Contents for May 26th, 2025
CONTENTS (please click on the links or scroll down for complete information on each post):
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1. Nicolás Dumit Estévez Raful Espejo Ovalles, FF Alumn, at Children’s Art Carnival, Manhattan, May 30-June 7
2. Arantxa Araujo & Sara Kostic, Xinan Helen Ran, Ann Rosen, Amy Rihl, Brooke Singer, Asia Stewart, FF Alumns, receive 2025 Brooklyn Arts Council grants
3. Xinan Helen Ran, FF Alumn, at Museum of Everyday Life, Glover, VT, thru May 2026
4. Pamela Sneed, FF Alumn, at Floating Gallery, Martha’s Vineyard, MA, opening June 12
5. Dynasty Handbag, Richard McGuire, FF Alumns, now online at NYTimes.com
6. Pope.L, Patty Chang, Lydia Grey, David Hammons, Geoffrey Hendricks, Ed Ruscha, Sur Rodney (Sur), Fred Wilson, FF Alumns, at Artists Space, Manhattan, opening May 29
7. Justin Allen, FF Alumn, now online at Art in America
8. Brendan Fernandes, FF Alumn, at Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadelphia, PA, June 6-8
9. Kunio Suzuki, FF Member, at Ossam Gallery, Brooklyn, thru June 14
10. Mierle Laderman Ukeles, FF Alumn, at Tribeca Film Festival, Manhattan, June 8-14
11. Veronica Vera, FF Alumn, at Judson Memorial Church, Manhattan, June 1
12. LAPD, FF Alumns, at Lancaster Public Library, CA, May 28, and more
13. Peter Downsbrough, FF Alumn, at settantaventidue, Milan, Italy, thru June 24 and more
14. Jay Critchley, FF Alumn, now online with Florida International University
15. Yura Adams, FF Alumn, now online at TwoCoatsofPaint.com
16. Susan Weil, FF Alumn, at Shirley Fiterman Art Center, Manhattan, opening June 5 and more
17. Heide Hatry, FF Alumn, at Ivy Brown Gallery, Manhattan, opening July 7
18. John Held, Jr., FF Alumn, now online at SquareCylinder.com
19. Joshua Fried, FF Alumn, new recording released
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1. Nicolás Dumit Estévez Raful Espejo Ovalles, FF Alumn, at Children’s Art Carnival, Manhattan, May 30-June 7
Art as Resistance: Harlem Hosts Groundbreaking Rasanblaj Symposium to Decolonize American Narratives Through Culture, Memory, and Healing
The Children’s Art Carnival and Centro Cívico Cultural Dominicano launch
The Rasanblaj Symposium and Exhibition
In a time of cultural censorship and erasure, two West Harlem institutions unite for a robust public response through art, health, and collective memory. As debates rage over what histories deserve to be amplified and who gets to belong in America, From May 30 to June 7, 2025, The Children’s Art Carnival and Centro Cívico Cultural Dominicano launch The Rasanblaj Symposium and Exhibition—a major, public-facing initiative to reclaim diasporic identity, challenge systemic erasure, and honor cultural memory through radical art and civic engagement.
For additional information and schedule visit: https://childrensartcarnival.org/the-rasanblaj-symposium/.
This collaborative effort is more than an arts event—it is a call to action anchored in community resilience. Drawing from the Haitian Kreyòl word rasanblaj (“gathering” or “reassembly”), this initiative brings together over 30 artists, scholars, and healers for a week of immersive installations, critical panels, and cultural healing in the heart of Harlem. “When books are banned, and history is rewritten, we respond by gathering, remembering, and making art that cannot be erased, ” says Dr. Gina Athena Ulysse, Symposium Keynote Speaker and professor of Humanities at UCSC.
In a climate where cultural programs are being defunded, and entire communities are pushed to the margins, the Rasanblaj Symposium offers a vibrant counter narrative—one that centers art as a public right, memory as resistance, and gathering as liberation. Funded partly by the West Harlem Development Corporation, this initiative is a local activation and a bold statement: that the arts are not a luxury but infrastructure for democracy, healing, and truth-telling.
Featured Events:
Opening Night: May 30 | 6–9 PM
Venue: Centro Civico Cultural Dominicano
Join keynote speaker and performer Dr. Gina Athena Ulysse for a powerful opening reception, launching a week of artistic resistance and community reflection.
Welcome, Keynote Conversation & Libations
Dr. Gina Athena Ulysse with Nicolás Dumit Estévez Raful Espejo Ovalles and Vanessa Valdez
Symposium Day: May 31 | 12–8:30 PM
Venues: The Children’s Art Carnival, Centro Cívico Cultural Dominicano, and Hamilton Landmark Galleries
Libation Ceremony Welcome, Keynote Conversation & Libations, 12-12:45 pm, Dr. Gina Athena Ulysse with Nicolás Dumit Estévez Raful Espejo Ovalles and Vanessa Valdez
Keynote Conversation
Dr. Gina Athena Ulysse with Dr. Vanessa K. Valdés
Panels on Menstruation, Displacement & Diasporic Memory
Interactive Exhibitions & Ritual Installations, including:
Reflections of WEUSI (Parts 1 & 2)
Living Winds: Oya’s Altar for Decolonization
I AM PRE-COLONIAL POWER
Decolonizing Menstruation
Workshops on textile art, soap making, and home mapping
Performance & Discussion: The Last Gatekeeper by Germono Toussaint
Arts & Culture Health Fair | June 7 | 12–5 PM
At Centro Civico Cultural Dominicano
145th Street between Broadway & Riverside
This powerful closing event unites indigenous healing practices, community health resources, and the arts. It offers services from local practitioners and activation for all ages, fostering a sense of community and belonging.
At a time when identity, memory, and truth are under siege, the Rasanblaj Symposium transforms Harlem into a living laboratory of resistance, where the arts provide tools for wellness, remembrance, and liberation.
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2. Arantxa Araujo & Sara Kostic, Xinan Helen Ran, Ann Rosen, Amy Rihl, Brooke Singer, Asia Stewart, FF Alumns, receive 2025 Brooklyn Arts Council grants
Please visit this link:
https://www.brooklynartscouncil.org/what-we-do-grants-2025-grantees
Thank you.
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3. Xinan Helen Ran, FF Alumn, at Museum of Everyday Life, Glover, VT, thru May 2026
In a time when the unimaginable seems to happen every day at a breakneck pace, stains teach us about what can and cannot be erased, invite us to contemplate smears and smudges and disfiguring blights, and ask ourselves at what point does a stain obliterate a surface and wholly transform an object? Where does the object stop and the stain begin?
Also at the opening you can peruse and purchase our
Museum of Everyday Life book!
Take the museum home with you condensed into a gorgeous small book…
The Museum of Everyday Life is a self-service museum, open every day from 8am-8pm, and is located at 3482 Dry Pond Rd. (Rt. 16) in Glover, a short distance South of the Shadow Lake Rd. See www.museumofeverydaylife.org for more details.
Join us for an inspired afternoon…See You There!!
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4. Pamela Sneed, FF Alumn, at Floating Gallery, Martha’s Vineyard, MA, opening June 12
The Floating Gallery Presents “Your Face Is A Clock: New Portraiture,” opening June 12, 5-7 pm and continuing thru Aug. 12. https://www.100lagoonpond.gallery/
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5. Dynasty Handbag, Richard McGuire, FF Alumns, now online at NYTimes.com
Please visit this link:
Thank you.
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6. Pope.L, Patty Chang, Lydia Grey, David Hammons, Geoffrey Hendricks, Ed Ruscha, Sur Rodney (Sur), Fred Wilson, FF Alumns, at Artists Space, Manhattan, opening May 29
LIFE—a group show
opens Thursday, May 29th from 6–8pm
at Artists Space
11 Cortlandt Alley, New York 10013
Curated by Arnold J. Kemp
May 29 – August 9, 2025
Art, given the right circumstances, could get very small, hermetic and quiet—or big and messy. It could look like, to quote the painter and poet Etel Adnan, “the big mess of having a life.”
— Arnold J. Kemp
Artists Space is pleased to announce LIFE—a group show, curated by Chicago-based artist and educator Arnold J. Kemp. In the words of its curator, this exhibition “is an armature that supports the continuation of a conversation that I was having with the artist Pope.L (1955 – 2023) for four years before his untimely passing.” Spanning the entire ground floor, LIFE—a group show features a dynamic array of forms—paintings, sculptures, objects, architectural interventions, videos, live performances, and newly commissioned poetry, that express the joyful, mundane, and atrociously unstable textures of sheer existence.
Participating artists include: Lindsay Adams, Zarouhie Abdalian, Israel Aten, Nick Bastis, Nayland Blake, Gregg Bordowitz, Carolyn Castaño, Patty Chang, Mike Cloud, D’Talentz (Nikita Gale, Aryel René Jackson, Tomashi Jackson, Ashley Teamer), Christopher Garrett, Renee Gladman, Robert Glück, Lydia Grey, Léonie Guyer, David Hammons, Geoffrey Hendricks, Tomashi Jackson, Xylor Jane, Margaret L. Kemp, Kristan Kennedy, Jinn Bronwen Lee, Eric N. Mack, Devin T. Mays, Malcolm Peacock, Pope.L, Nick Raffel, Ed Ruscha, Robert Ryman, Mindy Rose Schwartz, Cauleen Smith, Cameron Spratley, Catherine Sullivan (with George Lewis and Sean Griffin), Collection of Sur Rodney (Sur), Mami Takahashi, Christine Tien Wang, Fred Wilson, and poets David Buuck, Tonya Foster, Erica Hunt, and John Keene.
Gregg Bordowitz will present a performance on Thursday, June 5th at 7pm.
https://artistsspace.org/exhibitions
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7. Justin Allen, FF Alumn, now online at Art in America
Please visit this link:
https://www.artnews.com/art-news/news/new-talent-art-in-america-2025-1234742376
Thank you.
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8. Brendan Fernandes, FF Alumn, at Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadelphia, PA, June 6-8
Please visit this link:
https://www.showclix.com/event/fwm-museum-admission
Thank you.
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9. Kunio Suzuki, FF Member, at Ossam Gallery, Brooklyn, thru June 14
Art in Life Exhibition
https://www.j-collabo.org/art-in-life-exhibition
May 10 – June 14, 2025
OSSAM Gallery, 300 7th St, Brooklyn, NY 11215
J-Collabo.org
YouTube
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10. Mierle Laderman Ukeles, FF Alumn, at Tribeca Film Festival, Manhattan, June 8-14
Maintenance Artist – Documentary Film World Premiere
“Toby Perl Freilich’s engrossing documentary employs a playful visual style to explore Ukeles’ life and career as a truly atypical, radical artist. The ‘ecofeminist’ Ukeles, influenced by the socially-progressive Dadaists and Futurists, has imbued in her work the need to reconceptualize how we engage with consumption, waste and land. Her decades-spanning work at the NYC Department of Sanitation — and other public projects abroad — has furthered the evolution of performance art in sync with political and environmental issues. Anchored by expansive archival material, Maintenance Artist crafts the dynamic portrait of an irrepressible and subversive artistic force in culture and society.”— José Rodriguez, Tribeca Film Festival Documentary Screening Committee Following decades of close association, Ronald Feldman Gallery is thrilled to announce the world premiere of a documentary film exploring the work and career of artist Mierle Laderman Ukeles from director Toby Perl Freilich and producer Judith Mizrachy. The premiere of the documentary Maintenance Artist will be featured as part of this year’s Tribeca Film Festival in early June 2025 in New York City.
For tickets, screening times, and additional information, please visit the link below:
https://www.tribecafilm.com/films/maintenance-artist-2025
Maintenance Artist will also be shown on June 15th at the National Gallery of Art as part of the DC/DOX ’25 and on June 19th as part of the 11th Annual Bentonville Film Festival.
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11. Veronica Vera, FF Alumn, at Judson Memorial Church, Manhattan, June 1
Please join us on June 1st for a special Sex Worker Sunday service at Judson Memorial Church. Hear the gospel according to sex workers, featuring the writings of Veronica Vera, April Flores, Dale Corvino and more…We invite you, members of Judson, the sex worker community, friends and allies to hear our stories and celebrate freedom of expression. This will be the second annual event to be organized at the church in honor of International Whores Day. The event will also be live streamed and saved on the Judson Memorial YouTube channel for those of you not able to attend in NYC. For more info on last years event, see Veronica’s recent interview in Ecumenia: Journal of Performance and Religion
https://veronicaverawrites.com/sex-worker-sunday-in-ecumenica-journal-of-performance-and-religion/
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12. LAPD, FF Alumns, at Lancaster Public Library, CA, May 28, and more
This Skid Row theater group is using art to address the healthcare crisis for the unhoused, even in the face of funding cuts Los Angeles Poverty Department combines theater and public discussions to push for a recuperative care model proven successful during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Now, government cuts threaten to curtail the project.
A scene from The Covid Hotel Welcomes You to the Future. Photo by Monica Nouwens.
This month marks the 2-year anniversary of the declared end of the global pandemic, and three years since Los Angeles Poverty Department (LAPD) began to create “The Covid Hotel Welcomes You to the Future,” a multidisciplinary art project about healthcare innovations implemented during Covid-19.
The project familiarizes audiences and experts with the proven model of care employed by LA County’s Housing for Health staff during the pandemic. The practitioners quickly saw that their innovative model was transforming outcomes for homeless patients. Now, LAPD is in the middle of a county-wide tour to share this message across LA County. But with recent funding cuts, the group has had to get creative in their mission to spread what they believe is a vital message.
In 2022, LAPD—a small Skid Row-based arts organization, with many members who have lived experience of being unhoused—set out to document this little-known success story from the Covid pandemic. From 2020-2022, LA County’s Department of Health Services (DHS) set up and ran emergency medical shelters for homeless patients with no place to quarantine. Over two years, 13,000+ people were treated at thirteen “Covid Hotel” sites. There were countless cases of dramatic improvements in patients’ overall health, and an impressively high rate (93%) of housing placements.Witnessing their success proved transformative for the frontline workers—doctors, nurses, mental health clinicians, and social workers—who became convinced that the recuperative care model they developed in the crisis could improve access to healthcare and housing throughout LA. From March to December 2024, LAPD’s Skid Row History Museum & Archive told the stories of these frontline workers in “Welcome to the Covid Hotel,” a multidisciplinary art exhibition and series of public conversations that engaged audiences with lessons learned at the Covid Hotels.
Sharing these frontline workers’ conviction that they had hit upon a model that could address LA’s homelessness crisis, LAPD went on to develop “The Covid Hotel Welcomes You to the Future,” a theatrical performance distilled from interviews and conversations with over fifty frontline medical staff, as well as the theater group members’ own efforts to get unhoused neighbors housed.
Today, LAPD is touring the show to highlight the need for a new approach to healthcare throughout LA County. “We decided to do it because in conversations with community and frontline workers, everyone said, ‘these ideas should be everywhere,’ says John Malpede, LAPD’s artistic director. “So we said, okay, we’ll do something totally outrageous and try to take it to all the areas of the county.” The sprawling 4,000-plus miles of LA County is broken into eight Service Planning Areas, or SPAs, which control how the county distributes resources and plans initiatives. LAPD’s tour—12 performances in all—aims to include at least one performance in each SPA, visiting neighborhoods as far-flung as Lancaster, Claremont, and San Pedro, with many stops in between. Each performance is followed by a panel discussion with local experts on the unique challenges and opportunities around healthcare and housing in their part of the county.
For the small Skid Row group, it’s an ambitious undertaking in the best of times, but as with most small arts organizations, a barrage of grant terminations from the project’s government funders (IMLS, NEH, and California Humanities) has made the project particularly challenging. Convinced that their message is timely and important, the group has vowed to continue their work, and is now focusing on bringing the performance to low-cost, accessible venues such as public libraries and progressive interim housing sites in their quest to spread the message of “The Covid Hotel Welcomes You to the Future.” “If there’s ever a time to do an outsized effort, it’s now,” says Malpede. “What’s the alternative? Shrinking in the corner?”
Still, LAPD’s future projects may not be so fortunate. As a culminating piece of their Covid Hotel advocacy, LAPD had planned to produce a book-length publication that would keep sharing the story of how LA County is addressing homelessness—and what is possible with low-barrier, compassionate healthcare systems. With the loss of grant funding, the future of this publication is now uncertain. Similarly, a planned project around Single Room Occupancy hotels is endangered because of funding cuts, and without a new source of support, the group may not have the opportunity to draw attention to this important issue that has affected a number of its members
Nevertheless, performances for “The Covid Hotel Welcomes You to the Future” continue undaunted, with LAPD’s members determined to share a hopeful vision of the future, where a compassionate system allows anyone to access housing and healthcare.
Upcoming performances:
May 28,1 pm: Lancaster Public Library, 601 W Lancaster Blvd, Lancaster, CA 93534, with panelists Christopher Boyd (VelNonArt Transformative Health), Melissa Ivory (community advocate), and James Evans (community advocate).
June 4, 3:30 pm, Van Nuys Public Library, 6250 Sylmar Ave, Van Nuys, CA 91401, with panelists Alisa Osunfunke Orduna (Florence Aliese Advancement Network), Carla Orendorff (Aetna Street Solidarity), and Giselle “Gelly” Harrell (SFV Homeless Union). Orduna, former liaison for Skid Row with the Los Angeles City mayor’s office, will share her experience of convening Skid Row residents to imagine and realize the ReFresh Spot—a 24 hour hygiene center—while Mayor Garcetti’s liaison to Skid Row, and her equivalent role as consultant to the County Department of Health Services in leading community envisioning of the Skid Row Action Plan and realizing the Skid Row Care Campus. Orendorff and Harrell are working with their community to realize similar amenities in Van Nuys.
June 7, 8:20 pm, This Home, Forever performance series, organized by Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE) at Heidi Duckler Studio, 1206 Maple Ave., Ste. 1100B, Los Angeles, CA 90015 (Bendix Building).
Find a full record of the Covid Hotel project, including full panel conversations and upcoming performances, at https://www.lapovertydept.org/projects/welcome-to-the-covid-hotel/
ABOUT LOS ANGELES POVERTY DEPARTMENT
Los Angeles Poverty Department is a multi-disciplinary arts organization that produces and presents artworks and events that instantiate the existence of the Skid Row community—affirming its assets, advocating for its rights, and supporting its aspirations. LAPD projects interweave exhibitions, publications, theatrical performances, public conversations, and cultural events. Programs are developed, produced, and performed collaboratively with Skid Row community members. Founded in 1985 by John Malpede, LAPD was the first performance group in the nation made up principally of homeless people, and the first arts program of any kind for homeless people in Los Angeles.
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13. Peter Downsbrough, FF Alumn, at settantaventidue, Milan, Italy, thru June 24 and more
settantaventidue is pleased to invite you to the opening of the solo exhibition by
Peter Downsbrough
Thursday the 22nd of May 2025 starting at 19:00
Via Lodovico il Moro 1, Milano
The exhibition Peter Downsbrough – curated by Nicola Mafessoni – is conceived to occupy the entire gallery with wall pieces, sound and video pieces. It was thought of since the very early stages of settantaventidue’s project, and is dedicated to an artist particularly dear to the gallery.
Peter Downsbrough (1940, New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA—2024, Brussels, Belgium) is known for a body of work that spans various media including
sculpture, photography, urban interventions, and books as well as audio works, films, maquettes, and a wide range of work on paper including collages and prints.
“Peter Downsbrough’s works ask viewers to resituate themselves in order to make sense of them, and his minimalist approach explores the relationship between language and space, defining the intersections between construction and perception. His classic Two Pipes exemplify his conceptual approach. Consisting of two simple
metal pipes, one of standard length, the other one cut shorter. Positioned outdoors, vertically, parallel to one another, they emphasize the relationship between the objects, their spatial arrangement, and the viewer’s perception. The work invites contemplation on how form, space, and the absence of overt narrative can create meaning.
These parallel linear elements appear in other formats, too: Two Poles (placed indoors) or Two Lines, on paper, or in the books.
Downsbrough’s work frequently incorporates text and geometric forms, inviting viewers to engage with the context and meaning of words in relation to physical space.
In 1980 Peter Downsbrough started using transfer tape to overlay two lines onto commercially available postcards of mostly ordinary urban views. He then sent them off to friends and relatives. Later, he also added words, using transfer letters. Furthermore, a number of his altered postcards were published between 1980 and 2024.
Downsbrough used this condensation of his visual vocabulary to talk about how we
observe and analyze things.
His work has been exhibited widely and is included in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Musée d’Art Moderne et Contemporain, and Fonds Municipal d’art contemporain, both in Geneva; Centre Pompidou and Fonds National d’Art Contemporain, both in Paris; Le Consortium, Centre d’Art, and FRAC Bourgogne, both in Dijon; FRAC Bretagne, Rennes; FRAC Lorraine, Metz; and FRAC Nord – Pas de Calais, Dunkerque, France; S.M.A.K., Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst, Ghent, and Middelheimmuseum, Antwerp, Belgium; Museu d’Art Contemporani, Barcelona, Spain; and Muzeum Sztuki, Lodz, Poland.” Nicola Mafessoni
Conceptual and minimal art, electroacoustic experimentation, sound art and field recording, radical and utopian architecture, are at the centre settantaventidue’s program.
settantaventidue is committed to an articulated and rigorous cultural proposal, concentrating specifically on experimentation and research in the fields of visual, sonic and architectural arts with determined and consistent trajectories estranged from mainstream culture, conventional artistic discourses, and market dynamics.
All of settantaventidue’s cultural activities are entirely organized and financed by the non-profit entity Umbra Grey ETS, thanks to the generous collaboration of:
Main partner and supporter:
Kira A. Princess of Prussia Foundation, Germany
Partners:
TomoTomo, Milano
Paper&People, Milano
Press Point, Milano
Zurich Insurance Plc Italia & Consulenze Assicurative srl-Brescia
Futura_Research
and
a new Peter Downsbrough publication:
https://www.instagram.com/p/DJ3r2MuNH_3/?img_index=1
Thank you.
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14. Jay Critchley, FF Alumn, now online with Florida International University
Please visit this link:
https://artspeak.fiu.edu/interviews/jay-critchley/
Thank you.
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15. Yura Adams, FF Alumn, now online at TwoCoatsofPaint.com
Please visit this link:
https://twocoatsofpaint.com/2025/05/yura-adams-a-freewheeling-conversation-with-daniel-giordano.html
Thank you.
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16. Susan Weil, FF Alumn, at Shirley Fiterman Art Center, Manhattan, opening June 5 and more
Susan Weil: About Time
June 5 – August 9, 2025
Shirley Fiterman Art Center
81 Barclay Street
New York, NY
Opening Reception: Thursday, June 5, 5-7 pm.
Artist Talk: Saturday, June 7, 11am.
The Shirley Fiterman Art Center is excited to announce its upcoming exhibition Susan Weil: About Time. A solo show of more than 50 works by artist Susan Weil, this survey spans her career from 1949 to the present, and is the first major institutional solo presentation of her work in New York City.
Time, both literally and metaphorically, is a central theme that threads its way through her more than 70-year practice. Weil cultivated a unique vision that moved back and forth between paper and canvas, traditional materials and experimental techniques, figuration and abstraction, exploring throughout the ever-shifting elements of time, movement, and language. The exhibition will be on view from June 5 – August 9, 2025, with an opening reception on June 5 from 5-7 pm.
Susan Weil and Vincent FitzGerald In Conversation: Saturday, June 7 at 11 am.
Weil and Vincent FitzGerald, publisher of limited edition artist books and prints, discuss their many collaborations
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17. Heide Hatry, FF Alumn, at Ivy Brown Gallery, Manhattan, opening July 7
Heide Hatry
Flaco, A Tribute to the Central Park Owl
From July 7 – August 8
at Ivy Brown Gallery
675 Hudson St., NYU
with an opening reception on July 7th from 6-8pm
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18. John Held, Jr., FF Alumn, now online at SquareCylinder.com
Please visit this link
https://www.squarecylinder.com/2025/05/10-x-10-for-10-ten-years-of-letterform-archive/
Thank you.
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19. Joshua Fried, FF Alumn, new recording released
Please visit this link:
https://joshuafriedmusic.bandcamp.com
Thank you.
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Goings On is compiled weekly by Rohan Subramaniam, Archive Intern 2024/2025.
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