Mid-Winter Reunion on Friday, January 23, 2026

 

6:00 to 8:00 p.m. at The Winter Show in New York

 

$47/person

 

 

Drop by for good wine and conversation as you start the new year!

A limited number of spaces to enter The Show on Friday afternoon at a discounted General Admission rate will be available on a first-come, first-serve basis. Check back soon for details. 

 

TICKETS

 

 

Connect with colleagues and alumni at this beloved gathering at the 72nd annual Winter Show at the Park Avenue Armory in the historic Board of Officers Room. Special thanks to Helen Allen and her team for welcoming Attingham again this year!

Tickets are $47 per person (+ $3 processing fee). Registration closes on January 21. Payment by check will be accepted at the door for a limited number of walk-up Attingham and SOWF alumni, so please buy your ticket in advance with the button above.

We look forward to welcoming prospective Attingham course applicants and colleagues from the Society of Winterthur Fellows, an alumni organization serving two MA programs offered by Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library and the University of Delaware.

 

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We encourage you to return to The Show for these enlightening panel discussions with Attingham alumni: 

 

Shaping Taste: Asian Ceramics and the Making of American Art & Design” featuring

David L. Barquist ’86, RCS ’13, Ulysses Grant Dietz ’83, Elizabeth A. Williams ’08, as well as Glenn Adamson and Monika Bincsik  |  Saturday, January 24, 2:30 – 3:30 p.m.

 

Guardians of the Past & Present: Conservation in Action” moderated by

Peter Trippi ’95, RCS ’00 with panelist Alexandra A. Kirtley ’99, SC ’24, as well as Abed Haddad and Rosa Lowinger  |  Sunday, January 25, 1:30PM – 2:30PM

 

 

Special thanks to The Winter Show and our colleagues in the SOWF. We look forward to seeing you in January! 

 

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The Armory building was completed in 1881 and the Board of Officers Room is one of the few surviving Herter Brothers interiors in the country. Herter Brothers was a top cabinet-making and interior design firm in the mid-19th century and designed the Fifth Avenue mansion of William H. Vanderbilt (now demolished). This room was exquisitely restored in 2013 and still retains the original painted surfaces and magnificent mahogany woodwork.