All virtual programs are listed in Eastern Time (ET). Start times for all other continental US time zones are listed in the program description below the main image. For in-person programs, the program start time is listed in the location’s time zone.

  • New York, NY | ArtTable Circle – Collection Visit with Alice Sachs Zimet

    Alice Sachs Zimet's collection of photography includes over 300 museum-quality images, and she lives surrounded by the vast majority. Zimet has made a conscious effort to buy from all sources — galleries, auctions, benefit
    auctions, art fairs and even trades. With a collecting career spanning nearly 40 years, she has
    developed deep personal relationships with professionals across every aspect of the field.

  • New York, NY | A Discussion on Pay Equity in the Visual Arts

    Ford Foundation 320 E 43rd Street, New York, New York, United States

    Data about pay and gender equity when it comes to arts professionals is woefully inaccessible and incomplete. Over the past several months, in an effort to remedy some of these problems and contribute valuable knowledge to our community, ArtTable has collected new data via a survey about the changing contours of the artistic labor market in order to better understand trends and advocate for arts professionals, artists, and arts workers of all types. Based on the feedback we have received so far, and continue to receive, we are pleased to present this discussion on gender, compensation, and inequality among arts professionals.

  • Yonkers, NY | Private Tour of “Matrix: Prints by Women Artists, 1960–1990” with Laura Vookles, Chief Curator of Collections, Hudson River Museum

    Hudson River Museum 511 Warburton Avenue, Yonkers, New York, United States

    Printmaking has served as a stepping stone for many women artists, enabling their work to reach the masses thanks to its accessible form. Matrix: Prints by Women Artists, 1960–1990 explores a period of experimentation in printmaking among women artists, who used the art form as a means of creative expression and also a way to enter the male-dominated art market. Historically, women artists had encountered institutional barriers to success in the fine arts, including a lack of access to formal training, exhibitions, and sales. The 1960s ushered in an era of massive social change, including the feminist movement, which sought equal rights and opportunities and greater personal freedom for women. It became a period of great artistic experimentation and collaboration.

  • New York, NY | “Gego: Measuring Infinity” at The Guggenheim

    The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum 1071 5th Ave, New York, New York

    Join us at the Guggenheim as emerging curator and art historian curator Andrea Zambrano walks us through a retrospective of one of the great pioneering Venezuelan artists, Gego.

  • New York, NY  | Madison Square Park Tour of Shahzia Sikander’s “…havah, to-breathe, air, life”

    Madison Square Park 11 Madison Ave, New York, New York, United States

    Join us on Monday, May 1 at 5 pm for an artist-guided tour of Havah . . . to breathe, air, life, on view simultaneously in Madison Square Park and on the rooftop of the Appellate Division Courthouse through June 4. The tour will be led by artist Shahzia Sikander and Brooke Kamin Rapaport—Deputy Director and Martin Friedman Chief Curator.

  • National | Jaune Quick-to-See-Smith: “Memory Map” at the Whitney Museum of American Art

    Whitney Museum of American Art 99 Gansevoort Street, New York, NY, United States

    Join Laura Phipps, Assistant Curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art, with Caitlin Chaisson, Curatorial Project Assistant, for a tour of the first New York retrospective of groundbreaking artist, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith (b. 1940, citizen of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Nation)

  • New York, NY | Gallery Tuesday | Marilyn Minter at LGDR with Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn

    LGDR Gallery 3 East 89th Street, New York, New York

    Join us for a tour led by exhibition curator and LGDR Gallery partner Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn of Marilyn Minter. Spanning three floors and six gallery spaces, this ambitious show is Minter’s first solo exhibition in New York since her celebrated retrospective "Pretty/Dirty" at the Brooklyn Museum in 2016–17.

  • New York, NY | Gallery Tuesdays | Ruby Rumié “Us, 172 Years Later”

    Nohra Haime Gallery 500A West 21st Street, New York

    Join ArtTable and Nohra Haime for a tour of “Us, 172 Years Later” by Ruby Rumié at the Nohra Haime Gallery. Rumié puts together one hundred people from the Caribbean region whose unique characteristics share the passion and commitment for their trade, and express in a special way their taste and the value they place on the food from this region.

  • New York, NY | “Gego: Lines in Space” at LGDR

    LGDR East 64th Street 19 East 64th Street, New York, 10065

    LGDR is pleased to welcome ArtTable to "Gego: Lines in Space." A leading figure of Venezuelan abstraction in the 1960s and ’70s, Gego (1912–1994) created multidimensional works that radically engage the properties of line and space.

  • * Waiting List * New York, NY | Behind the Scenes: The Whitney Conservation Studio & Works of Art on Paper Study Center

    The Whitney Museum of American Art (Note: we are not meeting at the main entrance; see your confirmation email for details), New York, New York

    Don't miss this unique opportunity to get a behind-the-scenes look at the inner workings of the Whitney's conservation department with Executive Coordinator of the Conservation Department, Heather Cox, and Curatorial Fellow and Supervisor of the Works on Paper Study Center, Scout Hutchinson!

Support ArtTable’s Programming

Submit a Program Proposal.

Proposals are reviewed by the National Programs Committee.

Submit a Networking Event.

Opportunities to network for current and prospective members.

View the Program Archive.

A history of ArtTable programs from 1980 through today.

Watch Past Programs.

Rewatch recordings of past ArtTable programs.

ArtTable is a 501.c.3 organization and all programs are non-refundable. Should a program be postponed by ArtTable for any reason, the purchaser’s ticket will be honored for the rescheduled program. Should a program be canceled and not rescheduled, the purchaser will receive credit to be used toward a future program. Please email [email protected] with any questions.