New York, NY | Gallery Tuesdays at Salon Zürcher “11 Women of Spirit”

May 16, 2023 | 7:00 pm 8:00 pm

Bettina Blohm "Spanish Moon"

Join ArtTable for the 28th Edition of SALON ZÜRCHER, hosted by Zürcher Gallery founder Gwenolee Zurcher. A distinguished group of 11 women artists show their work in the space on Bleecker Street in Manhattan. Femmes d’esprit was an 18th-century French term that referred to independently-minded female painters, writers, and intellectuals, routinely under-recognized by their male contemporaries and publics.

Between their two locations, Zürcher New York / Paris has hosted 27 fairs. The May 2022 edition of 11 Women of Spirit (Part 5) was featured in Hyperallergic with a special review by Ela Bittenncourt and was mentioned as a must-see satellite fair in the New York Times and Timeout. Zürcher Gallery is located in the East Village, within walking distance of the New Museum, the Lower East Side, and TriBeCa gallery districts.

In keeping with the spirit of artistic salons, 11 Women of Spirit involves the presence of the following 11 participating artists:

Bettina Blohm
Petey Brown
Sue Collier
Fukuko Harris
Nancy Manter
Victoria Palermo
Sacha Floch Poliakoff
Jo Ann Rothschild
Sonita Singwi
Jenny Tango
April Vollmer


  • ArtTable Members & Guests – complimentary
  • Public Admission – complimentary

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This program is supported in part by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.



Image: Bettina Blohm | Spanish Moon, 2021 oil on linen 65 x 50 in / 165,1 cm x 127 cm

ZÜRCHER GALLERY

33 Bleecker Street
New York, New York 10012
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Gwenolee Zürcher 
Encouraged by Joan Mitchell, Gwenolee Zürcher cofounded Zürcher Gallery in New York and Paris in 2003. Read more on Hyperallergic.

Dallas, TX | “Lives of the Gods: Divinity in Maya Art” at the Kimbell Art Museum with Jennifer Casler Price

May 10, 2023 | 11:00 am 12:00 pm

'Whistle with the Maize God Emerging from a Flower' Maya, Mexico Late Classic period, 600–900 Ceramic with pigment, 8 1/8 x 2 in. (20.7 x 5.1 cm) The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, The Michael C. Rockefeller Memorial Collection, Bequest of Nelson A. Rockefeller, 1979, 1979.206.728

Join ArtTable at The Kimbell Art Museum for a guided tour of Lives of the Gods: Divinity in Maya Art led by Curator of Asian, African, and Ancient American Art, Jennifer Casler Price

An exhibition of nearly 100 rarely seen masterpieces and recent discoveries depicts episodes in the life cycle of the gods, from the moment of their birth to resplendent transformations as blossoming flowers or fearsome creatures of the night. Created by masters of the Classic period (A.D. 250–900) in the spectacular royal cities in the tropical forests of what is now Guatemala, Honduras, and Mexico, these landmark works evoke a world in which the divine, human, and natural realms are interrelated and intertwined. Lenders include major museum collections in Europe, the United States, and Latin America, with many works on view for the first time in the U.S., including new discoveries from Palenque (Mexico) and El Zotz (Guatemala).

“Mind-blowing”– New York Magazine 

“Totally riveting”– The New York Times 

“A magnificent show”— The New Yorker

For more information on the exhibition click here.

Admission:

  • ArtTable Members – $20
  • Member Guests – $30
  • Public -$35
  • If you are a current Kimbell Museum member, please email programs@arttable org to book your registration
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Thank you to Heather Reichstadt for initiating this program, and Louky Keijsers Koning for coordinating.

• • •

Image credit: “Whistle with the Maize God Emerging from a Flower.” Maya, Mexico Late Classic period, 600–900 Ceramic with pigment, 8 1/8 x 2 in. (20.7 x 5.1 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, The Michael C. Rockefeller Memorial Collection, Bequest of Nelson A. Rockefeller, 1979, 1979.206.728


About the Curator:

Jennifer Casler Price has held the position of curator of Asian, African, and Ancient American Art at the Kimbell Art Museum since 1993. She has a Master’s Degree in Chinese Art History and a Certificate in Curatorial Studies from the Institute of Fine Arts, NYU. In her position at the Kimbell, she is responsible for the areas of Chinese, Japanese, Indian, Himalayan, Southeast Asian, African and the Art of the Ancient Americas – which represent half of holdings of the permanent collection.

During her tenure at the Kimbell, she has curated major exhibitions of Buddhist sculpture, Chinese antiquities and Imperial porcelain, Japanese ukiyo-e painting and Samurai armor, Egyptian antiquities, Tibetan Esoteric Buddhist painting, Mughal painting, African and Oceanic sculpture, Maya and Wari art, a retrospective on Louis Kahn, the architect of the original Kimbell building, and the couturier Cristobal Balenciaga. More recently, she organized: Queen Nefertari’s Egypt; Buddha, Shiva, Lotus, Dragon; and The Language of Beauty in African Art; and is currently preparing for a spring 2023 exhibition Lives of Gods: Divinity in Maya Art (co-organized with the MET). In 2012 she curated the Kimbell’s 40th Anniversary exhibition in the iconic Louis Kahn building and in 2013 she supervised the re-installation of her collections in the Renzo Piano Pavilion. She has made nearly thirty acquisitions covering the range of all the fields she curates. In addition to these duties, Jennifer contributes to publications, conducts docent training, lectures frequently to share her expertise, and has led patron tours to China, Japan, India, Cambodia, Vietnam, Turkey, Cuba, Peru, New Zealand, Australia, Greece, and Croatia. Jennifer carried out a six-year term (2015 – 2020) as a Commissioner on the Fort Worth Public Art Commission, serving as Vice-Chair and Chair of the Commission during her tenure. She has been a member of AAMC (Association of Art Museum Curators) since 2001 and has served as Membership Committee Co-Chair, Advocacy Task Force co-Chair, Prize Committee member, and in 2020 participated in the Mentorship Program as a mentor to a junior curatorial colleague. She is a founding member and serves on the Steering Committee for the ACAA (American Curators of Asian Art). Jennifer lives in Fort Worth with her husband, Steven Price, and has a daughter Zoë, who is a sophomore at Emory Universit


Kimbell Art Museum

3333 Camp Bowie Boulevard
Fort Worth, 76107 United States
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New York, NY | Tour of Wendy Red Star’s “Our Side” at Sargent’s Daughters

May 2, 2023 | 5:00 pm 6:30 pm

Wendy Red Star | Strawberry Chief (ishkóoshiite), 2023. Fabric and archival pigment prints mounted on gatorboard, 44 x 44"

Please join us at Sargent’s Daughters gallery for a tour of Our Side—the third solo exhibition of Wendy Red Star (Apsáalooke (Crow), b.1981, Billings, MT) at the gallery. This exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Spring 2023 release of Red Star’s monograph Bíilukaa, published by Radius Books and featuring interviews with the artist, members of her extended family, and scholars. The book’s title, Bíilukaa, is in reference to what the Apsáalooke (Crow) call themselves: Our Side.

Our Side builds upon Red Star’s research into historical photographs of Apsáalooke individuals and objects, with the artist drawing on both her personal collection and works held in museums and archives across the country. Red Star notes: “Since the time I left the Crow reservation I have encountered my tribe’s material culture in every city I have exhibited or occupied. It is incredible that so much of my community’s history and material culture is kept in the vaults of these institutions hundreds of miles away from their source.”

The exhibition includes two distinct bodies of work; the first are photographic prints originally produced for Bíilukaa, reimagined as a dynamic installation in the gallery. The second consists of large-scale unique collages, which layer photographs on top of fabrics typical of Apsáalooke regalia.


Wendy Red Star (b.1981, Billings, MT) lives in Portland, OR. Red Star has exhibited at venues including the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, NY), Brooklyn Museum (Brooklyn, NY), both of which have her works in their permanent collections; Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemporain (Paris, France), Domaine de Kerguéhennec (Bignan, France), Portland Art Museum (Portland, OR), Hood Art Museum (Hanover, NH), St. Louis Art Museum (St. Louis, MO), Minneapolis Institute of Art (Minneapolis, MN), and the Frost Art Museum (Miami, FL).

Her work is in public collections including the Museum of Modern Art (New York, NY), the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, NY), the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York, NY), the Guggenheim Museum (New York, NY), the Amon Carter Museum of American Art (Fort Worth, TX), the Denver Art Museum (Denver, CO), the Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art at Hamilton College (Clinton, NY), the Baltimore Museum of Art (Baltimore, MD), the Fralin Museum of Art at the University of Virginia (Charlottesville, VA), the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University (Durham, NC), the Birmingham Museum of Art (Birmingham, AL), the Williams College Museum of Art (Williamstown, MA), the Memorial Art Gallery of the University of Rochester (Rochester, NY), San Antonio Museum of Art (San Antonio, TX), The Seattle Art Museum (Seattle, WA), and the British Museum (London, UK).

She served as visiting lecturer at Yale University (New Haven, CT), the Figge Art Museum (Davenport, IA), the Banff Centre (Banff, Canada), National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne (Melbourne, Australia), Dartmouth College (Hanover, NH), CalArts (Valencia, CA), Flagler College (St. Augustine, FL), and I.D.E.A. Space in Colorado Springs (Colorado Springs, CO). In 2017, Red Star was awarded the Louis Comfort Tiffany Award and in 2018 she received a Smithsonian Artist Research Fellowship. Her first career survey exhibition “Wendy Red Star: A Scratch on the Earth” was at the Newark Museum in New Jersey through May 2019, concurrently with her first New York solo gallery exhibition at Sargent’s Daughters. In the fall of 2022, Red Star had a solo project with the Public Art Fund titled Travels Pretty, on JCDeaux bus shelters across Boston, MA; Chicago, IL; and New York, NY. Red Star’s monograph Delegation was co-published by the Aperture Foundation and Documentary Arts in May 2022, which was named one of Vanity Fair’s best art books of 2022 as well as Time Magazine’s best photography books of 2022.

Red Star is currently exhibiting at the Seattle Art Museum (Seattle, WA), the Denver Art Museum (Denver, CO), the Utah Museum of Fine Art (Salt Lake City, UT), Sharjah Art Foundation (Sharjah, UAE).


Admission:

  • ArtTable Members – complimentary
  • Member Guests – $10

Not a member? Join today!

Please note that all income from program fees goes toward program expenses and ArtTable’s internal costs for organizing programs.

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This program is supported in part by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.



Image: Wendy Red Star | Strawberry Chief (ishkóoshiite), 2023. Fabric and archival pigment prints mounted on gatorboard, 44 x 44″

Sargent’s Daughters

179 East Broadway
New York, New York 10002
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About the Tour Leader

Christine Nyce is a curator and writer originally from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.  She is based in New York, where she is a Gallery Associate and Curator with Sargent’s Daughters gallery.  She holds a BA in Art History from Williams College and a MA in Curatorial Studies from the Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College.

About the Gallery

Sargent’s Daughters was founded in 2014 on the Lower East Side by Allegra LaViola. The gallery takes its name from the painter John Singer Sargent, who was an innovator working in a traditional medium. Accordingly, the gallery interest is in artists whose work combines the same qualities of tradition and cutting edge. In addition to exhibitions by represented gallery artists, Sargent’s Daughters creates collaborations as a platform for exploring new conversations within a wider context and presents a strong program of primarily women artist, often highlighting overlooked artists working outside the established gallery world. The gallery has a history of granting young artists their first exhibition opportunities, placing works in major museums, and producing catalogues to further the dialogue of the artists’ work. Gallery exhibitions have been featured in The New York Times, ARTFORUM and Art in America, among other national and international publications.

National | ArtTable Reception & Tour at VOLTA New York

May 20, 2023 | 10:30 am 12:00 pm

VOLTA 2023

Please join us for a brunch reception and tour with Cristina Salmastrelli at VOLTA New York!

Take advantage of this great opportunity to meet your fellow ArtTable members during Frieze Week in New York City. Enjoy a delicious array of brunch items while mingling with your fellow members.

VOLTA New York’s “A Female Focus” spotlight highlights artist Natalie Collette Wood, represented by Vellum Projects; Asako Tabata, represented by SEIZAN Gallery; Dana Sherwood, represented by Galerie Heike Strelow; and Chellis Baird, represented by FORMAH. Be sure to keep your eye out for them!

Your ticket covers general access to the fair, access to the brunch reception, tour, and refreshments.

*Please note that your reply/confirmation email will contain an EventBrite link to book your complimentary fair passes before the brunch! Please be sure to do that in advance.*

Admission:

  • ArtTable Members – $55
  • ArtTable Member +1 Guest – $120
  • Additional Guest -$50
    _________________________
  • Non-Members – $75
  • Non-Member’s Guest – $50

Not a member? Join today!

ArtTable is a 501.c.3 organization. All programs are non-refundable. 
Click here to view our cancellation policy.

This program is supported in part by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.


About VOLTA

VOLTA debuted in New York in 2008 to support ambitious international galleries to participate in the art markets’ major cities. Now, VOLTA returns to present over 50 international galleries at our 2023 edition May 17 – 21 at the Metropolitan Pavilion. 

“Beginning as an art fair collaboration between dealers and their friends in Basel, VOLTA has built up a reputation as a gallery favorite. Purposefully planned during Frieze New York, it’s ideal to hit both. “ 

VOLTA Art Fair fosters galleries in staging ambitious solo and group presentations, refining the experience to its essential elements: the artists and their work. This focus on compelling visual statements by up-and-coming and established artists cultivates a vibrant and approachable environment of discovery for the engaged collector.


Image: VOLTA New York, Courtesy of VOLTA

Volta New York 2023

125 West 18th Street
New York, New York 10011
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Details

Organizer

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New York, NY | Guided Tour of “Wangechi Mutu: Intertwined” at the New Museum

May 13, 2023 | 1:30 pm 2:30 pm

“Wangechi Mutu: Intertwined,” 2023. Exhibition view: New Museum, New York. Courtesy New Museum. Photo: Dario Lasagni

Join ArtTable at The New Museum for a tour of a major solo exhibition of the work of Wangechi Mutu (b. 1972, Nairobi), bringing together over one-hundred works from across her twenty-five-year career. The tour will be led by New Museum teaching artist, Yasmeen Abdalla.

ArtTable had the chance to interview Mutu in 2014 in partnership with artnet. This tour brings us full circle to see the significant development and accomplishment in her career since that time.

Representing the full breadth of Mutu’s practice, the presentation will encompass painting, collage, drawing, sculpture, film, and performance. Mutu first gained acclaim for her collage-based practice exploring camouflage, transformation, and mutation. She extends these strategies to her work across various media, developing hybrid, fantastical forms that fuse mythical and folkloric narratives with layered sociohistorical references. “Wangechi Mutu: Intertwined” will trace connections between recent developments in the artist’s sculptural practice and her decades-long exploration of the legacies of colonialism, globalization, and African and diasporic cultural traditions. At once culturally specific and transnational in scope, Mutu’s work grapples with contemporary realities, while proffering new models for a radically changed future informed by feminism, Afrofuturism, and interspecies symbiosis.This exhibition is curated by Margot Norton, Allen and Lola Goldring Senior Curator, and Vivian Crockett, Curator, with Ian Wallace, Curatorial Assistant.

See the New Museum website for full funding acknowledgements for the exhibition.

Admission:

  • ArtTable Members – $20
  • Member Guests – $30

Not a member? Join today!

Please note that all income from program fees goes toward ArtTable’s internal costs for organizing programs.

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This program is supported in part by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.



Image: Wangechi Mutu, “In Two Canoe” (2022). “Wangechi Mutu: Intertwined,” 2023. Exhibition view: New Museum, New York. Courtesy New Museum. Photo: Dario Lasagni

The New Museum

235 Bowery
New York, New York 10002 United States
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About the Teaching Artist:

Yasmeen Abdallah is an interdisciplinary artist and educator, incorporating civic engagement through creative reuse as a central point in her practice. She is interested in ephemera; aftermaths; and the stories told, and secrets kept by imprints and objects that speak to our contemporary culture. She holds an MFA in Fine Arts with distinction from Pratt Institute, and Bachelor’s degrees from University of Massachusetts, Boston in Studio Art with honors, and in Anthropology (emphasis in Historical & Collaborative Archaeology, including field schools with Hassanamesit Woods and the Eastern Pequot Tribal Nation); with a Minor in Women’s, Gender & Sexuality Studies.

She has been a visiting artist and speaker at institutions including Columbia University Teaching College; El Barrio Art Space, Fairleigh Dickinson University; Parsons School for Design; Pratt Institute; Sarah Lawrence College; and University of Massachusetts. Her work has been exhibited at venues including Art in Odd Places; the Boiler; Bronx Art Space; Bullet Space; Chashama; Cornell University; Ed Varie; Elizabeth Foundation; La Bodega; Open Source; Museum of Reclaimed Urban Space; Nars Foundation; PS122 Gallery; and Spring Break Art Show.

*Postponed* National | “Face to Face” at International Center of Photography with stefa marin alarcon

Please note the new tour date!

May 4, 2023 | 5:00 pm 6:00 pm

Thelma Golden photo by Catherine Opie Scott Rudd events for ICP

Join International Center of Photography (ICP)’s stefa marin alarcon for a tour of Face to Face: Portraits of Artists by Tacita Dean, Brigitte Lacombe and Catherine Opie. Organized by renowned writer and curator Helen Molesworth, Face to Face features more than 50 photographs by Brigitte Lacombe and Catherine Opie, and two films by Tacita Dean, with bracing, intimate, and resonant portraits of compelling cultural figures including Maya Angelou, Richard Avedon, Louise Bourgeois, Joan Didion, David Hockney, Miranda July, Rick Owens, Martin Scorsese, Patti Smith, Mickalene Thomas, Kara Walker, and John Waters.

After the tour, you will be led to the Between Friends exhibit to walk through at your own pace. This exhibit includes portraits of and by well-known figures like Alfred Stieglitz, Berenice Abbott, and Henri Cartier-Bresson. Between Friends also calls attention to many women photographers from ICP’s collection, including Lotte Jacobi, Nell Dorr, Consuelo Kanaga, and Barbara Morgan.

Optional post-tour activities:
• At 6:00 PM, Late Night ICP is hosting a free book event in the Library to celebrate the launch of ”A Humanist Vision: The Naomi Rosenblum Family Collection.” This publication honors the trailblazing legacy in photography and scholarship created by historian Naomi Rosenblum. More information. First-come, first-served seating.
• Cash bar available in the downstairs café.

Please review ICP’s Health & Safety guidelines and see the ICP site for funding acknowledgements for the exhibition.

Admission:

  • ArtTable Members – $15
  • Member Guests – $25

Not a member? Join today!

Please note that all income from program fees goes toward ArtTable’s internal costs for organizing programs.

*PLEASE NOTE: THIS EVENT HAS BEEN POSTPONED*

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This program is supported in part by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.


About the Docent

stefa marin alarcon (they/them) is a vocalist, composer, educator, and multi-media performance artist born and raised in Queens, NY. Through their transdisciplinary practice, stefa builds worlds that offer a somatic decolonial respite for the misfits & displaced who are yearning for a sense of home.

They have worked with NYC cultural institutions like International Center of Photography, Museum of the Moving Image, The Center for Fiction and Housing Works and are a 2022 Queer|Art|Prize Recent Work winner for their cinematic ritual opera, Born With An Extra Rib. Read more about their work at www.stefalives.com


Image: Thelma Golden, Photo by Catherine Opie. Scott Rudd events for ICP.

International Center for Photography (ICP)

79 Essex Street
New York, NY, 10002
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National | Jaune Quick-to-See-Smith: “Memory Map” at the Whitney Museum of American Art

May 3, 2023 | 4:00 pm 6:00 pm

See below to register for either the 4:00 PM or the 5:00 PM tour group.

Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, The Vanishing American, 1994. Acrylic, newspaper, paper, cotton, printing ink, chalk, and graphite pencil on canvas, 60 1/8 × 50 1/8 in. (152.7 × 127.3 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Dorothee Peiper-Riegraf and Hinrich Peiper in memory of Arlene LewAllen 2007.88. © Jaune Quick-to-See Smith

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). Jaune Quick-to-See Smith: Memory Map brings together nearly five decades of Smith’s drawings, prints, paintings, and sculptures in the largest and most comprehensive showing of her career to date.

Smith’s work engages with contemporary modes of making, from her idiosyncratic adoption of abstraction to her reflections on American Pop art and neo-expressionism. These artistic traditions are incorporated and reimagined with concepts rooted in Smith’s own cultural practice, reflecting her belief that her “life’s work involves examining contemporary life in America and interpreting it through Native ideology.” Employing satire and humor, Smith’s art tells stories that flip commonly held conceptions of historical narratives and illuminate absurdities in the formation of dominant culture. Smith’s approach importantly blurs categories and questions why certain visual languages attain recognition, historical privilege, and value.  Across decades and mediums, Smith has deployed and reappropriated ideas of mapping, history, and environmentalism while incorporating personal and collective memories. The retrospective will offer new frameworks in which to consider contemporary Native American art and show how Smith has led and initiated some of the most pressing dialogues around land, racism, and cultural preservation—issues at the forefront of contemporary life and art today.

See the Whitney’s website for full exhibition support acknowledgments.

This program is open to ArtTable members and guests.

Not a member? Join today!

Admission
$25 ArtTable Members
$35 ArtTable Member Guests

*Please note that we have waiting lists for BOTH tours: click on the register buttons to add your name!*


This program is supported in part by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.

Please note that all income from program fees goes toward ArtTable’s internal costs for organizing programs.


About the Curators

Laura Phipps

Laura Phipps is an assistant curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art. She has been at the Whitney since the summer of 2009, and her recent projects include Virginia Overton: Sculpture GardensOpen Plan: Andrea Fraser and a group show of emerging artists Flatlands. She has also co-curated a project with Michele Abeles and the permanent collection exhibition Test Pattern. Laura has assisted with numerous museum exhibitions including 2010, the Whitney Biennial, Legacy: The Emily Fisher Landau CollectionGlenn Ligon: AMERICASingular VisionsWade Guyton OSSinister Pop, and Jeff Koons: A Retrospective.

She has served on the grant selection committee of the Rema Hort Mann Foundation, as a visiting critic for the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Workspace and Smackmellon Studio Program, and as a guest curator at the Kentler Drawing Center, Brooklyn. Prior to the Whitney, Phipps worked in the curatorial department and director’s office of the Modern Art Museum, Fort Worth. She received her MA, Art History at Hunter College, CUNY and BFA, Studio Art and BS, Psychology from Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas.


Caitlin Chaisson is curator and critic based in New York, and holds an MA in Curatorial Studies from Bard College. She currently works at the Whitney Museum of American Art.

From 2016–2019, she served as the Director and Curator of Far Afield, an initiative that supports regionally-connected artistic and curatorial practices. She has also held positions and contracts at The Drawing Center (New York City), e-flux (New York City), Emily Carr University of Art and Design (Vancouver), AKA Artist-Run Centre (Saskatoon), and the Anvil Centre (New Westminster). Her writing has appeared in Canadian Art, C Magazine, and Frieze, among others.


Image: Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, The Vanishing American, 1994. Acrylic, newspaper, paper, cotton, printing ink, chalk, and graphite pencil on canvas, 60 1/8 × 50 1/8 in. (152.7 × 127.3 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Dorothee Peiper-Riegraf and Hinrich Peiper in memory of Arlene LewAllen 2007.88. © Jaune Quick-to-See Smith

Whitney Museum of American Art

99 Gansevoort Street
New York, NY 10014 United States
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*POSTPONED* Atlanta, GA | Exhibition Tour | Women to Watch: Melissa Messina & Sierra King

April 29, 2023 | 10:00 am 12:00 pm

NOTE: this event has been postponed: watch this space and @arttable_atl for new dates and more Atlanta Events.

Kenyatta Stanchez Photography by Stanchez Kenyatta courtesy of Atlanta Contemporary

Join ArtTable at Atlanta Contemporary for a talk and tour of the Women to Watch series exhibition led by Melissa Messina and Sierra King! This exhibition is presented at Atlanta Contemporary in partnership with the Georgia Committee of the National Museum of Women in the Arts.

For the 2023 iteration of the ongoing Women to Watch series, the Georgia Committee of the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) invited guest curators Sierra King and Melissa Messina to select five woman-identifying Georgia-connected artists whose work responds to the question: When women artists envision a different world, how does that look?

With over 60 artists initially considered, and 16 studio visits conducted, these 5 artists represent a diverse range of artistic excellence, age, backgrounds, and geographic locations. Their practices push the boundaries of their chosen media and the exhibition’s thematic inquiry.


MELISSA MESSINA is a nationally recognized arts professional who has developed thought-provoking exhibitions, dynamic site-responsive projects, and engaging educational public programming both independently and in leadership positions at museums and non-profit arts organizations.

SIERRA KING is an Archivist and Curator. Her creative and arts administration work is dedicated to documenting, preserving, and archiving the work of Black Women Artists.


This exhibition is presented at Atlanta Contemporary in partnership with the Georgia Committee of the National Museum of Women in the Arts.

Atlanta Contemporary believes in the power of contemporary art to change lives and that anyone—regardless of age, race, gender, socio-economic status, or any perceived limitations—should have access to innovative and engaging contemporary art and programs. Rooted in the very fabric of our founders, Atlanta Contemporary has been artist-centered and art-driven since 1973.

As one of the first of the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) committees, the Georgia Committee (GA NMWA) realized the importance of a museum advocating for women artists and swiftly formed as a committee in 1986. Thirty-five years later, we are proud to support NMWA and to champion Georgia women artists.


Admission:

  • ArtTable Members – $10
  • Member Guests – $20
  • Public – $25

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Please note that all income from program fees goes toward ArtTable’s internal costs for organizing programs.

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Image: Kenyatta Stanchez. Jan 2023. Photography by Stanchez Kenyatta. Courtesy of Atlanta Contemporary.

Atlanta Contemporary

535 Means Street NW
Atlanta, Georgia 30318
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Washington, DC | BreakfastTable with Mary Early, HEMPHILL Artworks

April 7, 2023 | 8:00 am 9:00 am

Prints and Works on Paper at HEMPHILL

Join us for a morning conversation and gallery tour with Mary Early, Director of HEMPHILL Artworks, featuring the exhibition: Prints & Works on Paper.

Prints and Works on Paper
(March 18 – May 6, 2023)
The 19 artists presented in Prints & Works on Paper worked from the mid-1930s through 2014. While the work spans almost a century, it was made within the shared social and political context of the Black experience in America. These artists did not perceive a line where activism ended and art began. Believing that pictures could make a difference, they were invested in advocating for justice, empowerment, and community through education; the intentionality of creating editioned prints in a workshop setting reflects this dedication. Printmaking facilitated a wider distribution of their messages, allowing artists to be deliberate about connection and reaching a larger audience. Imagery portraying a rich social life offered viewers positive self-representation, verity, and aspiration for the future. The private collection of 38 works passionately assembled over a 30-year period, is honest in content and impressive in technique, both captivating the audience and effectively conveying the artworks’ significance. By boldly broadcasting their identities while the art world was systematically prejudiced, the artists in Prints & Works on Paper documented a difficult past and visualized a brighter future.

Ron Adams, Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Elizabeth Catlett, Robert Colescott, Allan Rohan Crite, Aaron Douglas, Sam Gilliam, Palmer Hayden, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Lois Mailou Jones, Alison Saar, Charles Sebree, Renée Stout, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Hale Woodruff

Admission:

  • ArtTable Members – complimentary
  • Member Guests – $10

Not a member? Join today!

Please note that all income from program fees goes toward ArtTable’s internal costs for organizing programs.

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ABOUT MARY EARLY

Mary Early (b. 1975) is an artist and art dealer based in Washington, DC. She studied visual art, film, and video at Bennington College, and her work has been exhibited at the United States Botanic Garden, Washington Project for the Arts, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Second Street Gallery (Charlottesville, VA), Hemphill Fine Arts (Washington DC,) the Austrian Cultural Forum (Washington DC), Galerie Im Ersten (Vienna, Austria), Kloster Schloss Salem (Salem, Germany), Kunstlerbund Tubingen (Tubingen, Germany), the American University Museum (Washington DC), and the Sun Valley Museum of Art (Ketchum, ID). Early’s work is included in the collections of the US Department of State/Embassy of Panama and Embassy of Jordan, the District of Columbia Art Bank, the American University Museum (Corcoran Collection). She is a recipient of the Artist Fellowship Grant from the DC Commission on Arts & Humanities, Washington DC (2022, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2011, 2009, 2007).

Early is the director of HEMPHILL Artworks, Washington, DC, and serves on the boards of Hamiltonian Artists and Washington Sculptors Group. She handles the work of contemporary artists and artist estates, including William Christenberry (Estate), Colby Caldwell, Jacob Kainen (Estate), Hedieh Javanshir Ilchi, Mingering Mike, Robin Rose, Renée Stout, Alma Woodsey Thomas, Julie Wolfe, Workingman Collective. She specializes in the artists of the Washington Color School. Early works with living artists and artists’ heirs on long-range planning, and with private and institutional collectors to build and manage significant collections. She has a particular interest in public art and community engagement, the materials and processes of contemporary sculpture, and professional development for emerging and under-represented artists.

ABOUT HEMPHILL

HEMPHILL Artworks opened in Washington DC in September, 1993. The exhibition schedule features contemporary art ranging in media from emerging to mid-career and established artists. In addition to these shows, the gallery mounts exhibitions of historically-significant artwork and socially relevant subjects. The diversity of this schedule is designed to showcase important talent and provide artwork that appeals to a broad range of interests.

From its beginnings, HEMPHILL has advised corporate and private collectors. This initial client base was built upon contacts and experiences gained in academia, with private galleries, and with architectural and design firms. HEMPHILL’s consulting and advisory work has expanded to include companies and individuals worldwide. HEMPHILL offers collectors the chance to experience a broad range of aesthetic experiences both through the gallery exhibition program and through private viewing opportunities. It also provides an opportunity to be directly involved in the artists’ community as well as the creative process.

Special events include the ongoing ART TALKS series, artist book signings, and charitable vents for area nonprofits. Begun in 1998, the ART TALKS series includes educational lectures on topics such as collecting for beginners, artist talks, and panel discussions on issues in contemporary art. In 2020, HEMPHILL inaugurated a new gallery space in Washington’s historic Mount Vernon Square neighborhood. Featuring an open gallery floor plan and glass partitions that invite guests into the office area, the design allows for increased interaction and conversation. As we enter 2023, the third year in this new space and the third year of a global pandemic, we continue to welcome first-time visitors.


HEMPHILL Artworks

434 K STREET NW
Washington, DC, 20001
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National | Annual Brunch at the Dallas Art Fair

April 21, 2023 | 10:00 am 11:30 am

Dallas Art Fair

Join ArtTable in Dallas, TX for the Annual Coffee Reception to experience The Dallas Art Fair (DAF) on Friday April 21, 2023 before it opens to the public!

We’ll meet at 10 AM Central Time and enjoy some networking with coffee, conversation, and light bites. At 10.30 AM, we’ll hear brief remarks from Kelly Cornell (Fair Director) and Jennifer Klos (Art Advisor and Founder, Collector House Design, Inc), with introductions by Laurie Ann Farrell and Louky Keijsers Koning, DFW Chapter Co-Chairs.

Please note: when you register for this ArtTable Breakfast, you will have access to a complimentary 3-day pass to the Dallas Art Fair. *Your confirmation email will have your coupon code and instructions on how to set this up.*

Thank you to the Dallas Art Fair (DAF), Kelly Cornell, and Sarah Blagden (VIP Relations Director, DAF) for hosting the event, The Joule Hotel for the catering, and Jennifer Klos for organizing the program.

Admission:

  • ArtTable Members – $25
  • Member Guests – $35
  • Public – $45

Please note: when you register for this ArtTable Breakfast, you will have access to a complimentary 3-day pass to the Dallas Art Fair. Your confirmation email will have your coupon code and instructions.

Not a member? Join today!

Please note that all income from program fees goes toward ArtTable’s internal costs for organizing programs.

Register Here button

Dallas Art Fair

1807 Ross Ave, Dallas, TX
Dallas, Texas 75201 United States
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