Hudson River Museum August ProgramsYonkers, NY (July 31, 2023) —This month at the Hudson River Museum, the Summer Amphitheater Series continues! With free performances Friday and Saturday evenings through August 12, the 2023 Summer Amphitheater Series features a diverse selection of entertainment including musical performances spanning multiple genres, magic, and more! Plus, start the weekends off strong at Feel Good Fridays with free general admission to the Museum Fridays in August from 5-7pm. 

We are also excited to announce a brand new Planetarium show, Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon, playing every Friday at 6pm in August, celebrating the 50th anniversary of the iconic album. This immersive fulldome planetarium show will be an all-encompassing surround sound and visual treat that will take you way beyond the realms of two-dimensional experience. The show is organized according to the 10 tracks from the album, some futuristically looking forward and some a retro acknowledgment to Pink Floyd’s visual history, all relating to a time and space experience. Read the full press release.

Join us for the premier of Dark Side of the Moon at Feel Good Fridays—WonderFloyd Celebration on Friday, August 4, celebrating the 50th anniversaries of two iconic albums: Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon and Stevie Wonder’s Innervisions, which will be celebrated at a free 8pm performance by Library Jazz Band in the HRM Amphitheater. 

FEATURED EXHIBITIONS

Kengo Kito: Unity on the Hudson
Though September 24, 2023
View press images

Kengo Kito (b. Nagoya, Aichi, Japan, 1977) is one of Japan’s most innovative contemporary artists. Known for his exhilarating and ethereal conceptual art installations, he repurposes everyday objects and connects modern materials with ideas rooted in traditional Japanese philosophy, culture, and art. At the Hudson River Museum, using nearly 2,100 colorful hula hoops, Kito conceives a monumental, site-specific work symbolizing humanity’s interconnectedness and our relationship with the Hudson River. Unity on the Hudson is the inaugural exhibition of the Museum’s stunning new West Wing galleries, which include a cantilevered glass overlook with dramatic, three-sided panoramic views of the Hudson River and the majestic Palisades. 

Kito is particularly drawn to hula hoops, not only because of their universal appeal for children and adults alike, but also because of the resonance of circles in Zen Buddhist philosophy. The circle, or ensō, can symbolize many things, from infinity and cycles of life to cooperation and togetherness. In addition, the form is both perfectly whole and empty, inviting us to contemplate fullness, the void, and the nature of reality.

The artist envisions an immersive experience for visitors of walking around and under the multicolored intersecting circles as a metaphor for our bonds with each other and with nature. Curving lines, created by deconstructing and reconnecting different hoops, flow throughout the galleries like water, heightening our awareness from one point, ourselves, to something larger—expansive, yet fluid and intertwined. 

Unity on the Hudson creates an uplifting and memorable space in which to reflect on community and collective action, particularly ongoing efforts to protect the Hudson River ecosystem. Kito notes, “The process of transformation of consciousness through connection is an element that is crucial in the effort to improve the condition surrounding the River . . . environmental issues are the responsibility of not just one singular person but of the community as a whole.” The exhibition, offered in English, Japanese, and Spanish, will include an interactive area where visitors are invited to contribute their personal stories about interconnectedness and unity.

Kengo Kito received a BFA from Nagoya University of Fine Arts and Music in 2001, and completed his postgraduate studies at Kyoto City University of Fine Arts and Music in 2003. In addition to his work as an artist, he is currently Associate Professor at Kyoto University of Art and Design. Unity on the Hudson is a triumphant return to New York for Kito, who had a residency and a dynamic show at the Brooklyn campus of Long Island University in 2009. The artist first showed a hula hoop installation in 2021 at Japan House, Los Angeles; this is the first time one of his hula hoop environments has been exhibited on the East Coast.

Significant support is provided by the New York State Senate and Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins.

The exhibition is made possible by the W.L.S. Spencer Foundation and the City of Yonkers, Mayor Mike Spano.

Additional assistance for HRM exhibitions is provided by the County of Westchester.

Kengo Kito: Unity on the Hudson is organized by the Hudson River Museum. 

With gratitude to JAPAN HOUSE Los Angeles for their collaboration and for providing upcycled materials from the 2021 exhibition RECONNECTING: A Vision of Unity by Kengo Kito, and to advisors Miwako Tezuka, PhD, and David Janes, Global Citizens Initiative.

Sylvia Sleigh: Invitation to a Voyage
Through October 15, 2023
View press images 

Set along the banks of the Hudson River, Sylvia Sleigh’s Invitation to a Voyage: The Hudson River at Fishkill depicts a summer gathering of friends and art-world figures across fourteen large-scale panels. This panoramic work, totalling seventy feet in length, will be displayed in our new Community & Partnership Gallery, enveloping the viewer in the setting, as the artist originally intended it to be experienced.

Invitation to a Voyage highlights a stretch of the east bank of the river near Fishkill, New York, about fifty miles north of the Museum. Located in the heart of the Hudson Highlands, the scenic area has been a source of inspiration to artists for more than 200 years. Sleigh (American, born Wales, 1916–2010) was first impressed by the beauty of this part of the river on a train trip to Albany in 1961, the year she immigrated to the United States with her husband, art critic Lawrence Alloway. She joined the feminist art movement in the 1970s and was well -known for her large-scale portraits of nude men that reversed the male gaze. 

Years later, in 1979, Sleigh planned a trip upriver with Alloway and a group of their art-world friends, including Susan Kaprov, John Perreault, and Jeff Weinstein, to embark on the creation of Invitation to a Voyage. The artist posed her models along the railroad tracks with a backdrop of Pollepel Island and the ruins of Bannerman’s Island Arsenal, built by Frank Bannerman at the turn of the twentieth century. Back in her studio, working from photographs taken that day, Sleigh divided the panorama into seven panels facing the river and seven facing the shore, ultimately taking twenty years to complete her opus. 

Invitation to a Voyage reflects themes that Sleigh returned to repeatedly throughout her career, including self-portraiture, the use of friends and colleagues as models, groups of figures in landscapes, and a running commentary on art history—in this case pastoral gatherings by eighteenth-century French painters. Her creation of an immersive and connective experience along the river is a fitting counterpart to Kengo Kito: Unity on the Hudson, also on view in the West Wing.

Significant support is provided by the New York State Senate and Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins.

This exhibition is supported by the City of Yonkers, Mayor Mike Spano.

Its Inside Is Bigger Than Its Outside: Paintings by Seongmin Ahn
Through October 15, 2023
View press images 

With mysterious drawers bursting with cascading peonies, blossoming plum trees, and splashing waterfalls, Seongmin Ahn invites us to enter a surreal space of two separate yet connected dimensions. Ahn, who was born in South Korea and resides in New York City, deftly combines traditional Korean painting techniques with contemporary subject matter to express her personal journey to discover a sense of home as an artist bridging Eastern and Western cultures. She combines her artistic training in Korean black ink wash and color painting with an affinity for Western abstract and conceptual art. With its bold compositions and flat areas of saturated color, her painting style also reflects the influence of Minhwa, a Korean folk art that reached its height of popularity during the last century of the Chosŏn dynasty (1392–1910).

This exhibition features eight paintings from Ahn’s series Its Inside Is Bigger Than Its Outside, as well as one from her earlier Flat File series, in which she first began to experiment with hyperdimensional, connected spaces. For the former, Ahn drew upon literary inspiration, specifically The Chronicles of Narnia (1950–56) by English author C. S. Lewis, in which the main characters enter a different universe through magic portals, including a wardrobe. “Its inside is bigger than its outside” is a direct quote from The Last Battle, the final book of the Narnia series, and refers to a stable whose doors open into yet another world. This bilingual exhibition, with interpretive texts in English and Korean, is organized by the Hudson River Museum. This is the artist's first solo exhibition at an American art museum.

In contrast to Western art’s use of a one-point perspective that focuses on a distant horizon, Asian art often features multiple perspectives. By employing a reverse perspective, Ahn creates the illusion that the open drawers become secret portals. Her depiction of two different dimensions in one painting reflects her interest in the principles of dualism, coexistence, and interconnection in Eastern philosophies, such as Daoism. She explains, “In my paintings, by symbolic action and opening a drawer, two seemingly separate dimensions become integrated. It is a matter of how to find connection and openness.”

Ahn holds an MFA in Asian traditional painting from Seoul National University and an MFA in multidisciplinary art from the Maryland Institute College of Art. As an active participant in the contemporary art scene in New York and East Asia, she has exhibited work at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art in Seoul, the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at the University of Oregon, and the Charles Wang Center at Stony Brook University. She has received a number of funding awards, including two Pollock Krasner Foundation grants, the AHL foundation artist grant, and the Café Royal Cultural Foundation grant. Her work is in the collections of the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art in Seoul, the Princeton University Art Museum, and the Hudson River Museum.

Exhibitions are made possible by assistance provided by the County of Westchester.

In Exaltation of Flowers: Edward Jean Steichen
Through February 18, 2024
View press images

Edward J. Steichen (1879–1973), one of the leading photographers of the twentieth century, spent his early career equally devoted to both painting and photography. This exhibition highlights his most ambitious project as a painter—three large-scale paintings he created on the cusp of World War I as part of a series of seven murals. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Meyer, Jr., a prominent couple who were actively engaged in the arts, commissioned the paintings to decorate the foyer of their New York City townhouse. The magnificent works feature women from the Meyers’ family and close associates who formed a close-knit intellectual and artistic circle. Steichen himself was a member of this group of friends, who used floral names to address one another in correspondence and at social activities in creative and humorous ways. 

In each 10-foot panel, Steichen placed the botanical specimens that aligned with the sitter’s dominant personality traits alongside their human counterpart. In the painting titled Rose—Geranium, Steichen portrayed Katharine Rhoades, the New York–born painter, photographer, and one-time love interest of photography pioneer Alfred Stieglitz. Petunia—Caladium—Budleya depicts the painter Marion Beckett, a still life and portrait artist known as “Petunia Beckett.” The identification of the woman in Golden-Banded Lily—Violets is less certain and may be either Agnes Ernst Meyer, the patron, or Clara Steichen, the artist’s wife. He drew inspiration for these floral personifications from the book The Intelligence of Flowers (1907) by Symbolist poet and playwright Maurice Maeterlinck. 

The shimmering paintings are complemented by a selection of photographs from the HRM’s rich collection of Steichen images, including a self-portrait, works that illustrate his continued fascination with flowers, as well as photographs from his Condé Nast years of celebrities such as Marlene Dietrich, Lillian Gish, and Charlie Chaplin. In addition, the exhibition showcases related work by Steichen’s contemporary, Rudolf Eickemeyer, Jr., also known for evocative portraits of women with flowers. Eickemeyer went on to become one of the founders of the Museum. These photographs, together with the outstanding murals, shine a light on an under-appreciated aspect of the career of one of America’s most accomplished artists while exploring the legacy of this elaborate group portrait of Steichen’s and the Meyers’ friends who formed a close-knit intellectual and artistic circle while living in France.

Support provided by Art Bridges. 

Exhibitions are made possible by assistance provided by the County of Westchester.

Order / Reorder: Experiments with Collections 
Through September 3, 2023 
View press images

The Bierstadt Brother: Painting and Photography 
Through September 10, 2023
View press images

Collection Spotlight: Abstraction, 1950–1980
Through October 1, 2023
View press images 

Collection Spotlight: The Hudson River School
Ongoing
View press images

Collection Spotlight: The Art of Skywatching
Ongoing
View Press Images 

PROGRAMS
All events are free with general admission unless otherwise noted.
View program images here

Thursday, August 3, 1–7pm
Unity with the Hudson: Kayaking on the River Image
The HRM and the Yonkers Paddling and Rowing Club are partnering to offer unity with the Hudson through kayaking. Kayak with experienced guides in the cove at the JFK Marina, just north of the Museum off Kennedy Boulevard. What’s included: single and double sit-on-top kayaks, paddle, lifejacket, and experienced guides on the water. Free, no admission fee. 

Friday, August 4, 5–7pm
Feel Good Fridays—WonderFloyd Celebration! Image
This Feel Good Friday, celebrate the 50th anniversaries of two iconic albums: Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon and Stevie Wonder’s Innervisions. It will be a music-filled evening at the HRM! Catch the premiere of our brand-new planetarium show, Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon, at 6pm (ticketed), and stick around for the free 8pm performance of Innervisions by Library Jazz Band in the HRM Amphitheater. Attendees are invited to wear their favorite band tees or outfits inspired by the 70s! With free general admission from 5–7pm, experience the exhibitions currently on view, grab a drink, and enjoy the outdoor courtyard with games for all ages. Cash bar.

Saturday, August 5, 1:30–3:30pm
Portraiture Workshop with Antoinette Legnini Image
Join artist Antoinette Legnini, whose work is featured in Order / Reorder, in a portraiture workshop for teens and adults and create portraits of yourself or a loved one using mixed media. Fine-art materials will be provided. Legnini is best known for her collaborative community project Bronx Faces that pairs stories and experiences of Bronxites with mixed-media portraits. Appropriate for adults and teens 13+, at all skill levels. Capacity is limited. Advance registration is required.

Support provided by Art Bridges.

Sunday, August 6, 2pm
Japanese Dance Performance by Sachiyo Ito & Company Image
In this performance inspired by Kengo Kito: Unity on the Hudson, Sachiyo Ito & Company presents classical dances that express reverence for nature. Sachiyo Ito will demonstrate classical dance form and gestures and perform solo contemporary works, "To the Water" and "Memories,” which she choreographed to reflect water, nature, and humanity, accompanied by a poetry reading. Followed by Q&A with the performers. 

Friday, August 11, 5–7pm 
Feel Good Fridays! 50 Years of Hip Hop Image 
This Feel Good Friday, celebrate the 50th anniversary of hip hop with one of the hottest DJs from the tri-state area—Yonkers native Darrel “DJ Jericko” Morrison, who will trace the genre from its inception in the Bronx on this date in 1973 to today.  With free general admission, experience the exhibitions currently on view, grab a drink at the cash bar, and enjoy the outdoor courtyard with games for all ages. Catch an out-of-this-world planetarium show at 6pm (ticketed). 

Sunday, August 13, 1–4pm
Art Workshop: Vibrant Lens Image
Guided by Teaching Artist-in-Residence Natalya Khorover, create a layered, stained glass–like artwork made of brightly colored translucent single-use plastics, transparent tissue paper, and clear tracing papers tinged with colored pencils or pastels. Add collage components from magazines, plastic packaging, or other ephemera. Be inspired by the vibrant colors and translucent layers of Therman Statom’s mixed-media artwork and Louis Comfort Tiffany’s glass vessels on view in Order / Reorder. Appropriate for ages 5+.

Friday, August 18, 5–7pm
Feel Good Fridays! Image
You made it to Friday! Join us for Feel Good Fridays, with free general admission every Friday evening, 5–7pm, through August 25. Experience the exhibitions currently on view, grab a drink, and enjoy the outdoor courtyard with games for all ages. Catch an out-of-this-world planetarium show: Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon at 6pm (ticketed). Cash bar.

Saturday, August 19, 1:30–3:30pm 
Ikebana Flower Workshop with Mike McManus Image
Join Mike McManus, a contemporary practitioner of the Japanese art of ikebana, to create your own arrangement of flowers and other natural elements to take home. Learn to design seasonal, sculptural arrangements that embody harmony, peace, and beauty, while thinking about form, color, and design. Please bring a bowl, cup, vase, or other vessel; fresh florals and equipment will be provided.

Friday, August 25, 5–7pm
Feel Good Fridays! Image
Join us for the final Feel Good Friday of the summer, with free general admission from 5–7pm. Experience the exhibitions currently on view, grab a drink, and enjoy the outdoor courtyard with games for all ages. Catch an out-of-this-world planetarium show: Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon at 6pm (ticketed). Cash bar.

Family Art & Science Workshops

Saturdays & Sundays in August, 1–4pm
Family Art Workshop: Cabinet of Curiosities Image
Explore abstraction on a miniature scale by combining shapes, lines, and colors inside a small, clear plastic clamshell box. Taking inspiration from mixed-media works in Order / Reorder, make two- and three-dimensional shapes by repurposing single-use plastics and arranging them in various combinations inside the box. Designed by Teaching Artist-in-Residence Natalya Khorover. Recommended for ages 5+.

Support provided by Art Bridges.

Saturdays & Sundays in August, 1–4pm
Family Science Workshop: Hudson River Food Web Image
The vast and complex food web of the Hudson River includes everything from ospreys and oysters, to nematodes and nudibranchs, to duckweed and ducks. Make a dreamcatcher-like fragment of this vast and intricate network, including creatures familiar and unknown. Recommended for ages 6+.

Saturdays & Sundays in August, 1–4pm
Family Art Workshop: Threading Connections Image
The pathways of life are what connect us all, and as we make more connections, our pathways continue to intersect and form patterns. Use thread, representing the connections in your life, to weave an artwork on a circular loom. Recommended for ages 5+.

Amphitheater Shows

The Summer Amphitheater Series is generously sponsored by Ørsted U.S. 

Friday, August 4, 8pm
Library Jazz Band Image
Library Jazz Band, a collective of music professionals and educators from Westchester, perform all the tracks on Innervisions—the landmark album that Stevie Wonder released almost exactly fifty years ago!—with arrangements that honor the originals, but reimagine them with big band flair.

Support provided by Art Bridges.

Saturday, August 5, 8pm
Afro-Peruvian Ensemble Image
This all-star band brings you the joyful sounds of the Peruvian coast with a contemporary treatment rooted in the rich Afro-Peruvian tradition. Directed by drummer Hector Morales, the Afro-Peruvian Ensemble includes former Peru Negro singer/dancer Mariela Valencia; legendary percussionists Freddy “Huevito” Lobaton and Hector Ferreyra; innovative guitar player Eric Kurimski; along with the extraordinary talents of Ali Bello (Venezuela) on violin and Grammy Awarded Pedro Giraudo (Argentina) on the bass. The ensemble’s repertoire includes uplifting festejos and zamacuecas, dazzling Peruvian waltzes and hypnotic landos, as well as the “contrapunto de Cajones” (box drums counterpoint) and “contrapunto de Zapateo” (tap dancing competition) classics of the Afro-Peruvian folklore rarely seen in the US. Altogether, “…a superb group of authoritative musicians... Illuminating and joyful” - Jeff Potter, Modern Drummer Magazine.

Friday, August 11, 8pm 
AM Gold Yacht Rock Party Image
Sailors and landlubbers alike will groove to this Yacht Rock Party on the Hudson! AM Gold is a New York City-based tribute band, performing the adult-contemporary hit songs from the late 1970’s through the mid 1980’s. Artists include Hall & Oates, Steely Dan, Huey Lewis, Christopher Cross, Lionel Richie and so many more! Most of this Southern-California based music has recently experienced a revival known to many as Yacht Rock. This smooth style of music has stood the test of time.

Saturday, August 12, 8pm
An Evening of Magic and Mentalism with Andy Gersh Image
Forget everything you know about magicians! Andy Gersh's unique brand of magic and mentalism is personal, interactive, and will completely melt your mind. Andy has been a professional magician for over 15 years and recently performed on the hit CW TV show Penn and Teller: Fool Us, where he won their prestigious Fool Us trophy. Everyone will get a taste of the spotlight for an evening you will remember forever!

Sponsored by Sax LLP. 

Planetarium Shows

Fridays in August, 6pm
Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon Image
Celebrate the 50th anniversary of Pink Floyd’s iconic album The Dark Side of the Moon with an immersive fulldome planetarium show. The show is organized according to the 10 tracks off the album, some futuristically looking forward and some a retro acknowledgment to Pink Floyd’s visual history, all relating to a time and space experience. It promises to be immersive; an all-encompassing surround sound and visual treat that will take you way beyond the realms of two-dimensional experience. Watch the trailer. Recommended for ages 10+; 42-minute show. Tickets: $20; Members $15. Advance reservations are encouraged.

Saturdays & Sundays in August, 12:30pm
Planetarium Show: Earth, Moon, and Sun Image
Explore the relationship between the Earth, Moon, and Sun with the help of Coyote, an amusing character adapted from Native American oral traditions who has many misconceptions about our home planet and its most familiar neighbors. His confusion about the universe makes viewers think about how the Earth, Moon, and Sun work together as a system. Native American stories are used throughout the show to help distinguish between myths and science. Watch the trailer. Recommended for ages 5–10; 26-minute show plus Q&A. Advance reservations are encouraged.

Saturdays & Sundays in August, 2pm
Planetarium Show: The Sky Tonight Image
Take an awe-inspiring tour of the night sky as seen from our area, with topics ranging from visible planets, bright stars, and the Milky Way, to periodic comets, seasonal constellations, alien planets, upcoming rocket launches, and more! This month, learn about Vega, the brightest of the three stars of the Summer Triangle. Vega lies straight ahead of us near the Solar Apex, the direction our entire Solar System is heading. How do we know in what direction we’re headed, and in what other ways are we moving through space? Join us to find out! Recommended for ages 8+; 60-minute live and interactive show. Advance reservations are encouraged.

The Sky Tonight is sponsored by Domino Sugar Yonkers Refinery.

Saturdays & Sundays in August, 3:30pm
Planetarium Show: Birth of Planet Earth Image
Join us for Birth of Planet Earth, which tells the twisted tale of our planet’s origins. Scientists now believe that our galaxy is filled with solar systems, including up to one billion planets roughly the size of our own. This program employs advanced, data-driven visualizations to explore some of the greatest questions in science today: How did Earth become a living planet in the wake of our solar system’s violent birth? What does its history tell us about our chances of finding other worlds that are truly Earth-like? Watch the trailer. Recommended for ages 8+; 24-minute show plus Q&A. Advance reservations are encouraged.

Glenview Tours

Thursdays & Fridays, 1pm; Saturdays & Sundays, 1 & 3pm
Gilded Age Glenview: Historic Home Tour Image
Did you know that Glenview appears in HBO’s Emmy-award winning show The Gilded Age? Travel back in time and explore the six fully restored period rooms on a 45-minute guided tour of ​​1877 home on the National Register of Historic Places. Glenview is an 1877 home on the National Register of Historic Places, designed by architect Charles W. Clinton. Explore the six fully restored period rooms on a 45-minute guided tour and see the fine woodwork, furnishings, artwork, and magnificent architectural features that rank it as one of the most important early Gilded Age residences open to the public. Don’t miss the chance to see Yonkers’ favorite 24-room dollhouse, Nybelwyck Hall. Capacity is limited to 15 visitors per tour. Recommended for ages 8+. Advance ticket purchase is encouraged.

Press contact:
Jeana Wunderlich
jwunderlich@hrm.org
(914) 963-4550 x240
 
###
 
The Hudson River Museum is a preeminent cultural institution in Westchester County and the New York metropolitan area. Situated on the banks of the Hudson River in Yonkers, New York, the HRM’s mission is to engage, inspire, and connect diverse communities through the power of the arts, sciences, and history.
 
The Museum offers engaging experiences for every age and interest, with an ever-growing collection of American art; dynamic exhibitions that range from notable nineteenth-century paintings to contemporary art installations; Glenview, an 1877 house on the National Register of Historic Places; a state-of-the-art Planetarium; an environmental teaching gallery; and an outdoor Amphitheater. Accredited by the American Association of Museums (AAM), the Museum is dedicated to collecting, preserving, exhibiting, and interpreting these multidisciplinary offerings, which are complemented by an array of public programs that encourage creative expression, collaboration, and artistic and scientific discovery. 
 
Hours and Admission: The Hudson River Museum is open to the public Thursday–Friday, 12–5pm, Saturday–Sunday, 11am–5pm. Feel Good Fridays: Free general admission, Fridays, July 7–August 25, 5–7pm. Mask wearing and COVID-19 vaccination are no longer required, but are recommended for all visitors. Learn more and purchase tickets at hrm.org/visit.
 

General Admission: Adults $13; Youth (3–18) $8; Seniors (65+) $9; Students (with valid ID) $9; Veterans $9; Children (under 3) FREE; Members FREE; Museums for All* $2, *SNAP/EBT card with photo ID (up to 4 people). Planetarium tickets: Adults $7; Youth (3–18) $5; Seniors (65+) $6; Students (with valid ID) $6; Veterans $6; Children (under 3) Free. Glenview tours: Adults $7; Youth (3–18) $5; Seniors (65+) $6; Students (with valid ID) $6; Veterans $6; Children (under 3) Free. The Museum is accessible by Metro-North (Hudson Line—Yonkers and Glenview stations), by Bee-Line Bus Route #1, by car, and by bike. Make your visit a One-Day Getaway, and buy a combined rail and admission discount ticket. Learn more about Metro-North Deals & Getaways