Loading Events

Gardens & Galleries: Hip Hop at 50

PURCHASE TICKETs This year marks the 50th anniversary of Hip Hop, so to celebrate it, Hill-Stead Museum and the Amistad Center for Art & Culture are joining hands to bring you Gardens and Galleries: Hip Hop at 50. This event will be a one-of-a-kind Hip Hop Festival in two installments, the first at the gardens of Hill-Stead on Sunday, October 1 and the second in the galleries of the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art on Thursday, November 2. Drawn from…

when

October 1, 2023 @ 3:00 pm - 7:00 pm

where

See event website for details.

about

PURCHASE TICKETs
This year marks the 50th anniversary of Hip Hop, so to celebrate it, Hill-Stead Museum and the Amistad Center for Art & Culture are joining hands to bring you Gardens and Galleries: Hip Hop at 50. This event will be a one-of-a-kind Hip Hop Festival in two installments, the first at the gardens of Hill-Stead on Sunday, October 1 and the second in the galleries of the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art on Thursday, November 2.
Drawn from the nine discrete elements of Hip Hop (dancing, rapping, street art, etc.), the programs for each venue will complement one another, so the visitor can attend one or both and enjoy a unique subset of the nine elements at each.
Khaiim the RapOet, will be the lead performer at both events. Khaiim, currently serving his second year as the inaugural Troubadour of Hartford, has performed internationally with everyone from Pulitzer Prize poets like Alice Walker to Grammy-winning MCs like Common. He is the first American Hip Hop troubadour, and his positive use of rap music has been recognized by Obama’s White House, the New York Times, NPR, and others.
Besides the popular idea that Hip Hop is simply an entertaining form of dance and rap music, scholars and practitioners have documented that Hip Hop is a nonviolent, creative response to oppression. As Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. preached, humanity only sees justice in practices that resist oppression… without becoming the very thing they are fighting against. Hip Hop emerged organically as a way to assume individual and community power without the permission, endorsement, or resources of the powers that be. This is why we can now celebrate the 50th birthday of this resilient and empowering culture, which has transcended generational, locational, racial, and class divides, in pursuit of Peace, Love, Unity, and while Safely havin’ fun! After 50 Years of winning over the hearts and minds of the world, we attest that Hip Hop is welcome everywhere. Thank you for your generous support of Hip Hop artists (DJs, MCs, B-Boys & B-Girls, Graffiti Writers, Beatboxers, and more) who treasure our Gardens and Galleries!
Schedule
3 pm – 7 pm
Tickets
Adults (non-members) | $25 per person
Adults (members) | $20 per person
Children (12 & under) | $10 per person
We strongly advise attendees to purchase tickets in advance. Any available tickets sold at the gate will be by credit card only. 

join us:

Sensory Friendly Mornings

The Bruce Museum is hosting a sensory friendly morning for families. Before the Museum opens to the public on May 31, visitors with sensory sensitivities are welcome to enjoy hands-on, drop-in activities in the Museum’s Cohen Education Wing, a cozy story nook in the Lockhart Lookout, and an interactive sensory soft space in the Museum’s Gale and Robert H. Lawrence, Jr. and Pamela and Robert Goergen Auditorium in addition to a social narrative, quiet spaces, and high contrast lighting.  Drop-in…

Bruce Museum

On Thin Ice: Alaska’s Warming Wilderness

On Thin Ice: Alaska’s Warming Wilderness transports visitors to the Arctic to confront the startling impacts of climate change. Remarkable animals from the Bruce’s natural history collections are paired with scale landscape models that showcase Alaska’s diverse ecosystem. The installation highlights both subtle and dramatic shifts occurring across the Alaskan landscape, bringing attention to the impact of rising temperatures.

Bruce Museum

Isamu Noguchi: Metal the Mirror

“Here is where finally opposites come together, I see a surprising purity. Stone is the depth, metal the mirror. They do not conflict…” —Isamu Noguchi While the renowned sculptor Isamu Noguchi (1904–1988) is best known for his work in stone, he consistently explored new materials and methods during his wide-ranging career. He first experimented with aluminum in the 1950s and later with galvanized steel, creating a series of twenty-six sculptures in collaboration with Gemini G.E.L. in Los Angeles in 1982–83.…

Bruce Museum

follow us: