Come Celebrate with us!
Sunday, September 4, 4:30pm

466 Commercial St, Provincetown

Cocktails, small auction and a candlelit dinner with delicious food and ambiance.

Honoring:
Tina and Steve Tarantal and Carmi and Harriet Bee

Castle Hill is excited to be part of the Provincetown Art Society for the night! Located in the country’s oldest arts colony, the renovated home of author and activist, Mary Heaton Vorse, is now The Provincetown Arts Society, which supports local artists and longstanding arts organizations of all genres; Culinary, Film, Stage, Performance, Painting and Literary. Programming includes guest chefs in collaboration with local artists, an annual outdoor film series, performing arts, curator conversations, fund-raisers and year-round artist residencies.

Learn More about the Mary Heaton Vorse House!

In 1906, civil rights activist, labor organizer, journalist and all-round radical Mary Heaton Vorse bought the 18 th -century house in Provincetown – known then as the Captain Kibbe Cook House after the 19th-century whaler and traveler who lived there. In its heyday, the house became the nerve center of Vorse’s circle, which included Louise Bryant, John Reed, Sinclair Lewis, and future Pulitzer Prize winner Eugene O’Neill, who performed his very first play on a makeshift stage donated by Vorse to the Providence Players. The house has recently been given a new lease on life when it was restored by West Coast designer Ken Fulk.

To read about the exciting renovation of the Mary Heaton Vorse House click here

Painting above by Paul Schulenburg (represented by Addison Gallery in Orleans)