Beyond the Frame: Highlights from the HRM Archive, on view at the Hudson River Museum from August 29, 2025 through March 1, 2026, offers an expansive look at more than a century of life in Yonkers through the lens of the Museum’s rich archival holdings. The exhibition reflects both the resilience of the city’s communities and the enduring role of the Hudson River Museum as a cultural anchor, committed to preserving and sharing local history alongside American art and science.
Drawing from newly digitized archival materials,
Beyond the Frame brings forward photographs and documents that have rarely—or never—been seen by the public. These images illuminate everyday moments, personal histories, and collective experiences that shaped Yonkers across generations. From intimate street scenes to significant civic milestones, the exhibition reveals how ordinary lives contribute to a broader historical narrative, emphasizing perseverance, transformation, and continuity within the city.
A key focus of the exhibition is the Museum’s historic home, Glenview. Archival photographs trace its origins as a private residence before its evolution into a public institution, offering insight into how physical spaces adapt alongside the communities they serve. Alongside these architectural histories are portraits and visual records of Yonkers residents whose labor, creativity, and determination helped define the city’s character. Together, these materials connect personal memory with institutional history.
At the heart of the exhibition is the Museum’s ongoing digitization initiative. More than a technical undertaking, this effort represents a commitment to access, education, and inclusion. By preserving fragile photographs and documents and making them widely available, the Museum ensures that scholars, students, artists, and the public can engage with these stories in new and meaningful ways. Digitization allows history to circulate beyond gallery walls, enriching research, learning, and creative interpretation.
Beyond the Frame ultimately invites visitors to reconsider the power of archives—not as static repositories, but as living resources that continue to shape understanding of the past and present. Through these rediscovered images, the exhibition affirms the importance of preservation, community memory, and the shared responsibility of telling a fuller, more inclusive story of American life.
Image:
Photographer once known. Women Posing on the Steps of City Hall, Representing Different Nationalities, ca. 1918–19. Reproduction of a black-and-white photograph. Collection of the Hudson River Museum. Gift of Mrs. Elton Littell, 1952 (52.37f).