Storm King Art Center
- Wedding Venues
Joshua is a Preferred Vendor
Storm King Art Center
- Wedding Venues
Joshua is a Preferred Vendor
Storm King Art Center is a 500-acre outdoor sculpture museum in New Windsor, New York, about an hour north of Manhattan. The property spans rolling hills, open meadows, and dense woodlands, with more than 100 large-scale sculptures sited across the landscape. Works by Alexander Calder, Maya Lin, Mark di Suvero, Isamu Noguchi, and Sarah Sze are positioned in direct relationship to the terrain. It is one of the most recognized outdoor art institutions in the world, and it also happens to host weddings.
That distinction matters. Storm King is a museum first. The grounds, the sightlines, and the scale of the property are shaped by curatorial decisions, not event design. When you hold a wedding here, you’re working within that context. The result is a setting that looks unlike any traditional [Hudson Valley](/hudson-valley/wedding-venues/) venue, because it isn’t one.
Most couples choose Museum Hill for their ceremony and reception. The hilltop offers wide views across the property with the circa-1935 Museum Building in the background. Calder’s sheet-metal sculptures anchor the visual field. The South Fields space accommodates larger events, with capacity for up to 500 seated guests and open-field sightlines in every direction. Both locations are entirely outdoors, so tenting is standard for receptions.
Catering is handled exclusively by Fresh Company, Storm King’s in-house catering partner. There is no BYO option. The caterer also manages liquor licensing for each event, since Storm King does not hold its own liquor license. A professional wedding planner is required for all bookings. This is not optional. The venue does not provide day-of coordination.
Pricing starts at $25,000 for a ceremony, cocktails, and reception package. That figure includes a required Storm King membership and facility rental. Ceremony-only packages run from $2,500 to $11,000. Saturday weddings in September and October carry additional peak pricing. The rental covers a six-hour event window, four hours of same-day setup, the Museum Building Conference Room for seven hours, one guided tram tour for up to 47 guests, 140 white folding chairs for the ceremony, and one hour of golf cart use for couple portraits.
Storm King is seasonal. The grounds are open from approximately April through November and closed through winter. There is no on-site lodging. Couples typically arrange hotel blocks in the surrounding area or use nearby properties in Newburgh, Cornwall, or Beacon. On-site parking is available, but the venue encourages shuttle service for guests.
One detail that matters for photography: the artworks on the property are protected by artist contracts. Photographing sculptures for publication requires separate permission from the artists or their estates. Your photographer needs to understand this restriction before the event.
The venue holds only one private event per day. That exclusivity, combined with the scale of the grounds and the quality of the art collection, creates something that can’t be replicated at a conventional event space. If you want a wedding that feels more like an experience than a production, and you’re comfortable with the logistics that come with a museum setting, Storm King delivers.
For couples interested in discussing their event, [get in touch](/contact/) to talk through what a Storm King wedding looks like from a photography perspective.
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The photography conversation here starts with one unusual constraint: you need artist permission to publish images that include specific sculptures. That means your photographer has to plan compositions carefully, understanding what can and can’t be shared. It’s manageable, but it requires advance preparation.
The light on Museum Hill is strong. The elevation gives you open sky in every direction, which means the sun hits hard in the middle of the day and softens well in the late afternoon. A ceremony timed for 5 PM or later in summer puts you right in that golden window where the hills across the valley start picking up warm color. Morning light works too, especially on the east-facing slopes, but most weddings here are afternoon events.
The scale of the property creates natural separation between moments. The ceremony space, the cocktail area, and the reception tent can all occupy different zones, which means each part of the day has its own visual character. That’s rare. Most venues compress everything into a tight footprint. Here, you have room.
The Museum Building itself is a solid backdrop. Built in the 1930s, it has weight and proportion. The stone and the roofline photograph well. The surrounding grounds shift from manicured lawn near the building to wilder meadow as you move out. That gradient gives you visual range without moving far.
Wind is the main challenge. The hilltop is exposed. Veils, lightweight fabric, loose paper goods, and anything not secured will move. Plan for it. Hair and floral choices should account for steady breeze. On the upside, wind creates movement in photos that flat, still air doesn’t give you.
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– Museum Hill Overlook: The primary ceremony location with panoramic views across the sculpture park and surrounding hills. Afternoon light is best, with the sun dropping behind the western ridge. Wide-angle shots capture the full scope of the landscape.
– Museum Building Exterior: The circa-1935 stone building provides a grounded, architectural backdrop. Works well for formal portraits and bridal party shots. The front facade catches even light throughout the middle of the day.
– South Fields: Open meadow space with long sightlines. The grass and sky dominate the frame. Best for wide editorial-style shots with couples at a distance. Late afternoon light rakes across the field and creates warm tones.
– Woodland Trails: Shaded paths through dense tree cover offer a cooler, more intimate setting. Filtered light through the canopy creates soft, dappled patterns. Strong for quiet couple portraits between events.
– Tram Route Stops: The guided tram tour covers multiple vantage points across the property. The one-hour golf cart window for couple photos lets you reach locations guests won’t access on foot. Use this time strategically.
– Reception Tent Surroundings: The tent perimeter offers framing options with the landscape as background. Step outside the tent at dusk for shots that place the lit tent against the darkening sky.
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Start with the planner requirement. Storm King mandates a professional wedding planner for every event, so this hire comes before most other vendor decisions. Choose someone who has worked the property before or who has experience with museum venues. The logistics here are different from a barn or an estate. Access windows, setup timelines, and the coordination with Storm King’s events team all run on a tighter structure than a typical venue.
Pay attention to the seasonal calendar. Storm King is open from roughly April through November, and the most popular wedding months are September and October, which carry premium Saturday pricing. May, June, and early fall weekdays offer the same landscape at a lower cost and with more scheduling flexibility. The property closes for winter, so late-season weddings need a firm weather backup plan.
Think about transportation early. There is no on-site lodging. Guests will need hotel blocks in the surrounding area and shuttles to and from the venue. Beacon, Newburgh, and Cornwall all have hotel options within 15 to 25 minutes. Coordinating shuttle timing with the six-hour event window is important because the venue does not extend rental periods casually.
Understand the art restrictions before finalizing your photography plan. Sculptures on the property are protected by contracts with the artists or their estates. Publishing photos that feature specific artworks requires separate permission. Your photographer should request a list of restricted works from the venue in advance and plan compositions accordingly. This is a real logistical step, not a formality.
Use the included tram tour and golf cart hour well. The tram gives 47 guests a guided experience of the sculpture collection during cocktail hour. The golf cart hour is your window for couple portraits in locations spread across the 500 acres. Map out your shot list in advance so you’re not improvising during a limited time window.
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