As the state aims to have Vermont fully open for business by Independence Day, Stowe is giving local merchants and service providers several more months of relaxed zoning rules as they try to keep customers coming â and safe.
The selectboard last week extended by half a year its interim zoning bylaws, until Nov. 15. The temporary rules were adopted â and renewed three times â in 2020. This is the fourth renewal.
This means Stowe businesses can continue offering outdoor seating, tents, special signs and other things that would normally require town approval without having to go through the zoning process.
The decision extends the allowances even as Gov. Phil Scottâs âVermont Forward re-opening plan for the state would eliminate COVID-19 restrictions after July 1, âin order to give local businesses the greatest chance to recover economically,â according to Stowe Town Manager Charles Safford.
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Andrew Yang has led every public poll in the mayor’s race until now. Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams has edged him out for the No. 1 spot for the first time in a new survey, our Sally Goldenberg reports.
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Skarstedt’s fascinating new exhibition Painter / Sculptor brings together a sculpture and a painting by nine artists who says the gallery, ‘have mastered both painting and sculpture to formulate a unique artistic language’: Alberto Giacometti, Willem de Kooning, Martin Kippenberger (see his startling ambiguously-toned vision of himself as a persecuted heavy-drinking artist), Georg Baselitz, Eric Fischl, George Condo, Jeff Koons, Dana Schutz and KAWS. The highlight is a room in which Giacometti’s plaster of his brother, Diego, looks across to a painting of his mother; and de Kooning’s ‘Large Torso’ (one of only 22 bronzes he made) faces a late painting. Both were masters of both media, but there’s no doubt that the former was first and foremost a sculptor, the latter primarily a painter.
Galleries ability to physically attend depended on the health situation in their home countries.
April 27, 2021
The Vessel and The Shed at the Hudson Yards during the coronavirus pandemic on April 9, 2020 in New York City. Photo: Noam Galai/Getty Images.
The art industry may breathe a small sigh of relief: Frieze New York, one of the first major in-person art fairs in over a year, is due to open next week. Despite widespread enthusiasm for the return of business IRL, however, many international dealers initially planned to set up booths in New York have had to cancel their participation.
Around 22 galleries a full third of the initial 66-exhibitor list have opted out of physically attending since the lineup was released on January 14; 17 galleries, largely from New York, took their place. The vast majority of those that opted out of in-person attendance were international dealers facing new infection waves and uneven vaccine rollouts in their home bases, as well as ongoing restr
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