Goings On | 11/24/2025

Contents for November 24th, 2025

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1. Martha Wilson, Steven Watson, FF Alumns, now online at https://artifacts.movie/martha-wilson/ 

2. Javier Téllez, FF Alumn, awarded 2025 Pérez Prize

3. Martha Wilson, FF Alumn, at MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY, Dec. 4

4. Peter Cramer & Jack Waters, FF Alumns, at Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Manhattan, Dec. 5, and more

5. Ron Athey, Michel Auder, Judith Bernstein, Elly Clarke, EYIBRA, Amelia Jones, Suzanne Lacy, Barbara T. Smith, FF Alumns, at The Box, Los Angeles, CA, thru Jan. 17, 2026

6. Alice Wu, FF Alumn, at Kala Art Institute, Berkeley, CA, thru Feb. 11, 2026

7. Shayna Dunkelman, FF Alumn, at Ki Smith Gallery, Manhattan, Dec. 11

8. Pat Oleszko, FF Alumn, at SculptureCenter, Long Island City, NY, opening Jan. 29, 2026

9. Linda Carmella Sibio & Nicolás Dumit Estevez Raful Espejo Ovalles Morel, FF Alumns, now online at InteriorBeautySalon.com

10. Todd Ayoung, Alicia Grullón, Guerilla Girls, Jerry Kearns, Nima Nikaklagh, Dread Scott, Greg Sholette & Olga Kopenkina, FF Alumns, now online at Hyperallergic.com

11. Lygia Clark, David Hammons, Elizabeth Murray, FF Alumns, now online at NYTimes.com

12. Coco Fusco, Joan Jonas, Martha Rosler, FF Alumns, now online at Ocula.com

13. Jody Oberfelder, FF Alumn, awarded Best Dance Film, 2025 Queens World Film Fest

14. Stephanie Brody-Lederman, FF Alumn, at Women’s Art Center of the Hamptons, Bridgehampton, NY, thru Jan. 11, 2026

15. Arlene Rush, Susan Schwalb, FF Alumns, at West Chelsea Art Building, Manhattan, Nov. 25

16. Glen Belverio, Dara Birnbaum, Coco Fusco, Joan Jonas, FF Alumns, now online at Hyperallergic.com

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1. Martha Wilson, Steven Watson, FF Alumns, now online at https://artifacts.movie/martha-wilson/

We are live! Please visit these links to Steven Watson / Artifacts’ half-hour, in-depth video interview with Martha Wilson, Founding Director Emerita of Franklin Furnace.

Website link: https://artifacts.movie/martha-wilson/

YouTube link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uPFWEe6sW

Thanks!

Will

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2. Javier Téllez, FF Alumn, awarded 2025 Pérez Prize

Please visit this link:

https://www.artforum.com/news/perez-art-museum-miami-awards-javier-tellez-perez-prize-1234738187

Thank you.

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3. Martha Wilson, FF Alumn, at MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY, Dec. 4

We warmly invite you to an upcoming event co-organized by ACC and Cai Foundation, Archival Thinking: Artist Archive Symposium, on December 4, 2025, at MoMA PS1 in NYC.

We are thrilled to present this exciting event to the public on the 30th anniversary year of Cai Guo-Qiang’s first ACC grant that took him from Tokyo to New York for a pivotal residency at the P.S.1 Studio Program, which became his first studio in the U.S. The move marked the beginning of his life and practice on the global stage—setting into motion a dialogue between art and archival practice that continues to this day. 

This full-day forum, held from 9:30AM-4:30PM, will bring together distinguished speakers from the fields of art, archives, and the humanities to explore the contemporary significance and potential of artist archives; it will be followed by a reception from 4:30PM-6:00PM. The program aims to encourage early-career artists, students, archivists, and cultural workers to explore the possibilities of archiving from the start—viewing archives as an integral part of creation rather than an afterthought limited to documentation.

Archival Thinking: Artist Archive Symposium

On December 4, 2025, Archival Thinking: Artist Archive Symposium will be held at MoMA PS1 in New York. Jointly organized by the Asian Cultural Council (ACC) and the Cai Foundation, with the support from the Rattray Kimura Foundation, the symposium will be curated and moderated by Paul Holdengräber. The event will take the form of a full-day forum bringing together distinguished speakers from the fields of art, archives, and the humanities to explore the contemporary significance and potential of artist archives.

Ross Benjamin (translator of The Diaries of Franz Kafka), Mel Yimeng Chu (archives manager of Cai Guo-Qiang Archive), Lisa Darms (former Executive Director of Hauser & Wirth Institute), Samantha Rose Hill (scholar of Hannah Arendt), Jennifer Wen Ma (interdisciplinary visual artist), Glenn Phillips (Chief Curator, Getty Research Institute), Rani Singh (Director, Harry Smith Archives), David Walker (Archivist, the Easton Foundation) and Martha Wilson (Founder, Franklin Furnace Archive) will take part in keynote talks and roundtable discussions. Speakers will address questions on how archives shape art history and contemporary art practice, the symbiotic relationship between art and archives, and how archives might evolve from static repositories of preservation into a generative system in an era increasingly defined by the technological mediation of memory itself. Through these discussions, the ability of archives to not only record the past, but reveal unformed thoughts, emotions, and potential for creative process will unveil itself. Further encouraging artists to integrate the process of archiving as part of the art-making process rather than an afterthought limited to documentation purposes.

The seed for this symposium was planted thirty years ago when Cai Guo-Qiang, as a recipient of the Asian Cultural Council Fellowship, moved from Tokyo to New York for a pivotal residency at the P.S.1 Studio Program, which became his first studio in the United States. The move marked the beginning of his life and practice on the global stage—setting into motion a dialogue between art and archival practice that continues to this day. Building on that history, Archival Thinking transforms the archive itself into a new narrative center—one that fosters interdisciplinary dialogue and intergenerational collaboration. It invites artists, archivists, and curious learners alike to collectively redefine how knowledge is preserved, reimagined, and shared.

The symposium seeks to open the door for a new generation to discover the power, purpose, promise, and pleasure of archival practice. It reminds us that an archive is not merely a vessel of memory, but also a tool for action—a method through which each of us can help redefine the future of art.

This event is free but reservations are required. www.asianculturalcouncil.org

Don’t miss out on this unique opportunity to delve into the world of artist archives!

We hope to see you there!

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4. Peter Cramer & Jack Waters, FF Alumns, at Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Manhattan, Dec. 5, and more

Peter Cramer & Jack Waters create for Offerings performance series

December 5 , 2025 Friday  at 7pm.

Church of St Mary the Virgin

145 West 46th Street New York, NY 10036

By Donation.  https://www.offering-space.com/about

Peter Cramer & Jack Waters at 

Poetry Projects 52nd Annual 

New Years Day Marathon

January 1, 2026. Thursday  1pm – 12am

St. Mark’s Church in the Bowery

131 East 10th St. 

By Donation.   https://www.poetryproject.org/

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5. Ron Athey, Michel Auder, Judith Bernstein, Elly Clarke, EYIBRA, Amelia Jones, Suzanne Lacy, Barbara T. Smith, FF Alumns, at The Box, Los Angeles, CA, thru Jan. 17, 2026

The Box 805 Traction Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90013 +1.213.625.1747 info@theboxla.com

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

PHALLUS :: FASCINUM :: FASCISM

NOVEMBER 15, 2025 – JANUARY 17, 2026.

WEDNESDAY – SATURDAY, 11-6 PM.

OPENING RECEPTION SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 5-8 PM.

This is a show about inclusion as practice and process. Please invite whom you’d like.

To begin, please allow me some foreplay with wordplay; The Greek root φαλλός (phallos) is likely related to the Proto-Indo-European root bhel-, meaning “to blow up” or “swell,” which connects it to concepts of inflation or enlargement. This same root appears in other words related to swelling or fullness, such as balloon, bellows, or belly.

A fascinum was an ancient Roman style of an amulet of a phallus, designed to draw away the evil eye from the user towards the amulet (because it was an object of desire). The English word “fascinate” ultimately derives

from Latin fascinum and the related verb fascinare, “to use the power of the fascinus”, that is, “to practice magic” and hence “to enchant, bewitch, or bind together”. In ancient Rome, the fasces were a ceremonial symbol of authority carried before magistrates. They consisted of birch or elm rods bound together with a leather strap, often with an axe head protruding from the bundle. The fasces represented the magistrate’s power to punish (the rods for beating) and execute (the axe for beheading). Benito Mussolini adopted this terminology when he founded the “Fasci di Combattimento” (Combat Squads) in 1919. The name deliberately evoked both the ancient Roman symbol of state power and the more recent tradition of Italian political organizing.

Now, I would like to draw your attention—at length—to the history of Ancient Roman militarism and fucking, or the suppression of non-procreative sex, if you please: The endless demands of Roman militarism created an inexorable pressure for population growth that fundamentally transformed sexual culture and law. What began as pragmatic concerns about maintaining adequate military recruitment gradually evolved into a comprehensive system of legal and social controls that systematically suppressed non-procreative sexual behaviors. This transformation reached its culmination not with the end of paganism, but with Christianity’s adoption and intensification of these existing regulatory frameworks.

Before the ancient Romans, with the ancient Greeks and Egyptians, sexuality was notably pragmatic. In ancient Egypt homosexual relationships appeared in art and literature without moral condemnation, marriage was often informal, divorce was relatively easy for both sexes, and celibacy held no particular virtue—even priests typically married and had families. Greek attitudes toward homosexuality are well documented, celibacy and contemplative life often being elevated, with contraception and abortion discussed openly by medical writers. Homosexual relations between soldiers were even understood as beneficial to the intensity of their fighting. 

The earliest manifestations of state intervention in sexual behavior emerged from Rome’s military expansion across Italy. The Twelve Tables, codified around 450 BCE, established the legal framework of paternal authority (patria potestas) that gave fathers absolute control over their wife’s reproductive choices, their children’s marriages and even their reproductive choices. This wasn’t merely about family structure—it was about ensuring that each household contributed adequately to Rome’s military needs through the production of future soldiers.

As Rome’s territorial ambitions expanded, so did the censorial powers that monitored citizen behavior. The censors, initially concerned with property assessments for military service, gradually extended their oversight to include sexual conduct that might affect population growth. Social pressure against permanent bachelorhood among the patrician class intensified precisely during periods of military expansion, when the state most desperately needed the sons of prominent families to serve as officers and provide military leadership. Rome was mobilizing a staggering 10-15% of its entire adult male citizen population simultaneously (with 30-40% of the entire population being slaves, that were also recycled into their military). The Punic Wars and subsequent Mediterranean conquests created unprecedented demands for manpower, coinciding with the first systematic legal attacks on non-procreative sexuality. The Lex Scantinia, likely enacted during this period of military crisis, criminalized certain homosexual acts, particularly those involving freeborn Roman men as passive partners. The law’s timing was no coincidence—Rome was simultaneously fighting Hannibal and expanding eastward, requiring every citizen male to fulfill his reproductive and military obligations.

Growing taboos against practices like fellatio and cunnilingus were similarly justified as “foreign” and unmanly behaviors that weakened Roman military character. The crisis of the late Republic, marked by civil wars and recruitment difficulties, intensified state intervention in sexual behavior. The Lex Iulia de Adulteriis Coercendis, building on earlier precedents and finalized under Augustus in 18 BCE, criminalized adultery not primarily for moral reasons, but to ensure legitimate heirs who could provide military service. The law’s provisions carefully protected the patrilineal transmission of military obligations from father to son. Increased prosecution of sexual behavior deemed to undermine traditional family structures accompanied Rome’s desperate attempts to maintain military recruitment. Social campaigns against Greek sexual practices, particularly symposium culture and pederasty, were explicitly connected to Roman military superiority over their allegedly effeminate Greek subjects. The message was clear: sexual discipline was military discipline, and military discipline was the foundation of Roman power. Augustus’s reign marked the systematic codification of militaristic sexual regulation. The Lex Iulia de Maritandis Ordinibus of 18 BCE mandated marriage for men aged 25-60 and women aged 20-50, with explicit exemptions only for those serving the state in ways that precluded family life. The Lex Papia Poppaea of 9 CE penalized celibacy and childlessness through inheritance restrictions, creating economic incentives for reproduction that directly served military recruitment needs. The legal privileges granted to parents (ius trium liberorum) provided those with three or more children with significant legal advantages, including exemptions from certain civic duties and enhanced inheritance rights. These privileges were explicitly calculated to encourage the production of future soldiers. Restrictions on marriage between social classes served to maintain distinct citizen bloodlines suitable for military service, while increased regulation of prostitution channeled sexual activity toward procreative marriage rather than sterile commercial encounters.

The early Imperial period saw the expansion of stuprum laws targeting non-marital sex among citizens, creating qcomprehensive legal frameworks that made non-procreative sexual activity increasingly criminal. The senatus consultum against castration under Domitian around 83 CE explicitly protected male reproductive capacity, recognizing that voluntary sterility represented a direct threat to military recruitment. Legal restrictions on divorce were made more stringent under various emperors, ensuring that marriages, once contracted, would continue to produce children for military service. The military crises of the third century intensified sexual regulation as the empire struggled to maintain adequate forces against barbarian invasions and internal rebellions. The Lex Cornelia de Sicariis was expanded to include severe penalties for castration, treating voluntary sterilization as a form of treason against the state’s military needs. Legal campaigns against mystery religions that practiced celibacy reflected imperial recognition that religious enthusiasm could undermine demographic objectives. The cultural apparatus supporting these legal frameworks became equally comprehensive. Literary campaigns by authors like Juvenal and Martial satirized sterile relationships and non-procreative sexuality, while philosophical schools promoted marriage and childbearing as fundamental civic duties. Mystery religions emphasizing fertility, such as those devoted to Cybele and Mithras, gained state support precisely because they reinforced demographic objectives. Public festivals celebrating fertility and procreation, architectural programs emphasizing family and childbearing, and educational reforms emphasizing masculine virtue tied to reproductive The Box 805 Traction Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90013 +1.213.625.1747 info@theboxla.com success all served to normalize and institutionalize the connection between sexual behavior and military obligation. The legalization of Christianity under Constantine in 313 CE and its subsequent establishment as the state religion represented not a break from these regulatory traditions, but their crystallization and intensification under new ideological justifications. Early Christian leaders, far from rejecting the Roman system of sexual regulation, embraced and expanded it while providing new theological rationales for existing practices. The Christian synthesis represented the ultimate triumph of Roman demographic anxieties over sexual freedom. By transforming military necessity into divine commandment, Christian sexual ethics preserved and expanded the regulatory apparatus that Roman militarism had created, ensuring its survival well beyond the collapse of Roman military power itself. The theological justification of procreative obligation proved more durable than the military justification from which it had originally emerged, creating patterns of sexual regulation that would define Western civilization for more than a millennium.

Finally, to be enjoyed with your bedside smoke (and a faggot meant a bundle of sticks or tobacco leaves, to be

burnt)—the word proletariate came from the ancient Roman census, which categorized the class of people that

had no other assets but the ability to procreate.

R.Z.S.

The Box 805 Traction Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90013 +1.213.625.1747 info@theboxla.com

ARTISTS, CURATORS, AND ARTIST-CURATORS

Saliko Adams

Rosanna Albertini

Alberto Albertini

Max Almy

Devin Andersen

Carmen Argote

Ron Athey

Michel Auder

Jose Barajas

Susan Barbour

Chip Barrett

Math Bass

Creighton Baxter

Robert Beck

Autumn Beck

Gretchen Bender

Lynda Benglis

Elizabeth Berdann

Natalie Bergman

Judith Bernstein

Anna Betbeze

Julien Bismuth

Lauren Bon

Jorin Bossen

Kevin Bouton-Scott

Alexandra Branger

B. A. Briggs

John Brooks

Michael C~ McMillen

Paul Cadmus

Connor Camburn

Steve Campos

Rick Castro

Aline Cautis

Sarah Charlesworth

Eli Chartkoff

Alex Chaves

Edgar Isaac Chavez

Elly Clarke

Earthen Clay

Sarah Conaway

Fiona Connor

Erin Cosgrove

Eileen Cowin

Randy Da Crow

Development Daddy

Lena Daly

Brian Dario

Nemuel DePaula

Paul Donald

Kira Doutt

Hedi El Kholti

Experimento 23

EYIBRA

Tatiana Echeverri Fernandez

Robert Fontenot

Linda Franke

Genevieve Gaignard

Michelle Garduño

Piero Golia

Samantha Greenfeld

M. A. Guevara

Carlos Alberto Guizar

Simon Haas

Chanel Von Habsburg-Lothringen

Trulee Hall

Derrick Harlan

Karl Holmqvist

Julia Holter

Elliott Hundley

Zhu Jia B side

Amelia Jones

John Joyce

Emma Kearney

Mike Kelley

Jahan Khajavi

R.B. Kitaj

Nicholette Kominos

Loren Kramer

Bruce LaBruce

Drake LaBry

Suzanne Lacy

Peter Lasell

Nilay Lawson

Leigh Ledare

Pony Lee

Ryan Linkof

Karen Lofgren

Ben Lord

Dennis Lyall

Tala Madani

Moeko Maeda

Alec Malin

Josh Mannis

Michael Marlowe

Kristan Marvell

Max Maslansky

Mara McCarthy

Jacobine van der Meer

Nathaniel Mellors

Jason Michael

Vijar Mohinda

Andra Nadirshah

Raul de Nieves

Fredrik Nilsen

Erkka Nissinen

Louise O’Donnell

Javier Ocampo

Maximus Oppenheimer

Rubén Ortiz-Torres

Erika Ostrander

Andrea Pallaoro

Jacky Perez

Glenn Phillips

Elyse Poppers

Ruben Preciado

Ana Prvacki

Pete Puskas

George Quaintance

Michael Rabbitt

Kyle Rand

Bill Rangel

Jacquie Ray

Erica Redling

Benjamin Reiss

Devin Reynolds

Levon Riggins

Pietro Rigolo

Jolie Rittenberry-Kraemer

Michael Roberts

Amanda Ross-Ho

Sterling Ruby

Lucas Samaras

Luis Alonso Sanchez

Alex Andrew Sanchez

Matt Savitsky

Melanie Schiff

Beatrice Schleyer

Michael Schmidt

Mira Schnedler

Jeanne Silverthorne

Party Slab

Zak Smith

Ian Smith

Barbara T. Smith

Mark So

Corazon del Sol

Omar Maurilio Solorio

Laura Soto

Michael St John

Brennan Stalford

Cole Sternberg

Alex Stevens

LeRoy Stevens

Devin Troy Strother

Mitchell Syrop

Sarah Szczesny

Christian Tedeschi

Adam Thompson

Molly Tierney

Sean Townley

Ian Trout

Oscar Tuazon

Sara VanDerBeek

Johannes VanDerBeek

Samuel Vazquez

Mark Verabioff

Da Ron Vinson

Banks Violette

Celeste Voce

Tashi Wada

Scott Cameron Weaver

Eric Wesley

Lisa Williamson

Andrew Wingler

Anna Wittenberg

Gosia Wojas

Dorian Wood

Bobbi Woods

THE WRINKLE ROOM

Jacob Jiayi Zhang

Jia Zhu

Robert Zin Stark

John Zinonos

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6. Alice Wu, FF Alumn, at Kala Art Institute, Berkeley, CA, thru Feb. 11, 2026

Works on Paper!

Line Shape Color Shape Line at Kala

alice wu

I’m having a show of my ongoing series of acrylic gouache paintings. This is the first time I’ve been invited to exhibit these! The opening is this Saturday, November 22, 12-4pm at Kala Art Institute. I look forward to seeing you.

Line Shape Color Shape Line highlights the interdisciplinary and playful nature of Alice’s practice with a presentation of compact gouache paintings alongside textile-based sculptures created over the past five years. The selected works reflect Alice’s process-driven and meticulous yet intuitive and exploratory artmaking approach. The geometric, pattern-like paintings, all on uniformly-sized kraft paper, demonstrate Alice’s linework and dramatic chromatic vocabulary. She composes vibrating color relationships that pulsate with energy. Certain motifs such as a particular kind of zigzag, a loop, a curl, a wave, reappear throughout multiple paintings, and then again in sculptural form, each occurrence opening up the possibility of new readings. The sculptures, alternately free-standing and wall-hung, are made with reclaimed upholstery textiles. As with Alice’s paintings, the sculptures initiate their form from simple drawings. The sculptures are stitched and stuffed, then painted to highlight texture and shape. The results invite touch. Alice constructs a visual language to design new and liberating self-mythologies.

Line Shape Color Shape Line at Kala Art Institute

On View November 22, 2025 – February 11, 2026

Opening Reception with “Bookness” and Fall of Freedom activities on

Saturday, November 22, 12-4 pm

Kala Gallery, 2990 San Pablo Ave., Berkeley, CA 94702

Gallery Hours: Tue-Fri, 12-5 pm, Sat 12-4 pm

Purchase Inquiries: Sonya Castillo, Kala Art Sales & Collections Manager sonya@kala.org  (510) 841-7000

What is Fall of Freedom?

“Fall of Freedom is an urgent call to the arts community to unite in defiance of authoritarian forces sweeping the nation. Our Democracy is under attack. Threats to free expression are rising. Dissent is being criminalized. Institutions and media have been recast as mouthpieces of propaganda.

This fall, we are activating a nationwide wave of creative resistance. Beginning November 21–22, 2025, galleries, museums, libraries, comedy clubs, theaters, and concert halls across the country will host exhibitions, performances, and public events that channel the urgency of this moment. Fall of Freedom is an open invitation to artists, creators, and communities to take part—and to celebrate the experiences, cultures, and identities that shape the fabric of our nation.

Art matters. Artists are a threat to American fascism.”

At Kala Art Institute, on Saturday, November 22, 12-4pm, visitors can participate in a hands-on screen printing event in Kala’s community classroom, as part of this nationwide wave of creative resistance. Participants can screen print an image of artist Mary V. Marsh’s artwork with the quote: “Read the message, hold the knowledge, create the story, send the message on—long may we wave.” Prints can be taken home by attendees.

For more please visit this link:

https://www.kala.org/exhibition/alice-wu-line-shape-color-shape-line/#

Thanks! 

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7. Shayna Dunkelman, FF Alumn, at Ki Smith Gallery, Manhattan, Dec. 11

Please visit this link:

https://www.kismithgallery.com/event-details/nomon-at-ki-smith-gallery

Thank you.

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8. Pat Oleszko, FF Alumn, at SculptureCenter, Long Island City, NY, opening Jan. 29, 2026

Pat Oleszko:

Fool Disclosure

On View Jan 29–Apr 27, 2026

SculptureCenter

Opening Reception

Thu, Jan 29, 2026, 6–8pm

SculptureCenter presents the first solo exhibition in a New York City institution in over 35 years of Pat Oleszko. Rooted in humor, sharp social commentary, and defiance of all forms of authority, Oleszko’s practice has often taken the form of sculptures which lend themselves to raucous performances that use linguistic wit to address various concerns, including accessible housing, women’s issues, and world politics. As her work developed from the 1970s on, Oleszko devised two strategies: using her body, which led to costumes, and using air, which produced large inflatable works. In both cases, her art “walked out the door,” in her words, and she began “using all the world as a stooge.” For performances and events, Oleszko continues to create a universe of characters, demonstrating a lifelong commitment to worldbuilding and to “wearing her work,” from dressing up as different characters for a waitressing job in her early days in New York to presenting at the Winter Olympics and appearing in movies, festivals, and theaters worldwide.

Spanning both floors of SculptureCenter, this survey exhibition is constructed around Oleszko’s singular inflatables, which first appeared in the 1980s, and brings together dozens of these airy, monumental works for the first time. From Yupasaurus (1980), a dinosaur that satirizes developers aggressively buying up land in New York, to Quit Draggin’ (2012), a towering dragon that bemoans a slow response to the climate crisis, they offer a rare glimpse into this vital aspect of her work. The exhibition also includes other key works from her decades-long career, such as costumes, sculptural chapeaux, films, performance documentation, and archival material from the 1970s to the present.

The presentation will be accompanied by the artist’s first institutional publication, which expands on the performance histories around her sculptures with newly commissioned essays by Columbia University professor and art historian Julia Bryan-Wilson; New York-based cultural worker, writer, and researcher Marie Catalano; Budapest-based curator, writer, and artist Gyula Muskovics; and American chef, food writer—and close friend of Oleszko—Ruth Reichl, along with a biographical timeline by the artist in her own idiosyncratic language. The publication will be designed by Tiffany Malakooti.

Pat Oleszko: Fool Disclosure is curated by Sohrab Mohebbi, Director, and Jovanna Venegas, Curator, with Sharon Liu, Asymmetry Curatorial Fellow. Research assistance by Ray Camp, 2025 Summer Curatorial Fellow.

Pat Oleszko (b. 1947, Detroit) received a BFA from University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Since the early 1970s, she has staged projects and performances at institutions such as Museum of Modern Art, New York (1976, 1977); The Kitchen, New York (1979, 1992, 1993); Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (1980, 1988); Performance Space 122 (now Performance Space New York), New York (1985, 1987, 2000); Museum of Contemporary Craft (now Museum of Art and Design), New York (1971–90); P.S. 1, New York (1978); Lincoln Center, New York (1990); Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston (1989, 2015); Civitella Ranieri, Umbertide, Italy (2019); Neuberger Museum, Purchase, New York (1993, 2019); Rauschenberg Foundation, Captiva, Florida (2016); National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington D.C. (1991); and King Tut’s Wah Wah Hut, New York; among others. She was the recipient of the Rome Prize in 1998, and the Guggenheim Fellowship in 1990. Oleszko lives and works in New York City.

Read more about the exhibition on our website here:

https://www.sculpture-center.org/exhibitions/14655/pat-oleszko-fool-disclosure

Thank you.

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9. Linda Carmella Sibio & Nicolás Dumit Estevez Raful Espejo Ovalles Morel, FF Alumns, now online at InteriorBeautySalon.com

The Interior Beauty Salon publishes a new piece:

A Pilgrimage to Linda Carmella Sibio / A Travelogue to the California High Desert

Linda Carmella Sibio & Nicolás Dumit Estevez Raful Espejo Ovalles Morel

https://www.interiorbeautysalon.com/a-pilgrimage-to-linda-sibio

Thank you.

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10. Todd Ayoung, Alicia Grullón, Guerilla Girls, Jerry Kearns, Nima Nikaklagh, Dread Scott, Greg Sholette & Olga Kopenkina, FF Alumns, now online at Hyperallergic.com

Please visit this link:

https://hyperallergic.com/1058354/16-acts-of-artistic-resistance-happening-this-weekend/?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAc3J0YwZhcHBfaWQKNjYyODU2ODM3OQABHotV4W5TScwFJvwQ0ufJDc2lhffGZDLMAPA1V63vtNFXRR7sipjMq2BDmFHt_aem_8O1LEIrEvoj1K18Vl4LYbw

Thank you.

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11. Lygia Clark, David Hammons, Elizabeth Murray, FF Alumns, now online at NYTimes.com

Please visit this link:

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/20/arts/design/arthur-jafa-artists-choice-moma.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Thank you.

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12. Coco Fusco, Joan Jonas, Martha Rosler, FF Alumns, now online at Ocula.com

Please visit this link:

https://ocula.com/magazine/art-news/chicago-saic-video-data-bank-staff-layoffs

Thank you.

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13. Jody Oberfelder, FF Alumn, awarded Best Dance Film, 2025 Queens World Film Fest

I haven’t held a trophy in my hands since I used to win swimming competitions. And art is different from just being the fastest. So proud this film, which won Best Dance Film in the @queensworldfilmfest. Thank you to all collaborative elements and people involved in this film!

#sitespecificdance #dance #jodyoberfelderprojects #performance #screendance #dance

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14. Stephanie Brody-Lederman, FF Alumn, at Women’s Art Center of the Hamptons, Bridgehampton, NY, thru Jan. 11, 2026

Something Red

@ WACH, thursday-sunday 12-5

2418 Montauk Highway, Bridgehampton, NY

wachamptonsny.org

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15. Arlene Rush, Susan Schwalb, FF Alumns, at West Chelsea Art Building, Manhattan, Nov. 25

West Chelsea artists Arlene Rush, Eve Aschheim and Susan Schwalb at West Chelsea Art Building, 526 W. 26 St. NYC 1001, Lobby/Room 302, Nov 25, 11-5 pm

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16. Glen Belverio, Dara Birnbaum, Coco Fusco, Joan Jonas, FF Alumns, now online at Hyperallergic.com

Please visit this link:

https://hyperallergic.com/1057696/school-of-the-art-institute-of-chicago-lays-off-20-workers

Thank you.

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Goings On for Artists is compiled weekly by Rohan Subramaniam, Archive Intern, 2024/2025

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