Berkshire Museum Announces Summer Exhibition

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Berkshire Museum to display "The Animal Art of Julie Bell" an exhibition showcasing the works of one of the acclaimed fantasy artist. 
 
On view to the public June 1 through September 29.
 
"When I'm painting animals with all their beauty and wild nature, I experience the kind of at-one-with-the-universe feeling described by people who meditate. It's both soothing and exciting, the way nature itself is. I know without a doubt that this is what I was meant to do," Bell said.
 
Fantasy Artist Julie Bell has received several awards for her work, including nine awards at the 2014 Art Renewal Center's International Salon, where she won first and third place in the Animal Category and first place in the Imaginative Realism Category. 
 
"The Berkshire Museum is thrilled to host the first exhibition of Julie Bell's animal art. An award-winning fantasy and science fiction artist, Bell has created exquisite, lush portraits of animals in the wild in a style all her own," Jesse Kowalski, Berkshire Museum's Chief Curator said.
 
According to a press release: In 1989, Bell, a nationally ranked bodybuilder, began modeling for popular fantasy artist Boris Vallejo, with whom she soon fell in love and married. She was inspired to return to art, and in January 1992 her work appeared on the cover of Heavy Metal magazine. Since then, she has created advertisements for numerous companies, designed video game packaging art, and found work in the comic book industry, where she became the first woman to illustrate Conan the Barbarian for Marvel Comics. A field she worked in before becoming a fulltime mother to two successful artists – Anthony and David Palumbo.
 
The Berkshire Museum's annual gala will celebrate the work of Bell and host her as an honored guest on the evening of Saturday, June 15. Titled "Behind the Veil" (after one of Bell's works displayed in the accompanying exhibition), all funds raised will support educational programming at the Museum.
 
"The 2024 Berkshire Museum Gala Behind the Veil will be a truly unique event, as it will take place during a special exhibition highlighting the fantasy art of Julie Bell. Attendees will be able to enjoy the exhibition, a fabulous dinner by Chef Peter Platt, and celebrate the museum and the important role it plays as part of our community. Our annual major fundraising events each year supports the museum's educational programs, which is a cornerstone of our mission," said Kimberley Bush Tomio, Executive Director.
 

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PHS Community Challenges FY27 Budget Cuts

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The School Committee received an early look Wednesday at the proposed fiscal year 2027 facility budgets, and the Pittsfield High community argued that $653,000 would be too much of a burden for the school to bear. 

On Wednesday, during a meeting that adjourned past 10 p.m., school officials saw a more detailed overview of the spending proposal for Pittsfield's 14 schools and administration building.  

They accepted the presentation, recognizing that this is just the beginning of the budget process, as the decision on whether to close Morningside Community School still looms. The FY27 budget calendar plans the School Committee's vote in mid-April.

Under this plan, Pittsfield High School, with a proposed FY27 budget of around $8.1 million, would see a reduction of seven teachers (plus one teacher of deportment) and an assistant principal of teaching and learning, and a guidance counselor repurposed across the district.  

The administration said that after "right-sizing" the classrooms, there were initially 14 teacher reductions proposed for PHS. 

"While I truly appreciate the intentionality that has gone into developing the equity-based budget model, I am incredibly concerned that the things that make our PHS community strong are the very things now at risk," PHS teacher Kristen Negrini said. "Because when our school is facing a reduction of $653,000, 16 percent of total reductions, that impact is not just a number on a spreadsheet. It is the experience of our students." 

She said cuts to the high school budget is more than half of the districtwide $1.1 million in proposed instructional cuts. 

Student representative Elizabeth Klepetar said the "Home Under the Dome" is a family and community.  There is reportedly anxiety in the student body about losing their favorite teacher or activities, and Klepetar believes the cuts would be "catastrophic," from what she has seen. 

"Keep us in mind. Use student and faculty voice. Come to PHS and see what our everyday life looks like. If you spend time at PHS, you would see our teamwork and adaptability to our already vulnerable school," she said. 

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