Contents for June 22nd, 2026
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Weekly Spotlight: **FIRST FIFTY VOICES**
1. Laurie Anderson, FF Alumn, receives Kyoto Prize 2026
2. Nicolás Dumit Estévez Raful, FF Alumn, appointed to New York State Trauma Informed Network and Resource Center Advisory Council
3. Chin Chih Yang, FF Alumn, at 42nd Street & 8th Avenue, Manhattan, thru Aug. 1
4. Asia Stewart, FF Alumn, named to Smack Mellon 2026-27 Artist Studio cohort
5. Sarah Schulman, FF Alumn, now online at Hyperallergic.com
6. Julie Tolentino, FF Alumn, at Nowadays, Ridgewood, Queens, June 27
7. Liliana Porter, FF Alumn, now online at Vimeo.com, and more
8. Daniel Bejar, Mildred Beltre, Jenny Polak, FF Alumns, at Old Stone House, Brooklyn, opening June 25
9. Benoît Maubrey, FF Alumn, named Fab City Awards 2026 Technology Winner
10. Galinsky, FF Alumn, at 14th Street Y Theater, Manhattan, June 23
11. Agnes Denes, FF Alumn, at Hammaburg-Platz, Hamburg, Germany, thru September 21
12. Anne Marie LeQuesne, FF Alumn, now online
13. Alison Cornyn, Jillian McDonald, Marianne Petit, Nina Sobell, FF Alumns, at The Church in Staatsburg, NY, June 25-29
14. John Ahearn, Arlene Rush, FF Alumns, at Shadow Walls, Pruning, NY, opening June 27
15. Paul Zelevansky, FF Alumn, now online at https://vimeo.com/1202457036
16. Daniel Bejar, FF Alumn, at New York Historical, Manhattan, thru Nov. 1
17. Maya Ciarrocchi, FF Alumn, receives 2026 Bronx Recognizes Its Own BRIO award
18. Peter Cramer & Jack Waters, FF Alumns, at Le Petit Versailles, Manhattan, June 26-28
19. Susan Newmark, FF Alumn, at San Art Gallery, Brooklyn, July 23-Aug. 29 and more
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Weekly Spotlight: **FIRST FIFTY VOICES**
Cassils is one of the most recognized performance artists working today — a Guggenheim Fellow, Creative Capital awardee, United States Artists Fellow, and the inaugural recipient of the ANTI International Prize for Live Art, whose body-based work on LGBTQI+ violence and resilience has shown at the Barbican, the V&A, SITE Santa Fe, and the Park Avenue Armory. Long before any of that, they spent a multi-year internship at Franklin Furnace digitizing 1970s Porta-Pak video footage of legendary performance artists. Cassils wrote this note to Martha Wilson on the event of Franklin Furnace’s 50th anniversary:
“I ALWAYS knew I wanted to be an artist, but uploading all that 1970s Porta-Pak footage of so many great and legendary artists during my multi-year internship was the best education in performance art ever — and shifted the focus of my practice dramatically. Your and Harley’s leadership in the field certainly blazed a path and made impossible things seem tenable. Also, the FF grant was the first real grant I ever got — so you were one of the first art organizations to ever support me in a concrete way. I am continually grateful.”
The FF archive isn’t a storage closet — it’s a curriculum (and much more). For fifty years, this place has taught the next generation of artists by giving them access to previous generations. Help us keep the archives alive to inspire and educate. A gift of any size, funds both: https://secure.givelively.org/donate/franklin-furnace-archive-inc/first-fifty-campaign
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1. Laurie Anderson, FF Alumn, receives Kyoto Prize 2026
Please visit this link:
https://www.kyotoprize.org/en/260619?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=202606_41k_en
Thank you.
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2. Nicolás Dumit Estévez Raful, FF Alumn, appointed to New York State Trauma Informed Network and Resource Center Advisory Council
The New York State Trauma Informed Network and Resource Center (TINRC) funded by the NYS Office of Mental Health has selected Nicolás Dumit Estévez Raful to serve as a member of the Advisory Council. The goal of the Advisory Council is to guide and direct NYS TINRC activities and priorities, including planning for quarterly and annual meetings. Nicolás will be joining a diverse representation of people across regions, sectors, races, ethnicities, genders, and experiences, who have a commitment to trauma-informed and equity-centered principles and practices individually and within their organization.
The TINRC envisions a New York State where all people and their communities can attain wellness and resiliency, and systems have the tools to support healing from toxic stress and trauma.
The Advisory Council prioritizes creating space for collaboration and sharing of stories and concepts that reflect the mission, vision, and values of the network. Together the Network will leverage collective experiences and expertise to provide insights, build relationships, and expand trauma responsive practices across New York state.
Learn more about the New York State Trauma Informed Network and Resource Center by visiting our website for resource offerings, directory, and event information: https://www.traumainformedny.org/.
Nicolás Dumit Estévez Raful has exhibited or performed at Madrid Abierto/ARCO, The IX Havana Biennial, PERFORMA 05/07/21, IDENSITAT, Prague Quadrennial, Pontevedra Biennial, Queens Museum, MoMA, Printed Matter, P.S. 122, Sculpture Center, Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance BAAD!, Hemispheric Institute of Performance Art and Politics, City as Living Laboratory, Princeton University, Anthology Film Archives, El Museo del Barrio, Center for Book Arts, Longwood Art Gallery/BCA, The Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian, Franklin Furnace, and Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, among others. He is the founding director of The Interior Beauty Salon, an organism living at the intersection of creativity and healing. Nicolás has taught healing, meditation, somatic and movement related workshops at Copper Beech Institute, The Creative Center, Hispanic Society of America, Elisabeth Kübler-Ross Foundation, Healing Circles Global, and the In My Mind conference at the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Community Center in New York. He was recently a Senior Lecturer and Social Practice Artist in Residence in the Art and Art History Department at The University of Texas, Austin; and a Smithsonian Artist Research Fellow. He teaches with Breath-Body-Mind Foundation. Nicolás is currently a Teaching Scholar in Residence at Social Practice CUNY. He holds an MFA from Tyler School of Art, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA; and an MA from Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York. Born in Santiago, Dominican Republic, he was baptized as a Bronxite in 2011. www.interiorbeautysalon.com
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3. Chin Chih Yang, FF Alumn, at 42nd Street & 8th Avenue, Manhattan, thru Aug. 1
CHICKEN LITTLE – LÍNEAS DE FALLA / FAULT LINES by Cecile Chong
and 123 POLLUTION SOLUTION by Chin Chih Yang
Opening Reception: June 18, 2026 | 5–8 PM
On View: June 18 – August 1, 2026
WhiteBox Portable @ MTA
42nd Street–8th Avenue Station
Above the A, C, E Subway Lines (Downtown Direction)
Installed within one of New York City’s busiest transit corridors, these two exhibitions transform a space of daily movement into a site for reflection on our relationship to the environments we inhabit, alter, consume, and leave behind.
In CHICKEN LITTLE – Líneas de Falla / Fault Lines, Cecile Chong draws connections between the volcanic landscapes of Ecuador, where she was born, and the constant vibrations of New York City’s subway system. Suspended between collapse and resilience, the installation explores migration, ecological interdependence, memory, and the invisible forces that shape both our environments and our lives.
In 123 POLLUTION SOLUTION, Chin Chih Yang transforms discarded materials into sculptural forms that confront the realities of consumption, waste, and environmental responsibility. Drawing from decades of engagement with ecological issues, the installation invites viewers to reconsider the life cycles of the objects they use, discard, and overlook.
Although distinct in form and approach, both artists examine the fragile relationship between human activity and the natural world. Together, these installations offer a timely meditation on environmental vulnerability, collective responsibility, and the interconnected systems that sustain contemporary life.
Free and open to the public.
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4. Asia Stewart, FF Alumn, named to Smack Mellon 2026-27 Artist Studio cohort
2026/27 Artist Studio
Smack Mellon is thrilled to announce the six artists in the 2026–27 Artist Studio cohort!
Amy Bravo
Aparna Sarkar
Asia Stewart
Enrique Garcia
Judy Chung
Soeun Bae
These NYC-based emerging artists, representing a diverse array of practices, will move into their studios at Smack Mellon this September. For an eleven-month period, residents are granted a private studio, a stipend, and access to equipment with which to create work, establish relationships with arts professionals, and grow in community with their peers—all with the financial, technical, and administrative support of Smack Mellon.
A panel of arts professionals selected this year’s cohort, including Nova Benway, Executive Director at Triangle Arts Association; Ian Cofre, Independent Curator; and Pallavi Surana, Independent Curator. Preliminary panelists were former Smack Mellon Studio or Exhibition artists: Christian Amaya Garcia, mujero, Juan José Cielo, Utsa Hazarika, Angélica Maria Millán Lozano, and Armando Guadalupe Cortés.
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5. Sarah Schulman, FF Alumn, now online at Hyperallergic.com
Please visit this link:
https://hyperallergic.com/sarah-schulmans-four-decades-of-lesbian-fiction
Thank you.
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6. Julie Tolentino, FF Alumn, at Nowadays, Ridgewood, Queens, June 27
Sanctuary After Dark: Legacies of Queer Nightlife
Presented with Body Hack’s
Pride Nonstop at Nowadays
Saturday, June 27 | 2–10 PM
What can the legacies of queer nightlife teach us about sanctuary? Join us for Sanctuary After Dark: Legacies of Queer Nightlife, as part of Toward Sanctuary, our program series inspired by Guadalupe Maravilla’s artistic practice and upcoming public art commission.
Presented in collaboration with Body Hack this free public gathering brings together artists and cultural workers Lola Flash, Alice O’Malley, Julie Tolentino, and viento izquierdo ugaz, alongside DJs D1NAH and FASHION.
Tracing lineage from the legendary Clit Club, an influential queer party that galvanized community through years of crisis and upheaval, to Body Hack, a collective producing parties and fundraisers that support trans and gender non-conforming communities, the program reflects on nightlife as a site of refuge, resistance, and collective care across generations in New York City.
This event is organized in collaboration with Body Hack’s 2026 Pride Nonstop at Nowadays, a weekend-long celebration supporting mutual aid efforts for trans healthcare, housing, decarceration, and community wellbeing, including fundraising for Black Trans Liberation Kitchen and The Celebration of Black Trans Women Cookout.
2–3 PM | Clit Club DJ Set
3–5 PM | Lola Flash and Alice O’Malley
5 PM | Julie Tolentino with Anh Vo and Buffy Sierra
5:30 PM | Clit Club DJ Set Outro
6–8 PM | DJ D1NAH
8–10 PM | FASHION
Saturday, June 27 | 2–10 PM | Body Hack’s Pride Nonstop will continue all weekend long
Sanctuary After Dark is free and open to the public, but RSVP with a donation is strongly encouraged to support Body Hack’s fundraising for Black Trans Liberation Kitchen and The Celebration of Black Trans Women Cookout.
The ticket for Body Hack’s Pride Nonstop is sold separately.
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7. Liliana Porter, FF Alumn, now online at Vimeo.com, and more
The Liliana Porter exhibitions at Secrist / Beach, Chicago, have been extended through June 27, and
Watch “In Conversation with Liliana Porter” here:
https://vimeo.com/1198567902?share=copy&fl=sv&fe=ci
In celebration of Porter’s solo exhibition, critic and professor Lori Waxman leads a discussion with Liliana Porter and long-time collaborator Ana Tiscornia. This conversation took place at Secrist | Beach, on May 29, 2026.
Forthcoming exhibition catalogue will include an introduction by Lori Waxman and highlights from this discussion.
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8. Daniel Bejar, Mildred Beltre, Jenny Polak, FF Alumns, at Old Stone House, Brooklyn, opening June 25
Breaking the Law
A contemporary art exhibition at the Old Stone House & Washington Park
Exhibition Dates: June 18-August 2, 2026
Opening Reception: June 25, 6-8pm
Additional public programs TBA
Curatorial team:
Katherine Gressel, Bianca Mona, Jennifer Wingate, Dylan Yeats
Exhibiting Artists:
Chinatown Art Brigade, Daniel Bejar, Mildred Beltre, Meena Hasan, Intelligent Mischief, Tom Keogh, Graham MacIndoe, Katrina Majkut, Jeremiah Ojo, Julie Peppito, Megan Piontkowski, Jenny Polak, Rowan Renee, Margaret Roleke, Diana Schmertz
Breaking the Law at the Old Stone House & Washington Park (OSH) will consider the role of artists in both exposing, and responding to, unjust laws or interpretations of laws, including encouraging and honoring acts of protest and civil disobedience as well as acts of community building and repair.
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9. Benoît Maubrey, FF Alumn, named Fab City Awards 2026 Technology Winner
Congratulations — Fab City Awards 2026 Technology Winner
I’m very happy to share that Speaker Sculpture has been selected as the Technology category winner of the Fab City Awards 2026.
The jury recognised the strength of your public sound sculpture made from recycled e-waste speakers, and the way it creates a community “Speakers’ Corner” where people can share voices and messages live or remotely. Your initiative is a strong example of how technology, reuse, and public participation can come together to create new forms of civic expression.
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10. Galinsky, FF Alumn, at 14th Street Y Theater, Manhattan, June 23
Tuesday June 23rd, Robert Galinsky brings his 55 minute urgent and deeply human solo show Could You Patent the Sun? to the 14th Street Y Theater (344 East 14th St at 1st Ave) for a live staged reading/performance and taping on Tuesday, June 23, with doors at 6:30 PM and curtain at 7:00 PM. TICKETS ARE FREE FOR FRANKLIN FURNACE FANS, request comps at galinskynow@gmail.com or… pay $10.00 here https://couldyou14y.eventbrite.com Unreserved seating, live tapping. “Galinsky brings a wretching realism to his work.” Los Angeles Times Written and performed by Galinsky, directed by Cory Michael Herman, and executive produced by Dr. Nigel Brown, Could You Patent the Sun? drops audiences into one of the most defining moral moments of the twentieth century: Jonas Salk’s development of the polio vaccine and his refusal to patent it. At a time when – MUCH LIKE TODAY – fear, illness, public trust, scientific discovery, and access to medicine shaped the daily life of millions, Salk made a decision that still reverberates today. Asked who owned the patent to the vaccine, he famously replied: “Could you patent the sun?”
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11. Agnes Denes, FF Alumn, at Hammaburg-Platz, Hamburg, Germany, thru September 21
Sunflower Fields by Agnes Denes
An environmental public art installation at the Hammaburg-Platz
Curated by Joanna Warsza, City Curator Hamburg
Opening: Sunday, 21.6.2026, 16:30, Hammaburg-Platz
21.6. – 21.9.2026
An artwork grows here! For the exhibition cycle From the Cosmos to the Commons, a sunflower field by the legendary environmental artist Agnes Denes appears each summer in a different location across the landscape of Hamburg. This year it arrives to the very center and the origin of the city, at the Hammaburg-Platz, posing the question: how can the urban landscape be regenerated without triggering gentrification?
Agnes Denes is an iconic feminist artist who redefined art as a form of ecological intervention. Her most well-known work, Wheatfield — A Confrontation (1982), consisted of two acres of wheat planted on a landfill in Manhattan near Wall Street in New York City. Her new commission, Sunflower Fields, first presented in Prizren at the Autostrada Biennale (2021–2023), appears each year over the course of five years in a different district of Hamburg (2025-2029). It began last year at Stadtpark Hamburg and arrives this summer at Hammaburg-Platz. The project is conceived as an act of regeneration without gentrification — a proposal for a planetary, sustainable public artwork that produces more oxygen than it consumes, a refuge where we meet with and despite our differences. In the artist’s words: “We can all see the reality and still be able to dream.”
The work is cared for by artist-gardener Stephanie Jacobs. Curated by City Curator Joanna Warsza as a satellite initiative of the exhibition FIRE. From the Cosmos to the Commonsat the St. Nikolai Memorial. Exhibition Architect: José Délano
The series From the Cosmos to the Commons by the City Curator Hamburg is centering five core elements – Cosmos (2025), Fire (2026), Air (2027), Earth (2028), and Water (2029). It dedicates each year to one specific element around the idea of the planetary public sphere.
Pressekontakt / Press contact:
Nasim Weiler: presse@stadtkuratorin-hamburg.de | Tel. +49 170 4757307
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12. Anne Marie LeQuesne, FF Alumn, now online
CATHEDRAL
The Annual Group Photograph/28
07/12/2025 – *AGP28
St Paul’s Cathedral is hemmed in on all sides. After the Great Fire in the 17th Century the plan had been to enlarge the open space around the building in the rebuild. Small traders soon put paid to that idea as they instantly set up their stalls again. Today it is still hemmed in on all sides – trees have grown larger and the shops are still there, in their latest form. The film seeks to give a sense of the constant movement, chaos and energy on all sides of this building.
*www.theannualgroupphotograph.com
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13. Alison Cornyn, Jillian McDonald, Marianne Petit, Nina Sobell, FF Alumns, at The Church in Staatsburg, NY, June 25-29
Exhibition Dates:THE CHURCH IN STAATSBURG PRESENTS ARTIST BOOKS OF LOSS & HEALING
Exhibition and Free Public Programming Opening During Upstate Art Weekend, June 25–29, 2026
The Church in Staatsburg announces Artist Books of Loss & Healing, an exhibition curated by Alison Cornyn and Yolanda Cuomo, bringing together artist books centered on love, loss, and healing, on view during Upstate Art Weekend, June 25–29, and continuing through August 2, 2026. The exhibition features work by over 25 artists working across letterpress and bookbinding, photography and text, drawing and collage, and hand-sewn construction.
Lament is one of the most universal and least publicly accommodated of human experiences. And yet artists have always known otherwise — from medieval Books of Hours to contemporary archive works, the making of objects in response to loss is among the oldest and most persistent human impulses. Artist books are particularly well-suited to this work. They unfold in time, like grief itself. They require the reader to participate, to turn pages, to make choices about pace and attention. They can hold contradiction — the beautiful and the devastating, the intimate and the universal — within a single object. And they resist the logic of the monument: they do not insist on permanence or resolution. They simply bear witness.
Some of the books are elegies; some are records of survival; some are acts of protest or documentation. Included are photo books, embroidered books, pop-up books, editioned books, and unique objects.
Artists include Enrique Borges, Ann Burke Daly, Linda Duvall, Alex Callendar, Giovanni Cocco, Alison Cornyn, Maureen Cummins, Yolanda Cuomo, Christy Ferrato, Donna Ferrato, Patty Goodwin, Heather Greer, Raj Hariharan, Sandra Harper, Ann Lovett, Tanya Marcuse, Jillian McDonald, Maria Mayer Feng, Michelle A M Miller, Stella Nall, Marianne Petit, Sylvia Plachy, Nina Sobell, Sandra Spilke, Beth Theilen, Cristina Vatielli, Diana Weymar and Susan Wides.
Exhibition Dates:
• Upstate Art Weekend: June 25–29, 12:00–6:00 pm daily
• Opening Reception: Saturday, June 27, 4:00–6:00 pm
• Open weekends and by appointment, through August 2, 12:00–6:00 pm
Free Public Programming (all events free and open to all):
• TENDER RECORD: A Poetry Reading — Fri, June 26, 7:00 pm
• THE NOODLE + THE SATELLITE: An Attention Workshop — Fri, June 26, 1:00–2:00 pm
• SOUND WORKS: Embodied Listening — Saturday, June 27, 6:30 pm
• BOOKMAKING: A Workshop — Sunday, June 28, 2:00–4:00 pm (registration required)
Location and Access: The Church in Staatsburg, 5 Market Street, Staatsburg, NY 12580
About The Church in Staatsburg: Now in its third summer, The Church in Staatsburg is an art space dedicated to presenting exhibitions and programming that engage with critical social justice issues through the lens of contemporary art practice. Founded by artist and educator Alison Cornyn in 2023, The Church is located in a historic landmark building dating to 1876 in Staatsburg, NY. www.thechurchstaatsburg.org / @thechurchstaatsburg
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14. John Ahearn, Arlene Rush, FF Alumns, at Shadow Walls, Pruning, NY, opening June 27
All Are Welcome: Upstate Art Weekend 2026
June 25 – July 5
Open hours: 11am-7pm
Artist Reception Saturday, June 27th, 5-8pm
Curated by Niama Safia Sandy
Shadow Walls
413 Silver Spur Road West
Purling NY
Situated in the grand Victorian house and sprawling lawns of a former Catskills resort, All Are Welcome is grounded in the history of identity-based travel destinations in the Catskills versus the more intentional diversity and solidarity necessary in today’s world.
In part a commemoration of the many resorts that acted as safe havens for Black, Jewish, Queer and other marginalized and vulnerable identity groups in the 20th Century at spaces like Peg Leg Bates’ Country Club, Casa Susanna, Grossinger’s Catskill Resort Hotel, this exhibition seeks to create a new space where the divisions that once passed as safe must give way to a more total experience offering acceptance and parity for all people. With this show, we are offering an opportunity for our diverse community to proclaim a space for art, criticism, beauty, leisure, rest, and solidarity for all people.
Artists:
Arlene Rush
Cyle Warner
Dan Fethke
Dana-Marie Bullock
Derrick Adams
Evan Paul English
John Ahearn
Jeremy Dennis
Isaiah Davis
Kate Quarfordt
Khari Turner
Lauren Cohen
Michael Thorp
Nona Faustine
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15. Paul Zelevansky, FF Alumn, now online at https://vimeo.com/1202457036
TO THE GREAT BLANKNESS
MAILING LIST:
INTO THE VALLEY:
CANYON DE CHELLY, AZ
CANYON DC.JPG
PZ, June 19, 2026
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16. Daniel Bejar, FF Alumn, at New York Historical, Manhattan, thru Nov. 1
The New York Historical
170 Central Park West
at Richard Gilder Way (77th Street)
New York, NY 10024
June 18 – November 1, 2026
Why does democracy matter? What opportunities does it offer? What does it look like in action? Whom does it represent? These and other questions structure Democracy Matters, a dynamic visual conversation presented at The New York Historical on the occasion of the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States. Drawing primarily from the permanent collections of The New York Historical, the exhibition explores how the concept of democracy has stretched, contracted, and shifted through key moments in the history of the nation; how competing understandings of it have come into conflict; and how those conflicts have reshaped its boundaries.
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17. Maya Ciarrocchi, FF Alumn, receives 2026 Bronx Recognizes Its Own BRIO award
Please visit this link:
Thank you.
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18. Peter Cramer & Jack Waters, FF Alumns, at Le Petit Versailles, Manhattan, June 26-28
GREENBOX @ Le Petit Versailles, PART 2. June 26-28
The Garden as Commons: Ecologies of Care, Repair and Collective Futures.
WHITE BOX Portable Art Space returns to LPV with art installations, performances, films and more.
Curated by Juan Puntes
Curatorial Assistant Megan Daly
Assistant to Curator Ynuel Spence.
Curatorial and Program Advisor Yohanna M Roa.
Details and schedule to follow.
at LPV Garden – 247 E 2nd St, New York, NY 10009 (Rain or Shine)
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19. Susan Newmark, FF Alumn, at San Art Gallery, Brooklyn, July 23-Aug. 29 and more
San Art Gallery
Multiple Frequencies
Dates: July 23rd–August 29th, 2026
Reception: July 30 from 7 to 9pm
Location: 254 3rd Ave at Union St. in Gowanus
And
Millbrook Arts Project
Place/Meant
Dates: July 10th–August 22nd
Location: 3 Friendly Lane, Millbrook NY
Opening Reception: July 10th from 6–8pm ALL INVITED!
This will be one of 8 exhibits involved in a college symposium at Vassar College from July 22-24.
Making Meaning Upstate is a three-day symposium exploring new perspectives on collage history and current approaches to curating, publishing, and making. Through presentations, workshops, and exhibitions, the symposium brings together artists, curators, publishers, and historians to examine how meaning is constructed, disrupted, and reimagined through collage practices.
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Goings On is compiled weekly by Rohan Subramaniam, Archive Intern
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