
Atom Moore: Second Nature
June 11
Atom Moore's macro photography fuses luxury timepieces with Wave Hill's flora, finding surprising parallels between mechanical gears and botanical structures. A meditation on time: human-made versus natural rhythms.






Hudson Hill
Perched above the Hudson with sweeping views of the Palisades, this 28-acre estate feels worlds away from the city. Wander through wildflower paths in spring, water lily pools in summer, and historic mansions that once hosted Mark Twain.
Tips

June 11
Atom Moore's macro photography fuses luxury timepieces with Wave Hill's flora, finding surprising parallels between mechanical gears and botanical structures. A meditation on time: human-made versus natural rhythms.

June 11
Step into a surreal landscape dyed with red pigment from Rosa rugosa roses, where floral imprints slowly fade as a meditation on displacement and impermanence. The installation traces this East Asian flower's journey from a lost Korean island to the Hudson River shoreline, inviting you to experience memory through scent, color, and a more-than-human perspective.

June 11
David Antonio Cruz turns the idea of home inside out: it's not a building, it's the people who hold you. His dreamy portraits of chosen kin, immersive installation, and forest-drenched drawings explore Black, brown, and queer belonging through paint, performance, and memory.
Hudson HillOpen






Perched above the Hudson with sweeping views of the Palisades, this 28-acre estate feels worlds away from the city. Wander through wildflower paths in spring, water lily pools in summer, and historic mansions that once hosted Mark Twain.
Tips

June 11
Atom Moore's macro photography fuses luxury timepieces with Wave Hill's flora, finding surprising parallels between mechanical gears and botanical structures. A meditation on time: human-made versus natural rhythms.

June 11
Step into a surreal landscape dyed with red pigment from Rosa rugosa roses, where floral imprints slowly fade as a meditation on displacement and impermanence. The installation traces this East Asian flower's journey from a lost Korean island to the Hudson River shoreline, inviting you to experience memory through scent, color, and a more-than-human perspective.

June 11
David Antonio Cruz turns the idea of home inside out: it's not a building, it's the people who hold you. His dreamy portraits of chosen kin, immersive installation, and forest-drenched drawings explore Black, brown, and queer belonging through paint, performance, and memory.