2019 Exhibitions
Jessica Broad, A Solo Exhibition // Jessica Broad
The Form // Rima Day, Lesley Wamsley, Rebecca Sutton, Maryanne Braine
Immaterial // Rachel Gordon + Daisy Wiley
Glitch // Natalie Birinyi
Transform // Stephanie Martin
At the Open End // Chelsea Harris
New Works // Sarah Chan
Contact // Jasmine Yeh and Phylicia Eileen Haberman
Blurring Boundary // Daniel Shieh
Sustain // Arts Connective (co-curated)
Under Erasure // Zeshan Ahmed
The Form
An exhibition of work by artists in residence Rima Day, Lesley Wamsley, Rebecca Sutton, and Maryanne Braine.
An exhibition of work by artists in residence Rima Day, Lesley Wamsley, Rebecca Sutton, and Maryanne Braine. An exhibition of work by artists in residence Rima Day, Lesley Wamsley, Rebecca Sutton, and Maryanne Braine. An exhibition of work by artists in residence Rima Day, Lesley Wamsley, Rebecca Sutton, and Maryanne Braine.
Under Erasure
Zeshan Ahmed’s December exhibition, Under Erasure, opened in Indiana, PA at the Clark Gallery. Ahmed continues to explore color and photography through repetitive and instinctual processes. Ahmed is a visual artist based in Brooklyn, NY. Born and raised in old Delhi, India, his prints draw from a breadth of philosophical and personal references. Interior and contemplative, Ahmed abstractions forego specificity in favor of a wandering, poetic ambiguity, a strategic opacity abetted by his deconstructive erasure of color. His practice dwells in using photography not just as a tool but subject matter. Ahmed most recently exhibited his work in Pennsylvania, New York, Auckland, Pingyao, Nanjing, Hyderabad and Mumbai. He is the recipient of Provost scholarship for his MFA in photography and related media at Parsons School of Design, The New School and The JN Tata Endowment Scholarship for the Higher Education of Indians.
Contact
This duel exhibition by artists Jasmine Yeh and Phylicia Eileen Haberman explore geometric abstraction and the life of the kombucha-making organisms known as scoobys.
Jasmine Yeh is an interdisciplinary artist from Taiwan based in NYC. Through the language of food and the act of cooking, they are seeking answers to questions of immigrant and diaspora identity, birthright, and self-appropriation. Using performance, installation, and social practice, they hope to create recipes to fuel and nourish social justice activism through an intersectional lens as a queer, non-binary, 1.75 generation immigrant.
Phylicia Haberman is best known for her geometrical abstract paintings. Her work captures the vibrancy and motion of cities’ landscapes. She graduated from FIT with an Associates in Fine Arts, Bachelors in Visual Arts Management, and holds a Masters in Art Education from SVA. She has recently shown her work in several group exhibitions in New York. Phylicia lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.