“Long Island at War” Exhibit Features Photographs From Xiomáro

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Long Island at War
Long Island at War

Photographs created by Xiomáro (pronounced SEE-oh-MAH-ro) will be included in the Long Island Museum’s large scale exhibit Long Island at War:  Battle Front and Home Front, from May 23 to December 29, 2014, in Stony Brook, New York.

He is the only contemporary artist to be included in an exhibit featuring over 200 artifacts, paintings, and historical photographs drawn from many prominent museum and private collections.

Xiomáro’s photographs from the William Floyd Estate in Mastic and Theodore Roosevelt’s Sagamore Hill in Oyster Bay were selected by the museum to visually unify the exhibit’s six sections on each of America’s military engagements.

The artist created the photographs under commissions by the National Park Service.  William Floyd, who signed the Declaration of Independence and fought in the Revolutionary War under George Washington, will be prominently featured with photographs of his house in Mastic, his rarely seen ceremonial sword and the Chippendale desk from which he worked.  His descendants’ involvement in subsequent wars is also included.  A photograph of a Civil War recruitment poster represents his grandson’s service in the Union Army.  William Floyd Nichols’ World War II jacket and other memorabilia are displayed in another photograph taken in one of the dining rooms of the house in Mastic, which is open to the public as part of Fire Island National Seashore.

Civil War Recruitment Poster
Civil War Recruitment Poster

For the Spanish-American War, Long Island’s other National Park comes into view with an imposing photograph of Theodore Roosevelt resplendent in his Rough Rider uniform.  Xiomáro created the close-up from a painting hanging in Sagamore Hill National Historic Site.

Xio is a nationally exhibited artist who uses photography to breathe life into iconic American figures.  His work has been covered by The New York Times, The Huffington Post, Fine Art Connoisseur and many other national media outlets.  He began as an Artist-in-Residence at Weir Farm National Historic Site in Connecticut, where he continues as a Visiting Artist.  His solo exhibit at Harvard University features his Sagamore Hill collection.

An opportunity to delve deeper into the William Floyd and Sagamore Hill photographs will be offered to the public through an Artist Talk and Q&A that Xiomáro will be presenting on Sunday, October 19, 2014 from 2:00 pm to 3:30 pm at the Long Island Museum’s Gillespie Room located in the Carriage Museum Building.

Long Island at War is the first major museum exhibition centering on the region’s many significant and continuing connections to American military history.  Long Island has been a crucial and often unsung player in nearly every American war.  From Brooklyn to Montauk, generations of Long Island men and women have served and sacrificed for the country’s cause, and the region has been essential to the industrial supply, combat training, and coastal defense of the nation.  The region’s military role has been vital, multifaceted, and ever-present:  the Battle of Long Island in 1776, the essential war products created by Grumman Corporation and other Long Island-based companies in World War II, the solemn resting place provided to today’s fallen military heroes at Calverton National Cemetery.

The Long Island Museum is a Smithsonian Affiliate and is located at 1200 Route 25A, Stony Brook, NY  11790.  A free e-book containing some of Xiomáro’s work is available at xiomaro.com.

Published by Xiomáro

Nationally exhibited artist, photographer, speaker, teacher, and curator. Author of "Weir Farm National Historic Site" (Arcadia Publishing). www.xiomaro.com.

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