Olana is the most intact environment of the historical artist in the United States and includes the main house and its extensive collections, a historical farm complex and the 250 hectare naturalistic landscape, which was designed by the Frederic Church between 1860 and 1900. Despite his remarkable preservation of the remarkable, some of Olana's state structures of Olana and New York, which were annoyed. In the absence of these structures, the stories of the people they built and used, and the functions they served are also lost. Visible basics and archaeological evidence survive for some of these missing structures. In other cases, only photographs, cards or oral stories bear from their past existence. These buildings may have disappeared, but their stories remain embedded in Olana's landscape. For “What is missing?” The Olana Partnership commissioned the artists Ellen Harvey and Gabriela Salazar to create local-specific outdoor works of art that react to these missing pieces of Olana's landscape history.
“What is missing?” Works of art in the Olana landscape
