipyard to modern day office lingo. Eight boats from the Museum’s collection demonstrate how streamlining developed as a marine practice. A highlight is the 1904 Elco auto launch Panhard I, a 31-foot motorboat whose round, pod-like hull form defies its age and provides a clear vison of the modern shapes to come. Multiple photographs from the Museum’s Rosenfeld Collection celebrate the early development of speedboats, and elaborate the advances in hull design that allowed dramatic increases in speed. Boat models and movies help explain how speedboats worked, and why the world became so excited about them. Thirty outboard motors illustrate the arrival of stylistic streamlining and its development into today’s everyday manufacturing, which can be seen through a collection of familiar manufactured objects that show the development of streamlining as a design and manufacturing practice.

Mystic Seaport Museum tells this story with a fresh perspective that is made possible by utilizing its vast maritime collections. The result is an engaging and visually exciting exhibition that will appeal to both design enthusiasts and the layperson.

Streamlined: From Hull to Home runs June 15-August 25, 2019, in the Collins Gallery of the Museum’s Thompson Exhibition Building.

The exhibition will be featured on the Museum’s website, as well as on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram using the hashtag #MSMStreamlined

About Mystic Seaport Museum

Mystic Seaport Museum, founded in 1929, is the nation’s leading maritime museum. In addition to providing a multitude of immersive experiences, the Museum also houses a collection of more than two million artifacts that include more than 500 historic vessels and one of the largest collections of maritime photography. The new Thompson Exhibition Building houses a state-of-the-art gallery that will feature J.M.W. Turner: Watercolors from Tate, the most comprehensive exhibition of Turner watercolors ever displayed in the U.S. opening October 5, 2019. Mystic Seaport Museum is located one mile south of Exit 90 off I-95 in Mystic, CT. For more information, please visit https://mysticseaport.wpengine.com/ and follow Mystic Seaport Museum on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram.

 

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Mystic Seaport Museum to Honor Wendy Schmidt with the America and the Sea Award

Mystic, Conn. (March 27, 2019) — Mystic Seaport Museum will present its 2019 America and the Sea Award to American businesswoman and philanthropist Wendy Schmidt. The prestigious award recognizes those individuals and organizations whose extraordinary achievements in the world of maritime exploration, competition, scholarship, and design best exemplify the American character.

Wendy Schmidt
Wendy Schmidt

Schmidt has built an incredible portfolio of work devoted to our oceans made possible through the many organizations she has founded, led, and inspired, making her a natural and well-deserving recipient of the award. She is President of The Schmidt Family Foundation, which supports programs in renewable energy, healthy food and agriculture, and human rights. Schmidt Marine Technology Partners, an additional foundation program, supports the development of new ocean technologies with applications for conservation and research in areas including habitat health, marine plastic pollution, and sustainable fisheries. Schmidt has worked to advance the science and knowledge about the impact that climate change is having on ocean health and sea level, something directly affecting Mystic Seaport Museum.

Mystic Seaport Museum President Steve White remarked, “We are delighted to honor Wendy’s passion for and dedication to the sea. She stands as an exemplar for maritime studies and stewardship, and thus it is an honor for us to call more attention to her noteworthy work.”

Schmidt is co-founder, with her husband, Eric, of the Schmidt Ocean Institute, which operates the research vessel Falkor, a mobile platform to advance ocean exploration and discovery, using open source data to catalyze the sharing of information about the oceans. Since 2013, more than 500 scientists from 165 institutions and 30 countries have conducted research on R/V Falkor.

She has sponsored two XPRIZE Challenge Prizes focused on ocean health and currently serves as the lead philanthropic partner of the New Plastics Economy Initiative, driven by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation.

Schmidt has extended her oceans-focused work to the sporting world through 11th Hour Racing, partnering with the 2017-2018 Volvo Ocean Race and the Vestas 11th Hour Racing team to put sustainability at the core of their operations, empowering race managers and athletes to be leaders and spokespeople on restoring ocean health.

In 2017, the Schmidts launched the Schmidt Science Fellows program, a post-doctoral fellowship that provides the next generation of leaders and innovators with the tools and opportunities to drive world-changing advances across the sciences and society. With an initial commitment from Schmidt Futures of at least $25M for the first three years, the effort is the beginning of a broader $100 million commitment to promote scientific leadership and interdisciplinary research.

A black tie gala will be held in Schmidt’s honor in New York City Wednesday, October 30, 2019. This affair is the premier fund-raising event for Mystic Seaport Museum. Past recipients of the America and the Sea Award include America’s Cup sailor Dawn Riley, philanthropist and environmentalist David Rockefeller Jr.; oceanographer and explorer Sylvia Earle; historian David McCullough; legendary yacht designer Olin Stephens; President and CEO of Crowley Maritime Corporation, Thomas Crowley;  philanthropist William Koch; former Secretary of the Navy John Lehman; WoodenBoat Publications founder Jon Wilson; yachtsman and author Gary Jobson; maritime industrialist Charles A. Robertson; author Nathaniel Philbrick; and Rod and Bob Johnstone and their company J/Boats.

For invitations, please email advancement@https://mysticseaport.wpengine.com/ or call 860.572.5365.

About Mystic Seaport Museum
Mystic Seaport Museum is the nation’s leading maritime museum. Founded in 1929, the Museum is home to four National Historic Landmark vessels, including the Charles W. Morgan, America’s oldest commercial ship and the last wooden whaleship in the world. The Museum’s collection of more than two million artifacts includes more than 500 historic vessels and one of the largest collections of maritime photography in the country. The Thompson Exhibition Building provides a state-of-the-art gallery to host compelling, world-class exhibitions, currently featuring Death in the Ice: The Mystery of the Franklin Expedition through April 28, 2019. The Collections Research Center at Mystic Seaport provides scholars and researchers from around the world access to the Museum’s renowned archives. Mystic Seaport Museum is located one mile south of Exit 90 off I-95 in Mystic, CT. Admission is $28.95 for adults ages 15 and older and $18.95 for children ages 4-14. Museum members and children three and younger are admitted free. For more information, please visit https://mysticseaport.wpengine.com/  and follow Mystic Seaport Museum on FacebookTwitterYouTube, and Instagram.

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Mystic Seaport Museum Launches Program to Eliminate Single-Use Plastic

Museum staff members gather on the steps of the Thompson Exhibition Building to get out the "Say No to Plastics" message.
Museum staff members gather on the steps of the Thompson Exhibition Building to get out the “Say No to Plastics” message.

Mystic, Conn. (March 8, 2019) — Mystic Seaport Museum announced today an initiative to work toward eliminating single-use plastics on its 19-acre site on the Mystic River.

The program is being developed and implemented through the leadership of a staff Sustainability Committee in collaboration with the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum in St. Michaels, Md. The teams at each museum share information, resources, ideas, and results of implementation efforts, and will be giving a joint presentation at the 2019 Council of American Maritime Museums Annual Conference in Manitowoc, Wis., this coming April.

“Both of our museums are situated on estuaries, which brings with it the responsibility to be stewards of the water and shoreline that provide so much for our institutions,” said Steve White, president of Mystic Seaport Museum. “We recognize the gravity of our role in shedding light on the human impact on ocean health, and we believe in doing our part to help change that impact in a positive direction and to set a standard among maritime museums and surrounding communities.”

The Sustainability Committee at Mystic Seaport Museum began meeting in early 2018 at the direction of White, who encouraged the committee to make recommendations for financially sustainable, positive changes to the Museum’s impact on the environment that also will inspire and energize the public to adopt similar practices.

In conjunction with the Museum’s food-service partners Coastal Gourmet and Event Network, the following changes replacing single-use plastic products have been implemented:

  • Paper shopping bags instead of plastic
  • Nautical-themed reusable shopping bags made from 100-percent recycled plastic water bottles are available for purchase
  • Plant-based straws and pasta stir sticks
  • Plastic lids and straws are available upon request only
  • To-go containers and serving ware have been switched to paper rather than plastic or foam
  • Catered events are using wooden utensils, and plant-based cups, or rented china, glasses, and cutlery.

Moving forward, the Museum will continue to investigate ways to reduce single-use plastic consumption, while keeping in mind that alternatives used must be ecofriendly, and will focus on making changes across the Museum grounds to enable visitors to reduce plastic consumption and recycle more effectively.

About Mystic Seaport Museum

Mystic Seaport Museum, founded in 1929, is the nation’s leading maritime museum. In addition to providing a multitude of immersive experiences, the Museum also houses a collection of more than two million artifacts that include more than 500 historic vessels and one of the largest collections of maritime photography. The new Thompson Exhibition Building houses a state-of-the-art gallery that is showing Death in the Ice: The Mystery of the Franklin Expedition, a major exhibition of one of seafaring’s most mysterious tragedies through April 28, 2019. Mystic Seaport Museum is located one mile south of Exit 90 off I-95 in Mystic, Conn. For more information, please visit https://mysticseaport.wpengine.com/ and follow Mystic Seaport Museum on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram.

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Mystic Seaport Museum Hosts First-Ever Ice Festival

Mystic, Conn. (January 24, 2019) — Mystic Seaport Museum will hold an Ice Festival Presidents Day weekend, February 16-18. The event will be three days of winter activities in conjunction with the exhibition Death in the Ice: The Mystery of the Franklin Expedition, now on display in the Museum’s Collins Gallery.

Families are invited to enjoy games, activities, music, and entertainment throughout the Museum’s grounds:

  • Live Music
  • Working dog demonstrations
  • Winter crafts for children
  • Indoor Sock Skating Rink
  • Winter survival skills workshops
  • Winter Games on the Green
  • Special Planetarium show Aurora Borealis: The Northern Lights
  • Learn about Pemmican, the ultimate survival food
  • Sledge pulls
  • Make a Toy Boat
  • Bonfire on the Village Green
  • Victorian Selfie Station
  • Franklin Expedition-related talks

The festival kicks off with an ice sculpture carving 10:30 a.m., Saturday, and free horse-and-carriage rides will be available 12 to 4 p.m., Monday.

Live music will be provided by the band Sharks Come Cruisin’, Saturday and Sunday at 12 and 3:30 p.m., and Sea Tea Improv will perform two shows on Monday.

On Saturday and Sunday, winter working dog demonstrations will take place. The Museum welcomes the Newfoundland Club of New England from 1 to 4 p.m., Sunday. The Connecticut Valley Siberian Husky Club will bring their teams to the festival from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., Sunday. On Saturday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., the New England Saint Bernard Club will be featured.

Also here for Saturday and Sunday is Steve Lancia, owner of Northcamp Wilderness Survival School, who will do a presentation on winter survival skills. A professional with the National Ski Patrol, Lancia is a licensed New York state guide, an American Red Cross instructor and a licensed emergency medical technician, and wilderness technician.

Included in the weekend is a special show in the Planetarium, Aurora Borealis: The Northern Lights. The Northern Lights are a breathtaking phenomenon — a natural wonder that illuminates the night sky with magnificent colors! In addition to the visual beauty, there is also some fun and quirky science behind this event. the show will explain what causes the Aurora Borealis, and simulate the shimmering curtains of light projected onto the Planetarium dome. There is an extra fee for the show: $4 ($3 for Museum members), ages 3 and younger are free.

The new exhibition Death in the Ice explores the fate of the Franklin Expedition, a tragic story of 19th-century Arctic exploration and death and one of the most enduring mysteries of maritime history. Displaying more than 200 objects from the collections of the National Maritime Museum in London and the Canadian Museum of History, alongside finds recovered by Parks Canada from the underwater wreck of Sir John Franklin’s ship HMS Erebus, the exhibition tells the story of the 1845 Royal Navy expedition to find the elusive Northwest passage to Asia and offers clues to the unknown fate of Franklin and his 128 men, none of whom survived.

Admission tickets purchased online will be valid for all three days of the festival. The Ice Festival is included in the cost of general admission. The Planetarium shows and toy boat building require an additional fee.

Death in the Ice: The Mystery of the Franklin Expedition is a traveling exhibition developed by the Canadian Mu­seum of History (Gatineau, Canada), in partnership with Parks Canada Agency and with the National Maritime Museum (Lon­don, UK), and in collaboration with the Govern­ment of Nunavut and the Inuit Heritage Trust.

About Mystic Seaport Museum

Mystic Seaport Museum, founded in 1929, is the nation’s leading maritime museum. In addition to providing a multitude of immersive experiences, the Museum also houses a collection of more than two million artifacts that include more than 500 historic vessels and one of the largest collections of maritime photography. The new Thompson Exhibition Building houses a state-of-the-art gallery that is showing Death in the Ice: The Mystery of the Franklin Expedition, a major exhibition of one of seafaring’s most mysterious tragedies through April 28, 2019. Mystic Seaport Museum is located one mile south of Exit 90 off I-95 in Mystic, CT. For more information, please visit https://mysticseaport.wpengine.com/ and follow Mystic Seaport Museum on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram.

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Mystic Seaport Museum Offers Free Admission to Federal Workers Affected By The Shutdown

Mystic, Conn. (January 15, 2019) — Mystic Seaport Museum is offering free admission to all federal workers who are affected by the government shutdown (plus one additional guest) as long as the impasse lasts.

“We want federal workers to feel appreciated during this difficult period and this is our small way of ensuring we contribute positively by providing access to family activities,” said Steve White, president of Mystic Seaport Museum. “We look forward to welcoming them to our Museum.”

In order to receive free admission, federal employees must bring a government identification card and present it at the admission desk upon entering the Museum.

About Mystic Seaport Museum

Mystic Seaport Museum, founded in 1929, is the nation’s leading maritime museum. In addition to providing a multitude of immersive experiences, the Museum also houses a collection of more than two million artifacts that include more than 500 historic vessels and one of the largest collections of maritime photography. The new Thompson Exhibition Building houses a state-of-the-art gallery that is showing Death in the Ice: The Mystery of the Franklin Expedition, a major exhibition of one of seafaring’s most mysterious tragedies through April 28, 2019. Mystic Seaport Museum is located one mile south of Exit 90 off I-95 in Mystic, CT. For more information, please visit https://mysticseaport.wpengine.com/ and follow Mystic Seaport Museum on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram.

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Mystic Seaport Museum to Open “When This You See, Remember Me: The Photography of Everett Scholfield and George Tingley” on January 19

Exhibition Invites Visitors to Explore and Experience Portrait Photography of the Late 1800s

Mystic, Conn. (January 10, 2019) — Mystic Seaport Museum will open its latest exhibition, When This You See, Remember Me, Saturday, on January 19, 2019. The show explores advances in photographic technology and techniques in late 1800s studio photography from the perspective of both the sitter and the photographer.

Based on thousands of portraits in the Museum’s collection by local Connecticut photographers Everett Scholfield and George Tingley, the exhibition also features their original backdrops, cameras, coupons, and ads. Scholfield and Tingley worked with bulky and often-complicated equipment. They captured images on fragile pieces of glass and then had to mix and work with chemicals to create photographs. Color photographs did not exist and they could not make enlargements; to make a large photo they had to make a very large glass negative.

“In this age of smartphones and selfies, when everyone has a camera in their pocket, it is hard to imagine what it was like when photography was new and sitting for a formal portrait was a big deal,” said Elysa Engelman, director of Exhibits at Mystic Seaport Museum. “This exhibition returns the visitor to that time and asks them to consider the ways in which photography has changed and ways in which it has stayed the same.”

Using a recreated set based upon artifacts from Scholfield’s studio, visitors will be able to take their own 19th century-style portrait. They can practice composing a scene viewed upside down through a period camera, learn about the darkroom process, and experiment with props and poses. They then can take their own photo with their camera or smartphone.

Visitors will be encouraged to share their picture on social media with #MSMRememberMe and an Instagram feed of the resulting images will be streamed as part of the exhibition.

The two men’s overlapping careers spanned the years 1865-1930. Scholfield was an itinerant businessman and frequently moved to different locations around southeastern Connecticut and Rhode Island, although he eventually settled in New London. Tingley spent the bulk of his career in Mystic. Framed photographs and an extensive slideshow brings visitors face-to-face with a diverse selection of people from those areas, including people of different backgrounds – African American, Asian, Native American – various occupations – woodcutter, postal worker, musician – and of all life stages, from infants to elders. Most of the subjects are not identified and visitors with local ancestors are invited to see if they can spot a relative in the show. Museum curators are hopeful the collection catalog can be expanded through the public exposure in the exhibition.

When This You See, Remember Me, will be located in the Museum’s R.J. Schaefer Building. It runs through April 28, 2019.

About Mystic Seaport Museum

Mystic Seaport Museum, founded in 1929, is the nation’s leading maritime museum. In addition to providing a multitude of immersive experiences, the Museum also houses a collection of more than two million artifacts that include more than 500 historic vessels and one of the largest collections of maritime photography. The new Thompson Exhibition Building houses a state-of-the-art gallery that is showing Death in the Ice: The Mystery of the Franklin Expedition, a major exhibition of one of seafaring’s most mysterious tragedies through April 28, 2019. Mystic Seaport Museum is located one mile south of Exit 90 off I-95 in Mystic, CT. For more information, please visit https://mysticseaport.wpengine.com/ and follow Mystic Seaport Museum on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram.

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