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Port Chester Scenes; Images of Port Chester

Port Chester

Port Chester Scenes; Images of Port Chester

Bernard Greenwald
Straight-on view photograph of Port Chester station ramp and platform with bench in foreground with two people sitting; Bernard Greenwald metal artwork in middle ground; and train in background.
"Port Chester Scenes; Images of Port Chester" (2011/2018) © Bernard Greenwald, Metro-North Port Chester Station. Photo: Doug Biaz

About the project

Artist Bernard Greenwald created a series of panoramic paintings in 2011, "Port Chester Scenes," inspired by sites in the Village of Port Chester as seen primarily from the train platform. The compositions reflect Port Chester's contemporary environs. Heightened color makes the imagery visually engaging and reflects the village's vitality and diversity. Each panorama is divided into separate panels that occupy the various windows while remaining a visually connected composition. Interpreted in laminated glass by Depp Glass, the paintings are luminous and will change from day to night as the light shifts from natural daylight to illumination at night, providing a welcoming sight for commuters. 

In 2019, as part of updated station construction, Greenwald expanded his original project and created "Images of Port Chester," a related, meandering depiction of a linear trek through the Village of Port Chester, loosely based on what one sees while driving, walking, or riding the train — commercial, domestic, official, and religious architecture; landscaping; people of all sorts walking through town; signage; vehicles parked and moving; and the serpentine shapes and crossroads of the streets. This new metal artwork was fabricated by KC Fabrications and is composed of 15 original and individually unique pen and ink drawings, which Greenwald created during visits to Port Chester. 

About the artist

Bernard Greenwald was born in Newark, New Jersey, in 1941. He received his BFA from the Philadelphia Museum, College of Art, and his MFA from Yale University School of Art & Architecture. He paints in Red Hook, New York, where he lives with his wife.