Clark Art: In Concert With Performing Artists In Residence

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — On Sunday, Dec. 15 at 2 pm, the Clark Art Institute presents an afternoon of chamber music in the Michael Conforti Pavilion. 
 
Jeewon Park (piano) and Edward Arron (cello), artistic directors of the Clark's Performing Artists in Residence program, are joined by Amy Schwartz Moretti (violin) and Che-Yen Chen (viola). The program includes G. F. Handel/J. Halvorsen's Passacaglia for Violin and Cello, Georges Enescu's Concertstück for Viola and Piano, W. A. Mozart's Piano Quartet in G Minor (K. 478), and Gabriel Fauré's Piano Quartet in C Minor (op. 15).
 
Jeewon Park made her debut at age twelve performing Chopin's First Concerto with the Korean Symphony Orchestra. Park has since performed in such prestigious venues as Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center's Alice Tully Hall, Merkin Hall, the 92nd Street Y, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Seoul Arts Center in South Korea. Park and her husband Edward Arron are in their twelfth season as co-artistic directors of the Clark's Performing Artists in Residence series.
 
Since making his New York recital debut in 2000 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Edward Arron has appeared as a soloist with major orchestras and as a chamber musician throughout North America, Europe, and Asia. He tours and records as a member of the renowned Ehnes String Quartet and is a regular guest with the Boston and Seattle Chamber Music Societies as well as the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. Arron has served on the music faculty at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst since 2016.
 
Before becoming the inaugural Director of Mercer University's McDuffie Center for Strings, Macon, Georgia, in 2007, Amy Schwartz Moretti was concertmaster of the Florida Orchestra and the Oregon Symphony. She has premiered concertos for Matt Catingub and Christopher Schmitz, collaborated with James Ehnes for Prokofiev's Sonata for Two Violin and Bartók's 44 Duos (both receiving consecutive Juno Awards for Classical Album of the Year in 2014 and 2015), and performed the complete cycle of Beethoven String Quartets in Seoul, South Korea with the Ehnes Quartet.
 
Professor of Viola at University of California, Los Angeles's Herb Alpert School of Music, Che-Yen Chen previously served on the faculty of the University of Southern California's Thornton School of Music. Chen joined the renowned Ehnes Quartet in 2023 and has performed and taught in music festivals across North America and Asia. As the founding and former member of the Formosa Quartet, he won the first prize in the 2006 London International String Quartet Competition. Chen was the principal violist of the San Diego Symphony and Mainly Mozart Festival Orchestra and has appeared as guest principal with other major orchestras in North America.
 
Tickets $25 ($20 members, free for students with valid ID). For accessibility questions, call 413 458 0524. Advance registration required. Capacity is limited. No refunds.
 
This performance is presented through the support of the Sea Island Foundation. Jeewon Park performs on a Steinway & Sons piano, provided through a special arrangement with the firm.

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Williamstown Recognizes Local Farmer, Library Director at Town Meeting

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff

Win Chenail has had a farm stand at his Luce Road dairy farm since 1965. The Chenails have been farming in Williamstown since 1916. Right, Select Board Chair Stephanie Boyd thanks board members whose terms were up this year. 
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — For more than 60 years, Winthrop F. Chenail has been selling his bountiful crops to residents of Williamstown and beyond. 
 
"The family dairy farm at the top of Luce Road has been an anchor farm in our community since 1916," said Elisabeth Goodman. "His farm stand has been operating since 1965 and that's where we get our sweet corn, homegrown tomatoes, cucumbers, broccoli, cabbage, peppers, summer squash flowers, and pumpkins that he and his grandson Nick Chenail grow as a side business to the family dairy farm."
 
Win Chenail's integrity, excellence, and dedication of service to the citizens of Williamstown was recognized at the annual town meeting on Tuesday with the 11th annual Scarborough Solomon Flint Community Service Award.
 
"At age 90, Win has not slowed down much," Goodman said. "I never did get to speak to him on the phone when notifying him about this award, as his wife told me he was busy in the greenhouse repotting 2,000 tomato plants."
 
Five generations have worked the Mount Williams Dairy Farm that Chenail's grandparents purchased, and Chenail's also been a caretaker of 130 acres of town land at the Spruces and Burbank properties. 
 
"The Chenail family has been managing the land since the 1950s keeping the fields green, lush, and productive with sustainable management practices," she said. "They fertilize it with manure from the dairy farm and lime as needed. With such careful, long-term stewardship of the soil, the land has continued to be fertile and productive for half a century under his fare."
 
Chenail thanked his family and fellow farmers for contributing to the welfare of the community and said it had been a privilege to keep the town-owned fields in farming. 
 
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