Woodstock, unincorporated village and town (township) in Ulster county, southeastern New York, U.S., lying in the foothills of the southern Catskills near the Ashokan Reservoir. Located 10 miles (16 km) northwest of Kingston, the village is a year-round resort and also a noted artists’ colony, which developed after 1902 when Ralph R. Whitehead, inspired by William Morris and John Ruskin, established a handicraft community, Byrdcliffe, just north of the village. In 1906 L. Birge Harrison moved the summer school of the Art Students’ League of New York there. Artists such as George Bellows were attracted to the colony, which has flourished ever since.
Woodstock gave its name to the Woodstock Music and Art Fair, a rock festival that was held in Bethel, New York, in neighbouring Sullivan county on August 15–17, 1969. (The festival had been forced to move from its planned location in Woodstock itself after protests from the local townspeople.) The Woodstock Festival occasioned the harmonious gathering of a crowd of about 400,000 young rock-music devotees and marked what is considered the high point of the American youth counterculture of the 1960s. The festival was documented in the motion picture Woodstock (1970) and the book Woodstock: The Oral History (1989). The Woodstock ’94 festival was held in Saugerties about 8 miles (13 km) northwest of Woodstock village; a third festival under the Woodstock name took place in 1999 farther upstate near the city of Rome.
Woodstock village has art and craft galleries, theatre productions, and frequent music concerts. Area 68 square miles (175 square km). Pop. (2000) 6,241; (2010) 5,884.