Tuesday
Nov152011

November 2011 - World Nativities Exhibition at Glencairn through January 14


Neapolitan Nativity scene on exhibit through January | This Neapolitan presepio is the work of the Giuseppe and Marco Ferrigno workshop, a fourth-generation family business in Naples, Italy. The faces, hands, lower legs, and feet of their figures are made of terracotta, which is then painted. Most of the figures have glass eyes. Other parts of the body are constructed with wire wrapped in cloth so that each figure can be posed. The clothing for each character is handmade in the 18th-century style, draped in San Leucio silks. The Ferrigno family began making presepi in Naples in 1836.
Upcoming Events

Follow the Star: World Nativities Exhibition
Friday, November 25, 2011, through Saturday, January 14, 2012

See how Christians around the world have adapted the Nativity scene to represent their own national, regional, and local cultures, in our third annual exhibition featuring crèches from around the world. The three-dimensional Nativity scenes, made from local materials with regionally distinctive clothing, animals, and structures, compliment the museum’s collection of Nativity art dating from medieval times through the early 20th century. Read more...

Glad Tidings: A Celebration of Christmas
Sunday, December 4, 2011

Visit Glencairn for our annual Christmas program showcasing our annual exhibition, “Follow the Star: World Nativities.” See how Christians around the world have adapted the Nativity scene to represent their own national, regional, and local cultures. Enjoy holiday refreshments at the Castle Cafe, live Christmas music, a family activity, and a Christmas Quest of Nativity art in Glencairn. Finish up your visit by getting some of your holiday shopping done at our Ten Thousand Villages sale and Glencairn's gift shop! Read more...

Glencairn Christmas Sing
Tuesday, December 13, 2011

It’s been 74 years since Raymond and Mildred Pitcairn opened the doors of their nine-story home for a “Christmas Sing” for family, friends and neighbors. Pitcairn told those gathered that he and his wife were delighted that the first use of their new home was for an event associated with the “peace and happiness of Christmas time.” Read more...

World Nativities exhibition at Glencairn through January 14 | Glencairn’s annual exhibition, “Follow the Star: World Nativities,” opened the day after Thanksgiving and will run through January 14. The exhibition features dozens of Nativity sets from 17 different countries, including some from countries like Egypt and Ethiopia not traditionally associated with the crèche. Most of these sets have never before been on public exhibition, and for the first time this year artistic settings for the Nativity figures have been created by Bryn Athyn artisan Kathleen Glenn Pitcairn. A special video preview is available on Glencairn’s website and YouTube (and can also be accessed here). This Sunday, December 4, the exhibition will be featured at Glencairn’s annual event, “Glad Tidings: A Celebration of Christmas,” from 1 to 5 p.m.

Another new addition this year is a special online resource on Glencairn’s Web site titled, “Do You See What I See? Imagery in Nativity Scenes.” Although Nativity scenes can be enjoyed on purely spiritual and aesthetic grounds, Glencairn has created this website to help visitors to the exhibition, and others interested in the subject, understand the origins of the imagery found in Nativity scenes. According to Ed Gyllenhaal, Glencairn’s curator, “The Christmas story as represented in a Nativity is inspired by events described in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke. However, many of these scenes also incorporate non-biblical Christian texts and legends. Learning about the history of these traditions can lead to a better understanding and appreciation of Nativities.”

In addition to the images common to most Nativity scenes, such as the Holy Family, manger, star of Bethlehem, shepherds, and wise men, artisans frequently add imagery of their own. Three-dimensional Nativity scenes often feature regionally distinctive structures, clothing, vegetation, and animals. Depending on the geographical location, the customary ox and ass at the manger may be replaced by a water buffalo, a zebra, or a llama. Nativities are often crafted from whatever materials are available locally, such as clay, grass, corn husks, sticks, bark, gourds, and even coconuts.

Glencairn’s annual exhibition is now in its third year. Most of the Nativities in the Glencairn collection have been gifted by members of The Friends of the Creche, a national organization. This year’s exhibition features crèches donated by Alan and Mary Liz Pomeroy of West Chester, Pa., and by Brother Bob Reinke, a Franciscan friar who is a pastoral associate at St. Ann’s Church in Hoboken, New Jersey. Brother Bob, whose special love of Christmas earned him the nickname “Brother Christmas,” has also given the Museum his personal collection of antique Christmas tree ornaments, gathered over his lifetime. A tree decorated with these ornaments will be on exhibit in Glencairn’s Great Hall.

The New Church (Swedenborgian) congregation in Bryn Athyn has a longstanding tradition of Nativities, several examples of which are in the Museum’s collection. One is a three-part Nativity made for the Raymond Pitcairn family by Winfred Sumner Hyatt (1891–1959), a New Church artist; another is a handmade and painted chalkware set made by Theta Alpha International, a New Church women’s organization. Glencairn Museum is located in the former home of Raymond and Mildred Pitcairn, built between 1928 and 1939. The Pitcairns commissioned Hyatt to design and build the family’s three-part Nativity scene in the 1920s when the family was living at Cairnwood. (Hyatt was the principal stained glass artist and designer for Bryn Athyn Cathedral and later Glencairn.) In addition to the Nativity scenes made for the Raymond Pitcairn family, Hyatt went on to make similar scenes for Bryn Athyn Cathedral, the Harold Pitcairn family (Raymond’s brother), and the Eisenhower White House.

“Follow the Star” hours are: 1 to 5 p.m. Dec. 4; noon to 4:30 p.m., Monday–Saturday Nov. 25 through Jan. 14; closed on other Sundays, as well as Dec. 12, 13, 14 and 24. “Glad Tidings: A Celebration of Christmas,” will take place this Sunday, December 4, from 1 to 5 p.m. For more information visit www.glencairnmuseum.org or call the museum at 267-502-2990.

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