EXHIBITIONS

The Landscape: Lost and Found through March 28, 2026
Meg Alexander/Arden Bendler Browning/Amelia Hankin/Cristi Rinklin/Evelyn Rydz/Christopher Schade The landscape is forever changing, and forever changed. Artists continue to grapple with the natural world and its perpetual motion, both loss and rebirth. The Landscape: Lost and Found explores the lens through which 6 artists examine the presence of nature in today’s world. Utilizing a wide […]...

Isabel Riley: Time Mending Oct 17-November 22, 2025
Isabel Riley’s current body of work is the product of a complex journey, stitching together moments filled with memories, loss and the acceptance of time. Through her unique studio practice, these stunning new works contain a visual offering of both hope and joy. “These paintings continue to focus my attention towards reverence and devotion. The […]...

Tabitha Vevers: Flesh Memories, Remembered Sept 5th-October 11th
Vevers began Flesh Memories during a residency at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts in 1993 and later expanded the series at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown. She studied the fresco technique of painting into wet plaster at the Skowhegan School of Painting + Sculpture and later, Pre-Renaissance frescoes during travels in […]...

Ion Zupcu: Color Works
Ion Zupcu is a master of the pictorial stage. His stage does not have live actors, live audience or a theater, but Ion Zupcu certainly creates a lot of colorful drama. Zupcu constructs all of his work on top of a small table in his studio. His tools are paper, paint and scissors, and most […]...

Imi Hwangbo: The Diviner Series
Imi Hwangbo’s newest series of prints and constructed drawings envision a threshold to a space of reverie and invention. “The Diviner Series” expresses both unencumbered freedom and refined discipline through the artist’s labor-intensive practice. Hwangbo’s prints are made with the simplest of tools- a pencil, a ruler and evolve slowly over a period of months. Graphite is layered […]...

Marc Schepens: Stripers and Blues
Marc Schepens honors the power of nature and the hand-drawn line in his painting practice. To represent the presence of the ocean, Marc Schepens works directly on linen with oil and pencil, patterning broken lines that register light, weather, time, and movement. The formal qualities of line present the pretense of control over the ever-changing […]...