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Box 36

 Container

Contains 15 Results:

Exhibition: Press releases, 1970-1975, undated

 File — Box: 36, Folder: 1
Scope and Contents From the Series: Dorothy Yepez owned the Dorothy Yepez Galleries (DYG), also known as the Dorothy Yepez Gallery, the Dorothy Yepez Art Center, Inc. and “Happy Manor” Art Gallery. DYG was located on Bloomingdale Road (Route 3 and 365) and five miles from Saranac Lake in New York. The purpose of the galleries was “to promote education and culture in art, by means of exhibitions, lectures, classes, radio, television, cinema, discussions, and any other media current at the time. Its goal involved better...
Dates: Other: 1970-1975, undated

Exhibition: Reynold Weidenaar, 1962-1963

 File — Box: 36, Folder: 2
Scope and Contents From the Series: Dorothy Yepez owned the Dorothy Yepez Galleries (DYG), also known as the Dorothy Yepez Gallery, the Dorothy Yepez Art Center, Inc. and “Happy Manor” Art Gallery. DYG was located on Bloomingdale Road (Route 3 and 365) and five miles from Saranac Lake in New York. The purpose of the galleries was “to promote education and culture in art, by means of exhibitions, lectures, classes, radio, television, cinema, discussions, and any other media current at the time. Its goal involved better...
Dates: Other: 1962-1963

Exhibition: Saranac Lake Spring Art Festival, 1964

 File — Box: 36, Folder: 3
Scope and Contents From the Series: Dorothy Yepez owned the Dorothy Yepez Galleries (DYG), also known as the Dorothy Yepez Gallery, the Dorothy Yepez Art Center, Inc. and “Happy Manor” Art Gallery. DYG was located on Bloomingdale Road (Route 3 and 365) and five miles from Saranac Lake in New York. The purpose of the galleries was “to promote education and culture in art, by means of exhibitions, lectures, classes, radio, television, cinema, discussions, and any other media current at the time. Its goal involved better...
Dates: Other: 1964

Exhibition: Saranac Lake Spring Art Festival - Masterpieces of Religious Art, 1964

 File — Box: 36, Folder: 4
Scope and Contents From the Series: Dorothy Yepez owned the Dorothy Yepez Galleries (DYG), also known as the Dorothy Yepez Gallery, the Dorothy Yepez Art Center, Inc. and “Happy Manor” Art Gallery. DYG was located on Bloomingdale Road (Route 3 and 365) and five miles from Saranac Lake in New York. The purpose of the galleries was “to promote education and culture in art, by means of exhibitions, lectures, classes, radio, television, cinema, discussions, and any other media current at the time. Its goal involved better...
Dates: Other: 1964

Exhibition: Saranac Lake Spring Art Festival - Vis-A-Vis, Prints and Photographs from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1964

 File — Box: 36, Folder: 5
Scope and Contents From the Series: Dorothy Yepez owned the Dorothy Yepez Galleries (DYG), also known as the Dorothy Yepez Gallery, the Dorothy Yepez Art Center, Inc. and “Happy Manor” Art Gallery. DYG was located on Bloomingdale Road (Route 3 and 365) and five miles from Saranac Lake in New York. The purpose of the galleries was “to promote education and culture in art, by means of exhibitions, lectures, classes, radio, television, cinema, discussions, and any other media current at the time. Its goal involved better...
Dates: Other: 1964

Exhibition: Serigraphs by Pat Vaccaro, 1963

 File — Box: 36, Folder: 6
Scope and Contents From the Series: Dorothy Yepez owned the Dorothy Yepez Galleries (DYG), also known as the Dorothy Yepez Gallery, the Dorothy Yepez Art Center, Inc. and “Happy Manor” Art Gallery. DYG was located on Bloomingdale Road (Route 3 and 365) and five miles from Saranac Lake in New York. The purpose of the galleries was “to promote education and culture in art, by means of exhibitions, lectures, classes, radio, television, cinema, discussions, and any other media current at the time. Its goal involved better...
Dates: Other: 1963

Exhibition: Soldiers of the American Revolution, 1976

 File — Box: 36, Folder: 7
Scope and Contents From the Series: Dorothy Yepez owned the Dorothy Yepez Galleries (DYG), also known as the Dorothy Yepez Gallery, the Dorothy Yepez Art Center, Inc. and “Happy Manor” Art Gallery. DYG was located on Bloomingdale Road (Route 3 and 365) and five miles from Saranac Lake in New York. The purpose of the galleries was “to promote education and culture in art, by means of exhibitions, lectures, classes, radio, television, cinema, discussions, and any other media current at the time. Its goal involved better...
Dates: Other: 1976

Exhibition: Stanley Cohen, 1961-1963

 File — Box: 36, Folder: 8
Scope and Contents From the Series: Dorothy Yepez owned the Dorothy Yepez Galleries (DYG), also known as the Dorothy Yepez Gallery, the Dorothy Yepez Art Center, Inc. and “Happy Manor” Art Gallery. DYG was located on Bloomingdale Road (Route 3 and 365) and five miles from Saranac Lake in New York. The purpose of the galleries was “to promote education and culture in art, by means of exhibitions, lectures, classes, radio, television, cinema, discussions, and any other media current at the time. Its goal involved better...
Dates: Other: 1961-1963

Exhibition: Texas Boys Choir, 1964

 File — Box: 36, Folder: 9
Scope and Contents From the Series: Dorothy Yepez owned the Dorothy Yepez Galleries (DYG), also known as the Dorothy Yepez Gallery, the Dorothy Yepez Art Center, Inc. and “Happy Manor” Art Gallery. DYG was located on Bloomingdale Road (Route 3 and 365) and five miles from Saranac Lake in New York. The purpose of the galleries was “to promote education and culture in art, by means of exhibitions, lectures, classes, radio, television, cinema, discussions, and any other media current at the time. Its goal involved better...
Dates: Other: 1964

Exhibition: UNESCO Traveling Exhibition, 1960

 File — Box: 36, Folder: 10
Scope and Contents From the Series: Dorothy Yepez owned the Dorothy Yepez Galleries (DYG), also known as the Dorothy Yepez Gallery, the Dorothy Yepez Art Center, Inc. and “Happy Manor” Art Gallery. DYG was located on Bloomingdale Road (Route 3 and 365) and five miles from Saranac Lake in New York. The purpose of the galleries was “to promote education and culture in art, by means of exhibitions, lectures, classes, radio, television, cinema, discussions, and any other media current at the time. Its goal involved better...
Dates: Other: 1960