The Studio Restaurant & Bar

Gloucester, United States

2.4

20 reviews

Accepts Credit Cards
Free Wi-Fi

Map

Streetview

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Bussiness info

Takes Reservations
Yes
Delivery
No
Take-out
No
Accepts Credit Cards
Yes
Accepts Bitcoin
No
Good For
Dinner
Parking
Street
Bike Parking
No
Wheelchair Accessible
Yes
Good for Kids
Yes
Good for Groups
Yes
Attire
Casual
Ambience
Casual
Noise Level
Average
Alcohol
Full Bar
Outdoor Seating
Yes
Wi-Fi
Free
Has TV
Yes
Waiter Service
Yes
Caters
No

Description

Specialties

After a long year of demolitions, construction and planning the beloved Studio Restaurant is open once again. Begining this May, The Studio Restaurant will be filling the air with music, serving delicious tapas & seafood, mixing up cocktails, shucking oysters, and even rolling sushi.

Steeped in history, The Studio Restaurant & Bar is located on historic Rocky Neck in one of America’s oldest active art colonies. Our unique location off of Gloucester’s inner harbor is the famous Smith Cove, which has been drawing some of the best American painters for over 100 years.

With 260 feet of deep water dock slips we highly recommend arriving by boat or water shuttle. The water shuttle has pickup and drop off at our dock and many other points of interest in Gloucester’s downtown. You can purchase water shuttle tickets and get a tour of Gloucester Harbor online at Cape Ann Harbor Tours.

History

Established in 2014.

The Studio is located on Rocky Neck and was first built during the late 1800’s. Its earliest purpose was as a fish warehouse before it expanded its plank wharf and was remade into a fish glue manufacturer. In 1920, Hugh Henry Breckenridge (1870 – 1937), avant garde painter, instructor and dean at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, founded a summer art school on Rocky Neck which was to become a critical force in bringing notable younger artists to the area during the period between the two World Wars. Breckenridge’s reputation for innovativeness and talent as a colorist – together perhaps with his tuition of but $ 10 a week or $ 75 for eight weeks – kept his classes filled for almost two decades. In 1926 when asked «Why Gloucester?» Breckenridge was quick to cite the visual stimuli afforded by the gritty locale.