Connecticut Parks
Phone: Visitor Information 203-834-1896
How does our environment influence our creativity? Weir Farm National Historic Site is a place where visitors and artists can explore this question in various ways.
To American Impressionist painter J. Alden Weir (1852 ? 1919), his beloved Connecticut farm provided him with the means to explore his emotional and spiritual impressions of nature. Weir and his contemporaries (such as Childe Hassam and John Twachtman) were inspired by French Impressionism?s emphasis on painting outdoors and trying to capture light and motion in landscape. The American artists, though, also imbued their work with a strong sense of their intimate emotional relationships with their homeplaces. For 37 years, Weir and visiting friends painted hundreds of canvases featuring the gentle rolling hills, rocky pastures, and human and animal life of Weir Farm. After Weir?s death in 1919, the next two generations of farm occupants were also artists. Weir?s daughter Dorothy Weir Young lived here for thirty-odd years with her husband, the renowned sculptor Mahonri Young. After Young?s death, the farm was sold to his friend and landscape painter Sperry Andrews and his wife Doris. Each generation of occupants newly found creative inspiration in the fields, studios, and woods of Weir Farm. Above all, each generation recognized the artistic legacy and spirit of the place and helped preserve it.
Weir Farm?s gentle, pastoral landscape, once characteristic of New England, is now a rare vestige of 19th century life. Park visitors today can still see many of the landscape features, vistas and buildings painted by Weir and other artists. In addition to experiencing this historically significant artistic landscape, visitors are welcome to explore their own artistic potential here by painting, sketching, and photographing the site.
The National Park Service and its private partner the Weir Farm Trust also share the mission of providing professional artists with more structured opportunities to engage in creative activity, such as the Trust?s Visiting and Resident Artists programs. Weir Farm is at once a memory of our artistic past, a studio space for artists now, and a promise for continued inspiration in our artistic future.
For information on:
The Visiting Artist Program
The Artist-In-Residence Program
The Weir Farm Trust
Directions
Car - Weir Farm NHS, 735 Nod Hill Road, Wilton, CT 06897
PLEASE NOTE: Our parking lot CANNOT accomodate RVs, buses or other large vehicles. We're sorry for any inconvenience this may cause. For additional information please call the visitor center at (203) 834-1896.
***FROM THE SOUTH OR NORTH***
NORTH
-Take I-84 to exit 3 for Route 7 South in Danbury.
SOUTH
-Take the Merritt Parkway or I-95 to Route 7 North in Norwalk.
THEN
-Follow Route 7 to the Branchville section of Ridgefield.
-Turn onto Route 102 west at the light.
-Take 2nd left onto Old Branchville Road.
-Turn left at first stop sign onto Nod Hill Road.
-Follow Nod Hill Road 3/4 mile to top of hill.
-The parking lot is on the left and the Visitor Center is on the right at 735 Nod Hill Road.
***FROM THE WEST***
-Take RT 287 to Route 684 North.
-Follow Route 684 to Exit 6 for Route 35 (Katonah, New York).
-At the end of the exit ramp turn right and follow Route 35 East into Ridgefield, CT.
-At the
More info at http://www.nps.gov/wefa
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