Operating Schedule
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History of Newport and the Mansions
Founded in 1639, Newport was an important port city, a center of the slave trade, a fashionable resort and the summer home of the Gilded Age rich.
What was the Gilded Age?
The Gilded Age was a period of unprecedented change in America. Fortunes were spent on luxuries such as the lavish "summer cottages" of Newport.
Deep Dive into the Show
Learn about the people, places and events depicted in Julian Fellowes' popular historical drama series.
“Inside the Newport Mansions” Gilded Age Conversations
Noted historians and authors share their insights into all aspects of Gilded Age America in this monthly series of interviews with the Preservation Society.
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Our mission is to protect, preserve, and present the best of Newport County's architectural heritage. Learn more about us and our work.
Wind Farm Federal Appeal: FAQs
The Preservation Society of Newport County is appealing federal agency approval of two massive wind farms off the Rhode Island coast.
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Centuries of Italian influence descended on Newport during the Gilded Age. Buildings, interiors, landscapes and art collections spread across the island, resulting in a multi-disciplinary tribute to Italian design. While Chateau-sur-Mer began as an Italianate villa, its exterior renovations reflecting French themes occurred while its interiors received Florentine treatments by the acclaimed artist Luigi Frullini. Richard Morris Hunt brought the palazzos of Renaissance Genoa to The Breakers with his colossal 1892 design for the Vanderbilts. Edward Berwind joined the trend of his peers and purchased dozens of Venetian masterpieces to line the walls and halls of The Elms.
Itinerary
8:30 am: Check in at Rosecliff and continental breakfast. 9 am – 12 pm: Morning lightning-round sessions at Rosecliff (approximately 30 minutes each with a 10-minute Q&A session following each speaker for in-person audience only). 12:05 pm – 1:10 pm: Boxed lunch. 1:10 pm – 2 pm: Final lightning-round speaker at Rosecliff (Q&A for in-person audience only) and closing remarks. 2:15 pm – 4 pm: House tours of The Breakers, Chateau-sur-Mer and The Elms (previous signup required; more information to come). 5:30 – 7 pm: Reception at Rosecliff.
Video recordings of each speaker’s presentation will be made available for in-person and virtual attendees.
Keynote Speaker: Nathaniel Silver, Associate Director and Chief Curator at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
Italy and the American Collector: Isabella Stewart Gardner and her Gilded Age Peers Of the more than 37 countries visited by Isabella Stewart Gardner during her lifetime, she returned to Italy more frequently than anywhere else. Silver will explore Gardner's pioneering taste for Italian art, architecture and culture, how it shaped her collection and the museum she built to house it, and some of the friends and colleagues who helped her bring the Renaissance to life in Boston. This talk will further address Gardner's contemporaries, showing the breadth of their intersecting interests in Italy. Bio: Nathaniel Silver is the Associate Director and Chief Curator at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston. He has 15 years of experience in fine art museums and cultural institutions including The Frick Collection, J. Paul Getty Museum, Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts and as executive director and CEO at Hancock Shaker Village. In his previous role at the Gardner as the William and Lia Poorvu Curator of the Collection and Division Head, Silver oversaw Collections, Conservation and Archives and curated or co-curated more than a dozen exhibitions. These include the acclaimed Titian: Women, Myth, and Power and Boston’s Apollo: Thomas McKeller and John Singer Sargent. He holds a Ph.D. in art history from University College London.
Catherine Hess, Former Curator of Sculpture and Decorative Arts at the Getty Museum and former Chief Curator of European Art at The Huntington Museum
The Lure of Italy: The Case of Gilded Age Newport and Chateau-sur-Mer Just before and after the turn of the 20th century, American men and women of great means developed a taste for Italian art and furnishings of the past. Their motives can be explained by a complex mixture of yearning, discernment and insecurity. The material and ideas they brought back to the U.S. impacted the art market, collecting and, indeed, the definition of sophistication for many decades. In Newport, George and Edith Wetmore engaged Luigi Frullini, a brilliant wood carver from Florence, to create a masterpiece of furniture and interior elements for Chateau-sur-Mer's library and dining room. Hess will examine the Wetmores’ selection of Frullini as a vivid, lasting example of Gilded Age Italophilia. Bio: Catherine Hess was a curator of sculpture and decorative arts at the Getty Museum, LA, from 1984 to 2008 and then served as chief curator of European art at The Huntington Museum from 2008 to 2020. She also was director of a small art school for underserved young adults until 2023. In her curatorial work, she published, lectured about and produced exhibitions on European glass, ceramics, furniture and sculpture. She attended the Museum Leadership Institute at Claremont Graduate University and served on the National Endowment for the Art Indemnity Panel in Washington, D.C. She believes that the craft of art can be a source of profound inspiration, delight and knowledge.
Sarah Cartwright, Chief Curator and Ulla R. Searing Curator of Collections at The John & Mable Ringling Museum of Art
Fundament and Fantasy: Italian Renaissance Inspiration at The Breakers By examining specific examples, both small and large, Cartwright will consider some of the ways that elements of Italian Renaissance architecture, design and decoration were reinterpreted at The Breakers, the massive Newport summer residence of Cornelius Vanderbilt II and family, designed by Richard Morris Hunt and completed in 1895. Of particular interest will be the contrast in the home’s design between architectural clarity and elaborate ornamentation, as well as the variety of all’antica (classicizing) visions the home conveys. Bio: Sarah Cartwright is Chief Curator and Ulla R. Searing Curator of Collections at The Ringling. She has a PhD in Art History and Archaeology from the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Prior to her arrival at The Ringling in 2013, Cartwright was a research associate at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at Columbia University and a curator at Villa La Pietra in Florence, Italy. At The Ringling, Cartwright is responsible for the museum’s collection of European and American paintings, sculpture and works on paper from antiquity to 1900 CE. She has published and presented on a wide array of subjects, ranging from Italian manuscript illumination to ancient carved gemstones to the 19th-century French painter Rosa Bonheur. Recent projects at The Ringling have included curating the exhibition Shinique Smith: PARADE and co-curating the international loan exhibition Guercino’s Friar with a Gold Earring: Fra Bonaventura Bisi, Painter and Art Dealer and co-authoring its catalogue.
Charles Birnbaum, President + CEO, The Cultural Landscape Foundation
The Influence of the Italian Villa Landscape on Garden Design and Landscape Preservation in America The Italian Villa landscape has been celebrated in America since the turn of the last century. Since the publication of Charles Platt’s Italian Gardens (1894), there has been a succession of popular books aimed at America’s quest for beauty and antiquity. Birnbaum’s presentation will explore the period from 1890 through the 1930s when Americans had a thirst for Italian Villa landscapes. Although much has been written about these built works, little attention has been paid on the early American Academy in Rome (AAR) fellows and the Italian influences they imported to the U.S. This presentation will explore the palimpsest of historic preservation and design decisions made at iconic Italian Villas and Gardens, as recorded by early AAR Fellows in Landscape Architecture as part of their documentation plans, planting plans, regional surveys, illustrative landscape “restoration” and “reconstruction” plans. Bio: Prior to serving as The Cultural Landscape Foundation President + CEO, Birnbaum spent 15 years with the National Park Service and a decade in private practice in New York City. Birnbaum was a Loeb Fellow at Harvard’s Graduate School of Design and a Rome Prize recipient. He was awarded American Society of Landscape Architects’ LaGasse Medal (2008), President’s Medal (2009), the ASLA Medal (2018) and the Olmsted Medal (2023). He served as a Lecturer in Landscape Architecture at Harvard’s Graduate School of Design (2020-); Visiting Professor, Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture (2011-16); and Glimcher Distinguished Professor, Ohio State (2007). In 2021, The Cultural Landscape Foundation unveiled The Oberlander International Prize in Landscape Architecture, a permanently endowed prize with a $100,000 purse.
Remy Renzullo, Interior Decorator and Antiques Adviser
Title and topic details to come soon. Bio: Remy Renzullo is an interior decorator and antiques adviser working between the United States, United Kingdom and Italy with a specialty in period interiors. Raised in rural New England and New Mexico, Renzullo founded his design firm in New York eight years ago at the age of 25 and quickly established a reputation for unfussy but thoughtful interiors, with a strong focus on furniture from the 18th and early 19th centuries. Renzullo has since established a notable presence in the United Kingdom and Italy, working on historically and architecturally important projects.
Chateau-sur-Mer Dining Room with wood carvings by Luigi Frullini (Florentine, 1839-1897)
Chateau-sur-er wood carvings (detail) by Luigi Frullini (Florentine, 1839-1897)
The Breakers Great Hall, designed 1892 by Richard Morris Hunt
Ceiling of The Breakers Great Hall
The Breakers Upper Loggia, designed 1892 by Richard Morris Hunt
Bust of Roman Emperor Caracalla in The Elms Dining Room, late 19th century, unknown Italian artist
The Elms Dining Room with 18th-century Venetian paintings of the life of Scipio Africanus
Students Scholarships are available to assist undergraduate and graduate students interested in attending the Symposium. Scholarships are for $500.
To apply: Provide a letter of interest (1 page maximum) stating your professional or academic status and the reasons why attendance at the Symposium would benefit your work. Please include two academic or professional letters of recommendation.
Arts & Humanities Professionals To apply: Submit a letter of interest indicating your professional interests, affiliations and how the Symposium would benefit your work. Please provide your student or staff email address.
Please click here to submit the online Scholarship Application by February 28, 2025.
Explore the underground systems that made this great house a marvel of technology for its time.
For the first time in the 129-year history of The Breakers, the private third-floor family space occupied by generations of Vanderbilts is open for public tours.
This series of programs, listed below, offers glimpses into the work that happens behind the scenes at the Newport Mansions, including curatorial, conservation, preservation, historical research and interpretation.
Get an exclusive close-up look at two of the costumes worn in the 1974 film adaptation of "The Great Gatsby," guided by our textile conservator and one of our research fellows. SOLD OUT for February 6. This program will also be offered on March 13 & April 10.
Learn about ongoing preservation work throughout our properties with Director of Museum Affairs and Chief Curator Leslie Jones. Live at Rosecliff and via Zoom.
Treat yourself to a memorable day of cultural enrichment and architectural wonders in the heart of Boston. The itinerary invites members to explore the city’s hidden gems and iconic landmarks while connecting with fellow enthusiasts.
SOLD OUT
Here's a special opportunity for Preservation Society members to learn from an expert guide about one of the Gilded Age's greatest houses.This tour will be given on January 25, 26, February 1, 2, 8 & 9.
Enjoy a rare behind-the-scenes look at our conservation studio and the important work that happens there.
Beginning February 15. See and hear how the other half lived. This tour will highlight the stories of some of the men and women who worked to service the social whirl of Newport during the Gilded Age.
WinterFest is a weeklong celebration of the season, where families can gather to listen to a winter-themed story and create a take-home craft.
Learn how several of the historic Newport Mansions embrace modern technology with the use of geothermal climate-control systems, an environmentally sustainable solution.
This illuminating tour examines select artworks of the ‘idealized’ portrayal and real-life expectations of Gilded Age women throughout The Elms. SOLD OUT for February 27. This program will also be offered on March 7.
Follow the history and conservation research on the Ladies Reception Room at The Breakers, a highly significant but often overlooked space. This program will be offered on March 6 & April 9.
Join Historic Music of Newport's Gilded Age Orchestra as we celebrate the diverse musical history of Newport and the Gilded Age.
This illuminating tour examines select artworks of the ‘idealized’ portrayal and real-life expectations of Gilded Age women throughout The Elms. This program will be offered on February 27 (sold out) & March 7.
Learn about the preservation work and research taking place on The Breakers third floor from Chief Conservator Patricia Miller and Textile Conservator Heather Hodge.
Get an exclusive close-up look at two of the costumes worn in the 1974 film adaptation of "The Great Gatsby," guided by our textile conservator and one of our research fellows. This program will be offered on February 6 (sold out), March 13 & April 10.
Learn about the ongoing research into and conservation of the furniture on the third floor of The Breakers, which opened to the public for the first time last year. SOLD OUT for March 20. This program will also be offered on April 18.
The guided tour of Marble House will illuminate the French influences that architect Richard Morris Hunt incorporated throughout the mansion.
Curator of Collections Dr. Nicole Williams will offer a close look at rarely seen treasures of Gilded Age photography from the Preservation Society’s archives. Live at Rosecliff and via Zoom.
Learn about the ongoing research into and conservation of the furniture on the third floor of The Breakers, which opened to the public for the first time last year. This program will be offered on March 20 (sold out) & April 18.
Themed “A Floral Fair,” the 29th annual Show will combine the elegance of a Gilded Age fête with the good cheer of a summer county fair.
Thank you to all of our sponsors, guests and volunteers for another successful Newport Mansions Wine & Food Festival. See you next year for the 20th annual festival, September 19-21, 2025, at Rosecliff. Become a Preservation Society member and receive early access to purchase 2025 tickets before they become available to the general public.
Download our tour app before your visit and bring your earbuds.
Parking is free onsite at all properties except for Hunter House and The Breakers Stable & Carriage House, where street parking is available.
Answers to some of our most frequently asked questions.
Explore the 11 properties under the stewardship of the Preservation Society and open as historic house museums.
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