"Lake George On the Water" with filmmaker Hannah DeGarmo

7:00 PM - 8:30 PM
Crandall Public Library
Christine L. McDonald Community Room

Event Details

Film viewing and discussion with filmmaker Hannah DeGarmo.

Lake George On the Water is a series of mini-documentaries telling the stories of people, places and traditions of the Lake George watershed. Produced by the Folklife Center with funds from the Champlain Valley National Heritage Partnership, the series is directed by Hannah DeGarmo, who also worked on an earlier series, Battenkill Inspired: The Flow of Creativity, Ingenuity and the River. DeGarmo is a Brooklyn-based writer, musician and filmmaker, currently working at an arts nonprofit in New York City.

This is one of a series of programs that supports the exhibitions, Water/Ways at the Chapman Museum, and Can We Save the Queen? in the Folklife Gallery, both on view November 23, 2019 to January 4, 2020.

This free program is produced by the Folklife Center at Crandall Public Library, and sponsored by New York Folklore with the support of the New York State Regional Economic Development Initiative, a program of Gov. Andrew Cuomo and NYS Legislature, and the National Endowment for the Arts. Water/Ways is a Museum on Main Street exhibition organized by the Smithsonian Institution. The New York tour of Water/Ways is made possible by the Museum Association of New York. Can We Save the Queen? is an original exhibition produced by the Folklife Center with funds from the New York State Council on the Arts-Folk Arts Program supported by Gov Andrew Cuomo and the NYS Legislature. Photo credit to Todd DeGarmo.

Event Type(s): Folklife Program
Age Group(s): All Ages
Presenter: Todd DeGarmo
Todd DeGarmo
(518) 792-6508 ext. 237