Kiki Smith to Speak at Ventfort Hall

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LENOX, Mass. — Kiki Smith, a Professor of Costume Design at Smith College, will speak at Ventfort Hall on Tuesday, June 17 at 4 pm about the historic clothing collection at Smith College.
 
A tea will be served after her presentation.
 
According to a press release:
 
What can we learn from an old worn house dress or a group of aprons?  How about a 1940's Girl Scout uniform? Using illustrations from her book, Real Clothes, Real Lives: 200 Years of What Women Wore, Kiki will speak about the historic clothing collection at Smith College, what it includes and why the pieces are great resources for research in many areas. The collection was founded 45 years ago by a student and is based there in the basement of the Theatre Building near the Costume Shop. The collection now numbers over 4000 pieces.
 
Kiki Smith has been a professor of Costume Design at the Smith College Theatre Department in Northampton for over 50 year and is the Director of the Smith College Historic Clothing Collection. Her book "Real Clothes, Real Lives: 200 Years of What Women Wore" (Rizzoli), published in September 2023, documents garments and accessories that are what she calls "real" clothes worn by "real" women for all aspects of their lives.  It has developed a focus on the "uniforms" of women's many roles and jobs. An exhibit of selections from the book was part of a 9-month exhibition at the New York Historical in New York City, opening in September 2024. She is also a professional costume and set designer, working with theatre companies including Shakespeare & Co. in Lenox, MA and the Talking Band in New York, and received an Obie Award for a production with that company. She is an Alum of Smith College with advanced degrees in Theatre design from the University of Virginia and the University of Texas in Austin.
 
Tickets are $45. Members receive a discount code for $5 off all ticket prices. Students 22 and under are $22. Ticket pricing includes access to the mansion throughout the day of this event from 10 am to 4 pm. Reservations are strongly encouraged as seats are limited. Walk-ins accommodated as space allows. For reservations visit https://gildedage.org/pages/calendar or call (413) 637-3206. All tickets are nonrefundable and non-exchangeable. The historical mansion is located at 104 Walker St. in Lenox.
 

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Housing Planned for Former St. Joe's High School

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Nearly a decade after the facility last operated as a high school, the former Saint Joseph's is staged for new life as housing. 

Last week, the Community Development Board determined that subdivision approval was not required for a plan of land the Roman Catholic Bishop of Springfield submitted for 22 Maplewood Ave.

CT Management Group is under contract to purchase the property for conversion into market-rate housing, developer David Carver confirmed on Monday when contacted by iBerkshires. The closing date and related matters are in process. 

In 2017, the then 120-year-old St. Joseph Central High School ceased operations. After the COVID-19 pandemic hit, it sheltered people without homes before The Pearl, a 40-bed downtown shelter, was finished a few years ago. 

Brian Koczela of BEK Associates, who submitted the plan on behalf of the diocese, explained to the board that the diocese is conveying out the former St. Joseph's High School. (The bishop is listed as owner on deeds on behalf of the church.)

The high school is comprised of four parcels with different owner in the middle, he said, and they need to be combined for the conveyance. This refers to the transfer and assignment of a property right or interest from one individual or entity to another. 

"At the very southerly end, at the back of the high school, there's a 66-foot-wide strip, I believe, and that strip goes all the way from North Street to Maplewood, and it includes a rectory," Koczela explained.  

"In essence, what we're really doing is just separating out that small parcel from the rectory."

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