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...Soho
reborn in the lower Hudson Valley - our
favorite place to get some culture...
Mission
GAGA Arts Center
A Non-Profit Center for Visual & Performing Art Experiences
GAGA Arts Center is located 35 miles from Manhattan in the lower Hudson Valley within the Garnerville Arts & Industrial Center, an historic 19th century textile mill. GAGA provides unique and vibrant performance, gallery and creative space and presents artistic programs of exceptional merit for the benefit of a multi-cultural population. It is our mission to preserve the sanctity of the original textile mill buildings and creekside landscape, while offering an inspired setting which honors individual expression in a modern age.
Vision
GAGA Art Center’s vision is to build an enduring artisan community around this unique venue that supports the arts, attracts patrons and enriches and educates the public.
GAGA Galleries

The GAGA Art Center has over 15,000 square
feet of gallery space. Exhibitions of new work,
by established and emerging artists are presented throughout the
year. Students and developing artists are invited to submit their
work for our annual student and juried membership exhibitions.
For information on upcoming
exhibitions: click here
For information on past
exhibitions: click here
GAGA Events

Dance - Music - Art Exhibitions - Educational
Programs - Arts Workshops
GAGA Studios
- 
Art Studios large and small for painters,
sculptors, woodworkers, metalsmiths, photographers, ceramicists,
musicians - artists and artisans of every type.
info - 845-947-1155 or www.garnervillearts.com
We gladly thank the following sponsors
 
The Garnerville
Depot - A Brief History

1760 - Grist mill owned by Cornelius Osborn
operates on the
--------- Minesciongo Creek waterfall.
1830 - John Glass purchases 45 acres along Railroad Avenue
---------and builds first textile
mill making calico print.
1831 - Mr. Glass and 13 others killed in shipboard explosion.
1838 - Plant is purchased by the Garner brothers and expanded,
---------now employing more than
800 people.
1853 - Textile mill is making 11 million yards of cloth per year.
---------Workers homes & surrounding
village named Garnerville
1860 - Civil War. Rockland Print Works manufactures uniforms
---------for the Union Army of the
North.
1915 - Textile mill now producing 1.6 million yards of cloth per
----------week. Rockland Print Works
literally owns the village,
---------from the streetlights to
the private police force.
1929 - The Great Depression begins. The textile mill closes.
---------Buildings abandoned, machinery
sold and moved.
1934 - William Larkin and 39 local businessmen purchase the
---------complex with the help of
a $150,000 loan from FDR’s
---------Reconstruction Finance Corporation.
1940 - World War II. Uniforms made for American soldiers.
1950 - United Wire Goods Company is the first to start hiring
---------Puerto Rican and Dominican
workers.
1980 - Textile industry gone. Artists & light industry move
in.
2001 - First Garnerville Arts Festival attracts 1000 visitors.
2008 - GAGA Arts Center is born.

More
about GAGA?
The
Holding Company- how lives flow through brick and mortar
a film by Frank Vitale - order
form click here
GREEN ENERGY
at GAGA...?
With acres of open
rooftops for solar panels and wind generators, and the Minesciongo
Creek to drive water turbines, plus geothermal storage in the
upper pond, the potential for a green energy showcase at GAGA
is enormous.
Visible metering would
enable visitors to monitor the creation of green energy in real
time, creating an opportunity for ‘real world’ understanding
with the students participating in GAGA’s Encounters with
the Arts programs.
Imagine--green energy workspaces,
green energy education and training, green energy employment.
A green village with shops, galleries, and eateries, all promoting
a sustainable global environment.
This is our dream...if
you can help, please call 845-947-7108
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