Harlem Fine Arts Show brings summer festival to the Hamptons

8 hours ago
Harlem Fine Arts Show brings summer festival to the Hamptons

By AI, Created 5:06 AM UTC, June 04, 2026, /AGP/ – Harlem Fine Arts Show will stage a July 17-19 summer festival at Duck Walk Vineyards in Water Mill, New York, in partnership with the Creole Food Festival to benefit the Alzheimer’s Association. The event pairs art, food, music, wellness and cultural programming as HFAS expands its traveling African Diasporic art show into a Hamptons weekend experience.

Why it matters: - Harlem Fine Arts Show is using the Hamptons event to widen its audience and connect African Diasporic art with high-traffic summer tourism. - The festival also ties cultural programming to fundraising for the Alzheimer’s Association, adding a philanthropy angle to the art fair. - The weekend combines visual art, food, music, health and lifestyle activations in one venue, which can draw collectors, families, sponsors and general attendees.

What happened: - Harlem Fine Arts Show announced the Harlem Fine Arts Show Summer Festival for July 17-19 at Duck Walk Vineyards Hamptons, 231 Montauk Highway in Water Mill, New York. - The event runs 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, and 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sunday. - HFAS is presenting the festival with the Creole Food Festival. - The weekend will benefit the Alzheimer’s Association. - The festival is being marketed as “Harlem to the Hamptons: Experience the energy, the art, and the moment.”

The details: - The programming includes 50 curated immersive art galleries and artist engagement experiences. - The schedule also features 15 celebrity-chef culinary experiences. - Live jazz and world-music performances are part of the lineup. - The festival will include classic and luxury automobile displays, real estate and lifestyle showcases, and health and wellness activations. - Friday includes a daytime festival and an opening evening event benefiting Hamptons nonprofits. - Saturday includes daytime programming, curated thought-leader sessions and an evening event benefiting the Alzheimer’s Association. - Sunday salutes the Harlem Arts Alliance and local Long Island artists, including Robert Carter and Frank Frazier. - Featured artists include Angie St. Louis, Coco Head Pottery by Laurie-Lee Smith, DollyRose Arts by Carla E. Wade, Don O’Bannon and Keonna Thomas. - St. Louis works on wood and canvas with mixed media that includes oil paint and acrylic. - Wade’s DollyRose Arts centers on mixed media work. - O’Bannon is a contemporary American painter known for story-driven oil paintings rooted in music and cultural history. - Thomas creates cinematic, symbolic imagery focused on identity, memory and transformation. - Featured chefs include Chef Leen, Chef Jeff Jeffrey Morneau, Chef Lioness and Chef Cisse. - Chef Leen is Kathleen Coy, a Food Network Chopped champion and owner of Harlem HomeMade delivery business. - Chef Jeff Jeffrey Morneau leads a luxury creative agency that blends design, fabrication and culinary innovation. - Chef Lioness is Jennifer Corporan, a Dominican-American social worker turned private chef and entrepreneur. - Chef Cisse is Cisse Elhadji, founder of Ponty Bistro and later ventures including Renaissance Harlem, Harlem Café and PB Brasserie. - Organizers say attendees will have access to valet parking, golf cart transportation, luxury rest stations and air-conditioned tents. - People who cannot attend in person can visit the HFAS Virtual Arts District, a virtual lobby of online viewing rooms with guided tours. - Brand and media partners include Dan’s Papers, WBGO 88.3 FM and NiLu Gift Shop. - Sponsor inquiries go to Chris Chaney at csaleschaney@gmail.com. - The festival is supported by a media and social push across YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, Facebook and LinkedIn. - The event hashtag set includes #HFAS, #SummerFest, #HarlemFineArtsShow, #BlackArtMatters and #BuyBlackArt.

Between the lines: - HFAS is positioning the festival as more than a weekend art fair and is emphasizing cultural diplomacy, community impact and the creative economy. - The collaboration with the Creole Food Festival broadens the appeal beyond visual art and into food-driven cultural programming. - The Alzheimer’s Association partnership gives the event a charitable anchor that may help with attendance, sponsorship and media interest. - The Sunday salute to Harlem and Long Island artists signals an effort to connect the organization’s Harlem identity with local Hamptons audiences.

What’s next: - HFAS says art enthusiasts, collectors and cultural supporters can view the schedule, buy tickets and sign up for the Artletter newsletter through the Harlem Fine Arts Show Summer Festival site. - The organization is also offering advance interviews and on-site press credentials through Jennifer A. Maguire and Diane Stefani. - Additional festival promotion is expected through HFAS and Creole Food Festival social channels ahead of the July 17 opening.

The bottom line: - Harlem Fine Arts Show is turning its summer festival into a multi-day cultural showcase, with art, food and music serving both audience growth and a charitable cause.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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