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Holiday Open House and Artist Talk

03 Wednesday Dec 2025

Posted by Eve Ogden Schaub in arts, local event, Pawlet Happenings

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artist talk, evensteve, holiday event, open house, pawlet vermont

Pawlet artists EveNSteve are excited to announce that they will be hosting an open studio and an artist talk in their studio on Sunday Dec. 14 beginning at 2PM and running till 4 PM.

On display will be their two most recent bodies of work. The first, their newest portfolio, entitled Tales of the Bittersweet, represents a decisive new chapter of their artwork, characterized by intense color, experimental optics, secret messages, and an overt engagement with the uncanny.

Also on display will be The Nothing There Is, a body of black and white imagery that uses cryptic symbology to investigate how meaning is constructed and deconstructed, inviting the viewer into a meditation on the human search for significance. Several of the works in this series are featured in the Sept/Oct issue of Art New England Magazine.

EveNSteve is the creative team of artist Stephen Schaub and author Eve O. Schaub. Their artworks combine imagery with handwritten text to create evocative landscapes that tell stories and speak to history. They also create award-winning experimental short films detailing their artworks and their art-making process.


EveNSteve’s studio is located at 671 River Road in Pawlet Vermont. To learn more, or to schedule a private studio visit, call 802-287-0287, visit EveNSteve.com or follow @evensteveartists on IG.

Pawlet Holds First Annual Tree Lighting!!

01 Monday Dec 2025

Posted by Eve Ogden Schaub in local event, Pawlet Happenings

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holiday events, pawlet vermont, tree lighting

EveNSteve Holiday Open House and Artist Talk

20 Thursday Nov 2025

Posted by Eve Ogden Schaub in arts, local event

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Tags

art, evensteve, open studio, pawlet vermont

Artists EveNSteve are excited to announce that they will be hosting an open studio and an artist talk in their Pawlet, Vermont studio on, Sunday Dec. 14 beginning at 2PM and running till 4 PM.

“There Are No Hints,” from Tales of the Bittersweet by EveNSteve

On display will be their two most recent bodies of work. The first, their newest portfolio, entitled Tales of the Bittersweet, represents a decisive new chapter of their artwork, characterized by intense color, experimental optics, secret messages, and an overt engagement with the uncanny.

Also on display will be The Nothing There Is, a body of which black and white imagery that uses cryptic symbology to investigate how meaning is constructed and deconstructed, inviting the viewer into a meditation on the human search for significance. Several of the works in this series are featured in the Sept/Oct issue of Art New England Magazine.

EveNSteve is the creative team of artist Stephen Schaub and author Eve O. Schaub. Their artworks combine imagery with handwritten text to create evocative landscapes that tell stories and speak to history. They also create award-winning experimental short films detailing their artworks and their art-making process.


EveNSteve’s studio is located at 671 River Road in Pawlet Vermont. To learn more, or to schedule a private studio visit, call 802-287-0287, visit EveNSteve.com or follow @evensteveartists on IG.

Outdoor Exhibition in Pawlet Asks What Happens When You Defund the Arts?

23 Friday May 2025

Posted by Eve Ogden Schaub in Uncategorized

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art, artist, creativity, evensteve, exhibition, hayfield art gallery, outdoor art, painting, pawlet vermont, protest art

EveNSteve announce the opening of the sixth year of the Hayfield Art Gallery in Pawlet, Vermont with What Happens When You Defund the Arts?

“This is not the exhibition we were planning,” explains Eve Schaub of the show which she and her creative partner Stephen Schaub are calling an “art protest.”

The show’s centerpiece is a thirty-two-foot artwork with spray-painted letters reading “WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU DEFUND THE ARTS?”

“As the news of 2025 kept rolling in, we felt an urgency to address the rapidly shifting landscape in the world of the arts,” Schaub explains. “We wanted to create a space to pose important questions and contemplate what is happening.”

“Last year each taxpayer paid less than one dollar to support the NEA,” Stephen Schaub adds. “It is one of the largest arts funders in the U.S., yet it is also one of the smallest federal agencies. It does a tremendous amount of good with very little, yet the current administration is proposing to eliminate it entirely.”

The Schaubs cite drastic NEA cuts that have already affected Vermont institutions as varied as the Vermont Symphony Orchestra, the Flynn Theater and the Governor’s Institutes of Vermont.

“Creativity and the arts helped us through the time of the pandemic,” Stephen continues. “In fact, the outdoor Hayfield Art Gallery was born of our feeling of urgency to share art with our community in new, safe ways.”

“Art helped us then and it helps us now,” Eve explains. “Art helps us make sense of the world. We hope people will come from all over to engage in this deeply important question about support for creativity.”

EveNSteve, are the husband-and-wife team of author Eve O. Schaub and artist Stephen Schaub. They created the Hayfield Art Gallery in 2020 as a way to safely share art during the pandemic. Five monumental artworks compose the annual outdoor exhibition, including one that reaches thirteen feet in height and another that is over thirty feet long.

The Hayfield Art Gallery has been the subject of news stories on NBC Boston News 10, New England Cable News, WTEN Albany ABC, and WCAX Burlington CBS, as well as articles in Seven Days, the Rutland Herald, and the Times Argus.

Free and open to the public, the Hayfield Art Gallery may be viewed by driving by or by parking in the gallery lot and walking the mown trail through the field. Open dawn till dusk year-round, it is located at 671 River Road in Pawlet Vermont. What Happens When You Defund the Arts will be on display until Spring of 2026.

For more information visit their website at www.evensteve.com 

 

 

What Happened at the Proposed Library Project Meeting?

12 Wednesday Feb 2020

Posted by Eve Ogden Schaub in Pawlet Happenings

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pawlet, pawlet public library, Pawlet Select Board, pawlet vermont, proposed library project, public information meeting

I’m delighted to report that there was a very nice turn-out for the Library Board Informational meeting about the proposed elevator project: about 40 people showed up, and on a very cold, Vermont Sunday afternoon in February, that’s really saying something.

The Library Board, and specifically board member Sally Caras, gave a very comprehensive Power Point presentation, for which they should definitely be commended.

The Argument in Favor

Sally Caras explaining details of the proposed architectural plans

To super-summarize, the message was this: the library’s needs are changing and evolving. The Strategic Plan completed last spring indicated residents want the library to be a social center of the town that provides space for meetings. The Matt Waite Room in the basement would be an ideal candidate for additional meeting space except for the fact that it is not handicapped accessible. Additionally, the handicapped access that the library does have is problematic: despite the fact that it meets ADA requirements, falling snow hinders access and there are complaints that the ramp is too steep.

The proposed elevator project solves both these concerns and, according to the library board, is likely to get funding of up to approximately one-half the estimated $295,000 price tag. All we have to do as citizens of Pawlet is vote to approve article one on March 3 and the process of securing grant money can begin.

The Argument… Against?

 Just for the record, I’m not against handicapped access to public spaces, nor am I against improving existing handicapped access. I don’t think I know anyone who is.

What I have a problem with is this particular proposal, and, in a nutshell, here is why:

  1. The Select Board has never voted to endorse this project.

At the meeting, the Library Board gave the impression that this project has been endorsed by the Select Board. It has not. They put it on the ballot instead of making a decision themselves.

  1. Where are the numbers?

Check out the library website for a PDF showing a breakdown of six different scenarios. (They show how a bond taken out by the town could affect taxpayers to the tune of between $165 and $765, total cost, over either 20 or 30 years.)

But here’s my question: where does the official estimate of $295,000 come from? Ralph Nimtz, the architect of the plans, was at the informational meeting and he said the numbers come from a “very reputable contractor in Rutland.” When pressed to give a general breakdown he was unable to give specifics of any kind, save that the lift itself would probably be about $30,000. When I asked if new front stairs were part of this estimate, Mr. Nimtz said they weren’t but could add anywhere from $5,000 to $20,000 to the total cost.

I’ve never heard of a construction project that did not have an estimated breakdown of expenses. It’s important to have the numbers available to voters so we know what we’re voting on.

It’s also important to remember that the original library project, which converted the schoolhouse into the facility we use today, was not funded by taxpayer dollars. It was funded exclusively by grants and donations from individuals. Because the use of taxpayer money is being proposed here, it’s even more important to have those specifics.

A full house on hand for the informational meeting last Sunday

  1. Where are the experts?

I’ve been reading up on ADA compliance, (on the Department of the Interior website.) When dealing with a historic building, it’s important to understand that there is no one perfect way to provide accessibility.

For example: Did you know that the recommended ideal is to have the handicapped entrance be the same entrance the general public uses? I didn’t, but it makes sense.

So… why aren’t we proposing to put the new elevator on the front of the building?

Because, of course, sticking an elevator on the library front entrance would drastically alter the beautiful and historic facade built in 1912. By having handicapped access in the rear of the building we’re compromising. In adaptive reuse of historic buildings, compromises are a given. Beyond meeting the federal and state requirements for handicapped accessibility- which the Pawlet Library does- the question is how do we strike the right balance between best practices for accessibility and best practices for preservation. It’s a judgment call: what is reasonable?

For questions such as this it is common to hire an accessibility consultant. Also highly recommended is to incorporate a person with ability challenges into the planning process.

Did our Library Board do those things? In their very thorough presentation there was no mention made of either.

  1. The order of events is all wrong.

When I went to the library board meeting back in December of 2018 and first learned of this proposed project, they could have said it was a good solution to a problem of inadequate handicapped access.

But, that’s not what they said. What they said, more than once, was (and I’m paraphrasing here, but not much): We don’t necessarily love it, but the Select Board wants it. We have to play ball.

I’m not big on playing ball, especially when it concerns spending hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars. I know how tight our town budget is causing many important maintenance projects and upgrades to get deferred year after year.

At the informational meeting, you’d never know the library board didn’t love this proposed project only a few short months ago. The way it was presented, it seemed like a very natural progression: the public asked for meeting space, and so we made a plan to accommodate more meeting space.

The only problem is that this timeline is backwards: the strategic plan came out in spring of 2019, whereas the architectural plans were created in 2018.

That’s why I’ve described this plan as a solution looking for a problem: the solution was drafted first. Who cares what order it happened in? Well, I think the order in which events occur can tell us a lot about the motivation behind them. I’d feel a lot better about this project as a voter if this process hadn’t put the cart approximately a mile and a half before the horse.

A Final Thought

By writing about this as honestly as I can, I have become a bit of a target; I’ve been accused of having ulterior motives.

None of these accusations are true. I have the greatest respect for accessibility concerns and I contributed to the fundraising effort to install an elevator in the Town Hall. Both my father and my mother-in-law are handicapped so it is never an issue far from my mind. I have great respect for the memory of Matt Waite, who I considered a friend.

Leaving the meeting on Sunday I had a lot of different thoughts. I thought if I had never heard of the proposal at all, and simply showed up at the polls to find it on the ballot, I would surely have voted in favor of it. Handicapped access? Support the library? Of course. It’s a no-brainer.

But because I know a little more, I’m concerned. Process is important. Transparency is important. Just like any household, our town only has so much to spend, and we can only take out so many loans. It just makes common sense to prioritize town improvements. Does this plan for more meeting space represent the number one thing our town will need over the next decade? Do we need this more than we need the roads to be fixed, during this year of endless mud season? Do we need this more than a new town garage?

Whatever the current Number One Priority turns out to be, then we need to identify a solution, in the process incorporating experts and detailed estimates from more than one source. Most of all we need our Select Board- our town leaders- to have an opinion on such matters. And then they should actually do something about it.

Chesnut-Tangerman Responds; Cleveland Opts Out

17 Wednesday Oct 2018

Posted by Eve Ogden Schaub in Pawlet Happenings

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

community forum, middletown springs vermont, pawlet firehouse, pawlet vermont, rupert vermont, tinmouth vermont, vermont representative, wells vermont

Monday night at the Pawlet firehouse there was an interesting development in the race for district representative. In an open forum, intended to showcase the different viewpoints of the men running to represent our lovely corner of Vermont: one of the two candidates failed to show up.

IMG_9412

A Full House Monday Night at the Candidate Forum

Not that anyone was particularly surprised by this fact. Ed Cleveland, who is running in hopes of unseating third term incumbent Robin Chesnut-Tangerman, had early on declined to participate in the forum.

Nevertheless, more than one voter— both those who know Cleveland personally, as well as others who have never met him— stood up not so much to ask a question, as to express disappointment and frustration that Cleveland would not appear to discuss his views, and explain how they might differ from the incumbent’s. In an unusual move, Cleveland seems to be participating in no public events in support of his candidacy.

Instead of the hoped-for dialogue, Chesnut-Tangerman took the opportunity to introduce himself as a candidate he hopes has been “building a reputation for being serious, consistent, and open-minded,” and took questions from the audience.

Many questions centered on the controversial proposed “carbon tax,” which aims to encourage alternate, sustainable energy sources by increasing gas taxes a total of 35 cents per gallon over the next eight years.

“The question is not ‘Are we going to have a carbon tax?'” Chesnut-Tangerman said, “the question is, ‘What are we going to do about climate change?’ A carbon tax is just one tool.” he went on to point out that he does not support Vermont “going it alone” with a carbon tax, but only if it were implemented throughout the New England region in a coordinated effort.

He said that many ways to mitigate the negative effects of such a tax are being explored, such as the exclusion of off-road diesel used by farming equipment, and the purchase of electric school buses with Vermont’s share of money from the Volkswagen settlement. Chesnut-Tangerman added that although he supports the carbon tax in theory, it is unlikely to move forward if Governor Scott is reelected.

Also covered was a proposed plan to change the manner in which public education receives funding: deriving from a percentage of resident income rather than, as it does now, from property taxes. Property taxes are not a reliable indicator of ability to pay, Chesnut-Tangerman explained, stating that over 70 percent of Vermont residents receive income sensitivity adjustments to their property tax bills.

“Why not just tax income?” Chesnut-Tangerman said, indicating that this would result in greater fairness and “equity in our tax payments.”

Other issues covered were the fact that Chesnut-Tangerman does not accept any PAC or corporate campaign donations, the lack of adequate funding for mental health facilities and continuing education, and that, although he disagrees with Governor Scott on many issues, he commended the governor for changing his position on gun control.

“I see that as political courage,” Chesnut-Tangerman said.

Asked to name the top ideas he’d focus on if reelected, Chesnut-Tangerman cited conductivity (broad band expansion), a livable minimum wage, and health care.

www.RobinForRep.com                https://clevelandforhouse.org/

 

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