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ALMANAC WEEKLY ALMANAC WEEKLY ALMANAC WEEKLY A miscellany of Hudson Valley art, adventure and ideas | Calendar & Classifieds | Issue 34 | August 24 – 31 page 8 s REMAINS OF A ROADSIDE ATTRACTION Discover the Emile Brunel Studio & Sculpture Garden in Boiceville DION OGUST | ALMANAC WEEKLY

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Page 1: s ALMANAC WEEKLY - Olivetown.olive.ny.us/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/Brunel-Park-Remains-of... · Discover the Emile Brunel Studio & Sculpture Garden in Boiceville DION OGUST | ALMANAC

ALMANAC WEEKLYALMANAC WEEKLYALMANAC WEEKLYA miscellany of Hudson Valley art, adventure and ideas | Calendar & Classifieds | Issue 34 | August 24 – 31

p a g e 8

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REMAINS OF A ROADSIDE

ATTRACTIONDiscover the Emile Brunel Studio & Sculpture Garden in Boiceville

DION OGUST | ALMANAC WEEKLY

Page 2: s ALMANAC WEEKLY - Olivetown.olive.ny.us/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/Brunel-Park-Remains-of... · Discover the Emile Brunel Studio & Sculpture Garden in Boiceville DION OGUST | ALMANAC

A L M A N A C W E E K LY A L M A N A C W E E K LY A L M A N A C W E E K LYA L M A N A C W E E K LY A L M A N A C W E E K LY A L M A N A C W E E K LY2 3August 24, 2017August 24, 2017

According to best-sell-ing author Neil Gaiman – a transplant from England who now lives part of the

year in Ulster County – a large part of the inspiration for his fantasy novel Ameri-can Gods (recently turned into a Starz cable TV series) came from his fascina-tion with “roadside attractions.” There’s something quintessentially American about these imaginative phenomena that popped up all over the country as its highway system spread in the mid-20th century; apparently the Old World doesn’t really have anything comparable. Is it our romance with the automobile,

Remains of a roadside attractionDiscover the Emile Brunel Studio & Sculpture Garden in Boiceville

DION OGUST | ALMANAC WEEKLY

E X P L O ∏ EE X P L O ∏ EE X P L O ∏ E

or merely our lack of cultivated taste that accounts for their proliferation on this side of the Pond? For Gaiman, the spark came from a gigantic sculpture of a cheese somewhere in the Upper Midwest. But New York State certainly has its share of roadside oddities. Growing up on Long Island, this correspondent spent much of her summers at the beach on Napeague Bay, near Montauk, where my grandparents kept a little Airstream camper. No road trip out to the East End was complete without visits to the Big Duck, near Riverhead, or the 12-foot-tall painted concrete statues of dueling musketeers at the Casa Basso restaurant in Westhampton. Similarly odd tourist attractions could readily be spotted in places like Lake George and Old Forge in the Adirondacks. They weren’t high art, perhaps; but for a small child, they were magical friends. The mid-Hudson Valley offers its own variety of postcardworthy destinations. Some are easy to spot, like the giant Prozac capsule and the Fork in the Road sculpture in Dutchess County, or Gnome Chomsky at Kelder’s Farm in Kerhonkson. Others take a bit more hunting, such as the cliffside petroglyphs carved and painted by Zadock Pratt in Prattsville.

In the case of the Emile Brunel Studio and Sculpture Garden in Boiceville, the site was a major roadside attraction before World War II. Then known as Le Chalet Indien resort, it became the summer home of Harold Prince and Max Ernst; regular visitors included Enrico Caruso, George M. Cohan, Edward VIII

and Wallis Simpson. Proprietor Emile Brunel counted Franklin D. and Eleanor Roosevelt among his personal friends. Then Route 28 got widened and relocated, Brunel died and the property, once approaching 80 acres in size was broken up. A pioneering photographer born in Châteauneuf, France, Brunel

had come to the US in 1904 and traveled through the Western states, where he became fascinated with Native American cultures. After settling in Boiceville in 1918, he began adorning his property with sculptures inspired by indigenous art (though somewhat lacking in authenticity or artistic sophistication). Beginning with a wire mesh core filled with rocks, then covering them with concrete, he crafted totem poles, animal figures and statues of a standing Native man (30 feet in height) and kneeling woman. Seven of the surviving sculptures have been consolidated onto a smaller parcel of land, where Brunel’s Arts and Crafts-style former home and studio – adorned with carved bas-reliefs, also Indian-themed – still stands. In recent decades, the site has been named to the National Register of Historic Places and a collapsed totem pole sculpture restored. Yes, you can pay a visit: The Emile Brunel Studio and Sculpture Garden are located on Da Silva Road, just off Route 28 in Boiceville. To learn more, start with http://bit.ly/2vWpiXf. A description of the statues for self-guided tours is available from the owners. If you knock on their door, they'll also provide you with a detailed Ulster Publishing article about the site and its origins.

– Frances Marion Platt

When it was known as Le Chalet Indien resort, it was the summer home of Harold Prince and Max Ernst; regular visitors included

Enrico Caruso, George M. Cohan, Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson.