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OVERVIEW
Once
considered New Castle’s “best kept secret”,
the word is out on the Hoyt Institute of Fine
Arts and its vision to “provide the best
possible arts to the greatest number of people”!
This thriving regional arts center and museum, once
home to the Hoyt family, now houses more than 50
arts classes and workshops, 24 annual exhibits,
annual cultural festivals, and school programs in
two stately 1917 mansions on five acres of New
Castle’s residential north hill. The Hoyt’s
mission “to encourage an awareness, understanding,
appreciation, and practice of the Arts & Humanities
through visual, educational, and enrichment
programming for all ages” remains central to its
synergy.
Once quiet homes to a generous family, the grand
architecture now bustles with daily and seasonal
activity. The Greek Revival estate of May Emma
Hoyt, now known simply as Hoyt East, is the “heart”
of the museum’s programming and regularly attracts
more than 20,000 visitors per year.
Inside, the former living and dining rooms have been
transformed into galleries, the large bedrooms to
classrooms and offices, and the fruit cellars to
ceramics, photography, stained glass, and metal-smithing
studios. The neighboring Tudor Revival estate of
brother Alex Crawford Hoyt, known today as Hoyt
West, retains much of its original historical
character, as well, in period rooms set within
the homes elaborate carpentry and leaded glass
windows. This elegant setting is available for
private, corporate, and wedding occasions.
Program improvements continue to compliment facility
upgrades resulting in heightened public
experiences demonstrated by Schindler from
the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2005
and the
Harlem Renaissance exhibits of Jacob Lawrence
and Romare Bearden in 2006 and the artists Charles
Burchfield and Wolf Kahn in 2007. Other
exhibits to look forward to include Winslow
Homer: The Illustrator (1857-1888) and the
Art of the Amusement Park: Growing Up in
Southwestern PA.
Despite its growing reputation, many visitor are
still surprised at the “metropolitan” quality of
cultural opportunities offered from this
neighborhood venue, including school programs,
artist residences, annual festivals, concerts, and
regional and national art competitions. Past jurors have included artists
Faith Ringgold and Judy Chicago
and Newsweek Art Critic, Peter Plagens.
Consistent with our mission to “encourage an
awareness, understanding, appreciation and practice
of the Arts & Humanities” the Hoyt offers numerous
school and public programs including curriculums,
lectures, guided tours, and other outreach
activities surrounding current exhibitions.
New additions also include the Hoyt Artist’s
Association (HAA) for professional artists, programs
for home-schooled, a developing print making
program, and leadership roles developing the New
Wilmington Community Arts & Heritage Festival.
Membership is available to individuals, families,
businesses, and philanthropies on numerous levels
providing the backbone of programming support.
The Hoyt Institute of Fine Arts is not to be
confused with the Hoyt Foundation and does not
provide grants or college scholarships.
For more information on how to become involved with
“keeping the arts alive” in your community, please
phone 724/652-2882 or visit
www.hoytartcenter.org.
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