Jun
11
to Jul 26

Diana Solís Photographs

Opening Reception:

Co-Prosperity Catskill

391 Main Street, Catskill, NY

Sunday, June 11th, 6:00pm - 9:00pm

(June 11th - July 24th, 2023) Public Media Institute and Co-Prosperity Catskill is excited to present a solo exhibition of photographs from Chicago-based artist and recent US Latinx Art Forum Award recipient: Diana Solís. The exhibition will also be on-view during Upstate Art Weekend and NADA fair.

This exhibit presents iconic images by Diana Solís (b. 1956) who began photographing as a teen while growing up in a predominantly Mexican community of Chicago called Pilsen. Working as a photojournalist in the 1980s-90s, Solís also documented the queer and Mexican communities they inhabited. They paused in 1990 and returned to photography in 2020 and since then they have been reflecting the people and the places that have shaped them. The exhibit includes historic photographs, new digital work, as well as ephemera and articles. 

Read more about Diana Solís on her website: dianasolis.com

For inquiries, please contact us at dianasolis.com

To see more work by Diana Solís, visit the Leslie Lohman Museum:  Images on Which to Build: 1970s-1990s, curated by Ariel Goldberg, on view in NYC through July 30.


About the Artist: Diana Solis (b 1956, Mexico) is a Chicago-based visual artist, photographer, and educator who has documented queer Latinx activism and daily life for almost 5 decades. She studied studio and experimental photography and worked as a photojournalist for 25 years, occasionally halted by recurring breast cancer. She photographed poets including Sandra Cisneros, many consecutive years of Chicago and Mexico Pride marches, IV Encuentro Feminista de América Latina y el Caribe, early years at Latino Youth, marches and demonstrations, Chicago women’s rugby and women’s marathons, women’s bars, feminist gatherings, Chicano theater, and her neighborhood of Pilsen. She has been a teaching artist, a painter and illustrator and photographer for over 40 years and currently resides in Pilsen.


Performance Night: “Necessary Excess” // June 11th 6-9PM @ Co-Prosperity Catskill

Join us on Sunday, June 11th for an evening of queer/fem performance across a variety of platforms. Sparked by a wooden stage built by artist Edie Fake, installed at the Co-Prosperity Catskill gallery for the next year, Necessary Excess brings together five artists from the Hudson Valley, Chicago and New York City.

Ticket Master presents: CATSKILLCOPS unfurls harsh noise wallpaper with just a tapeless cassette recorder, shaped by decades spent in underground music scenes and art worlds in Colorado Springs, Chicago and Brooklyn. Upstate duo The Laurens offers a dance experience created for Fake’s stage, born of years of collaboration in Brooklyn and beyond in a variety of experimental movement fields. Responding to The Laurens’ dance, André Azevedo projects onto the ceiling above the stage in a live feed improvisational piece in addition to sharing his own solo video work. And returning to the Hudson Valley from Chicago, Ále Campos AKA Celeste brings electric, drag-informed performance art to our Catskill stage.


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Mar
31
to Jun 2

Reckless Rolodex: Catskill Edition

Opening Reception:

Co-Prosperity Catskill

391 Main Street, Catskill, NY

Friday, March 31st, 6:30pm - 8:30pm

(March 31st - June 2nd, 2023) Public Media Institute and Co-Prosperity Catskill are thrilled to announce that Reckless Rolodex, a group exhibition that originated at Gallery 400 at the University of Illinois Chicago, will be exhibited at our gallery in Catskill, New York! 

Curated by Matthew Goulish, Lin Hixson, and Caroline Picard, Reckless Rolodex presents the work of ten contemporary artists to highlight the lasting, though largely overlooked, influence of Chicago performance artist, writer, and filmmaker Lawrence Steger, unearthing an artistic predecessor too-easily marginalized by his early death in 1999.

The originating exhibition on view January-March 2023 was named as a “Must-See” in ArtForum, listed on New-City’sTop 5 list, and featured in the Chicago Reader and Art Papers.

“The exhibition imparts urgency and impresses intimacy upon Steger’s legacy and honors the artistic communities that continued in his absence. There is a type of magic that occurs when one is dislocated in time and place. It is in these moments that one can join something bigger than the self. This magic is what “Rolodex” offers viewers.” - The Chicago Reader

 Exhibiting Artists

Susan Anderson, Lilli Carré, Edie Fake, Max Guy, Young Joon Kwak, Devin T. Mays, John Neff, Betsy Odom, Derrick Woods-Morrow, and Cherrie Yu.

About the Exhibition

Reckless Rolodex (March 31 - June 2) highlights the lasting, though largely overlooked, influence of Lawrence Steger, described by the Chicago Tribune as “one of the most important, and most influential, performance artists in Chicago during the late 1980s and 90s.” Lawrence Steger explored desire and sexuality in performance until his early death in 1999 due to AIDS-related complications. Rather than eulogize the artist’s life, Reckless Rolodex underlines Steger’s legacy through works by contemporary artists responding to his work and research practice. A skilled director, writer and performer, Steger relied on the disciplines of theater and a community of collaborative artists to realize his intricately constructed performances, reflecting his deep knowledge of a wide range of sources, from pop culture and film to the writing of Jean Genet and the Fluxus-style works of Yoko Ono. Mercurial, mordant, stylish, and comical, he presented himself refracted through historical figures such as Ludwig II, the nineteenth-century “Mad King” of Bavaria, or imaginary personas like nocturnal figures that populate cabaret dreams and nightmares.

Rather than eulogize the artist’s life, Reckless Rolodex underlines Steger’s legacy with a constellation of works by contemporary artists in response to his performances and research practices, engaging theatricality and transecting media and emotional registers to undermine the notion of a static self. Artist Edie Fake has designed a stage, central to the exhibition, for the presentation of performances, lectures, and conversations. Other works include an exploding cast of a mirror ball by Young Joon Kwak; paper masks by Max Guy; a gestural installation by Devin T. Mays; kitchen knives fabricated from graphite by Betsy Odom; a mattress sculpture by Derrick Woods-Morrow; an oversized ceramic door chain by Lilli Carré; a deconstructed archive wall painting by John Neff; a video work by Cherrie Yu exploring dance, labor, and mimicry; and Susan Anderson’s portrait of Steger. Exhibition essays by Joao Florencio  and Matthew Goulish will be available in free publications.

Exhibition materials can be found in plain text and in audio recordings here.

Following the closure of Reckless Rolodex in June, Co-Prosperity Catskill’s subsequent exhibitions by artists Nicole Marroquin, Diana Solis, and Jen Delos Reyes will each incorporate the stage Edie Fake produced for Reckless Rolodex, illustrating how a conversation inspired by Lawrence Steger continues to unfold today.

Support
Reckless Rolodex originated at Gallery 400 at the University of Illinois Chicago January 13 to March 18, 2023 with support  from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts; a grant from the Illinois Arts Council Agency; and the School of Art & Art History, College of Architecture, Design, and the Arts, University of Illinois Chicago.


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Jul
23
to Oct 1

What the Cards Say by Victoria Martinez

Opening Reception:

Co-Prosperity Catskill - 391 Main Street, Catskill, NY

Saturday, June 23 6-9pm

(July 23-September 30, 2022) Public Media Institute is thrilled to present a new exhibition of works by Chicago-based artist Victoria Martinez at Co-Prosperity Catskill. Martinez will be in residence in New York making in the weeks preceding the exhibition, staying in Windham, NY with Public Media Institute partners Fictilis. She’ll be working toward major solo exhibitions of her work at the Chicago Cultural Center and Produce Model Chicago, as well as exhibitions at the Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts and Museo Universitario Del Chopo in Mexico City.

Co-Prosperity Catskill is a nonprofit gallery founded in Spring 2021 as a satellite space for Public Media Institute, whose primary activities take place in Chicago, IL. Since then the space has welcomed artists from upstate, the midwest and beyond in an effort to promote exchange and amplification of emerging and mid-career artists. Look forward to exhibitions from Jeffery Gibson’s studio and Oakland/Puerto Rico-based artist Sofia Cordova in the fall of 2022.

About the Artist:

Victoria Martinez is an interdisciplinary artist who honors her Mexican-American ancestry through textile-based projects including painting, installation art, and printmaking. Her work is inspired by public art, architecture, and the urban environment.

She has exhibited nationally and internationally including the Yale University Art Gallery, the National Museum of Mexican Art, the University of Chicago Arts Incubator, Northwestern University, and through the Perrotin Gallery viewing salon. Her work has been supported by The Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library Research Fellowship and The MacMillian Center Field Research Fellowship through Yale University, the Actos de Confianza Grant through the National Association of Latino Arts and Cultures (NALAC), the Career Development Grant through the American Association of University Women, and a travel grant through Theaster Gates Rebuild Foundation. Martinez holds a BFA from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design and an MFA from Yale University School of Art in Painting and Printmaking.

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Apr
15
to May 15

Baby Get Closer

The Opening Reception will take place on Friday April 15th from 4 - 8 pm. The show will be open for visitation every Saturday 12 - 5 pm until May 15th.

This show will highlight the work of Sahar Carter (multidisciplinary artist), Brandon Hartley (Sculptor), Rashad Heagle (photographer), and Immanuel Williams (multidisciplinary artist). They will be displaying works in conversation with the concept of the life, death, and rebirth of love in interpersonal relationships.

About the Artists


  • Sahar Carter is a multi-disciplinary artist, performer, and writer hailing from Oakland, CA, Miami, FL, and currently takes residence in Annandale-On-Hudson, NY. Their work generally takes inspiration from afflictions of love, afflictions of theory, and the psychological undercurrents of racism as it appears in the body. Contradictions abound. In Spring of this 2022 they should be receiving their B.A. from Bard College and plan to move to New York City proper, like every other 22 year old in the country.


  • Brandon Hartley is a New York based interdisciplinary artist who works primarily with ceramics, emulating the way that children view the world & their improvisational method of creating with an irreverence for what is deemed appropriate or correct.


  • Rashad Awesome Heagle is a photo-based artist born and raised in Miami, Florida and currently based in New York City. Heagle provides his work as a source of intimacy, solace, and light. His intimate (yet arresting) portraits blend fine art and documentary photography to capture scenes around him in a new light.


  • Immanuel Williams is a multi-disciplinary artist and performer born and raised in Albany, NY. Their work currently focuses on documenting and archiving their family's history. Their work articulates and responds to oral histories passed down from elders, as well their own childhood memories.

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Feb
26
to Mar 27

I Wanna Be You Anywhere

391 Main Street, Catskill, NY

I Wanna Be You Anywhere is a two-person show curated by artists Juan Arango Palacios and Nicholas Zepeda, featuring their own works. Viewing hours are Saturdays 12 - 5 pm, no appointment is required.

I Wanna Be You Anywhere is an exhibition featuring prints, drawings, and installation work by Chicago-based artists Juan Arango Palacios and Nicholas Zepeda produced during a shared residency at the Macedonia Institute in Chatham, NY.  Zepeda’s attention to domestic spaces paired with Arango Palacios’ fantastical world-building set the stage for a tale of queer becoming, told through a set of collaborative drawings and individual projects.

Both drawing inspiration from their favorite music, these artists unapologetically indulge in their vulnerabilities by referencing emotional lyrics and their own childhood memories.

Although distinct in their own playlists, the two share a clear a dedication to drawing. One that can be traced to a pictorial structures course they both attended at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. 

In the fantasy of Arango Palacios’ work, characters from Latin American folklore are brought to life through the lens of contemporary queer culture. Make-up wearing tattooed characters yield swords, and are guided by the magical lyrics of Cumbia and Reggaeton music. 

Zepeda presents a new series of of text-based yearning and installation from a practice interested in the performance of sharing autobiographical work, and not leaving your apartment.

About the Artists:


  • Juan Arango Palacios was born in Pereira, Colombia, and was raised in a traditional Catholic home. Their traditional upbringing was cut short by a series of migrations that their family took seeking a better future. The family moved from Colombia to southern Louisiana where Juan’s sense of identity and belonging began to be skewed by their lack of knowledge of the English language, their unfamiliarity with American culture, and their internal struggle with a queer identity. Living in other parts of Louisiana and Texas, and being further subdued by the conservative culture in which they lived, Juan continued to live with a constant fear of their own identity throughout their youth. Juan graduated from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and has found a safe-haven within the queer community in Chicago.

    @juuuanitx
    www.jarangopalacios.com


  • Nicholas Zepeda (b.1999) is an artist from Chicago’s southwest neighborhoods working with drawings and paintings. Recently including video and installation, Zepeda is focused on how presentation influences autobiographical work, and how it can be used for expressive gestures.

    “The drawings have always been about self-discovery, but they’ve become progressively more about fear. There was the subject of not really knowing a correct way to interact with your environment that felt a lot younger to me, but now there’s this growing concern of what it means to try really hard anyways.”

    Zepeda graduated with a BFA in Studio from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago where he received a nomination for the Yale at Norfolk Summer Residency program. He recently completed the Ox-Bow Longform residency in Michigan, and attended a residency in Chatham, NY at The Macedonia Institute. Zepeda will have an upcoming solo-exhibition in Norwich, UK with Moosey Art in summer 2022.

    @nicholaszepeda
    www.nicholaszepeda.com

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Aug
28
to Sep 26

Jungle Boogie 2: Portrait of the Artist as a Colossal Wreck Selected Projects (2008-2021)

Shabbona Lake State Park, IL Summer 2020The image is of the artist, Brandon Alvendia, with his eyes closed sitting at a wooden picnic table drinking an unidentified beer sheathed in a foam Miller Lite can koozie, he is wearing a non-descript grey t-shirt, cap, and wedding band. In the background there is a concrete fire ring with a pile of unlit firewood, peeking behind the artist are two camp chairs, and everything is surrounded by dense woods illuminated by afternoon sunlight. In the foreground is an overturned metal bucket supporting a bare metal can whose top is removed and triangular holes punched evenly apart on the top and bottom edges upon which a carbonized round metal wire grate is nestled, through which two wisps of flame emanate from within the vessel. Shabbona Lake State Park, IL Summer 2020. (Photo by Angel Essig)

Shabbona Lake State Park, IL Summer 2020

The image is of the artist, Brandon Alvendia, with his eyes closed sitting at a wooden picnic table drinking an unidentified beer sheathed in a foam Miller Lite can koozie, he is wearing a non-descript grey t-shirt, cap, and wedding band. In the background there is a concrete fire ring with a pile of unlit firewood, peeking behind the artist are two camp chairs, and everything is surrounded by dense woods illuminated by afternoon sunlight. In the foreground is an overturned metal bucket supporting a bare metal can whose top is removed and triangular holes punched evenly apart on the top and bottom edges upon which a carbonized round metal wire grate is nestled, through which two wisps of flame emanate from within the vessel. Shabbona Lake State Park, IL Summer 2020. (Photo by Angel Essig)

Jungle Boogie 2: Portrait of the Artist as a Colossal Wreck

Selected Projects (2008-2021)

By Brandon Alvendia

Jungle Boogie 2: Portrait of the Artist as a Colossal Wreck is a restaging of extant artworks, documents, and reclaimed materials derived from 13 years of artistic output of the artist, curator, and educator Brandon Alvendia, living and working out of Chicago. The artist portrays himself in this solo survey as a corpse stranded on a deserted archipelago amidst the wreckage of a shipwreck scattering his smuggled wares. 

The work will be placed throughout the space in a series of desert island vignettes, designed to highlight the different methodology at play, spanning installation, curating, research, publishing, and foremost, collaboration. All of which is delivered with the signature comedic timing of the recently self-proclaimed (on Twitter), “Friendly First Generation Filipino Failson, America's Next Top Model Minority, and Sane Middle Class Asian American Anchor Baby.” 

Detourning and decolonizing what would be a momentous occasion of an objective mid-career retrospective, the artist instead portrays himself working on an act of salvage and survival during a proverbial mid-career crisis. The works appear as compromised, damaged, fragmented, shabby, weathered, obscured, indistinct, and otherwise incomplete hazy documents adrift in the psychedelic experience of being lost in the vast sea of our contemporary moment. However, signs of reclamation, repurpose, reinvigoration, and reenchantment pervade the scenes, quickly erected ad-hoc altars and other useful, albeit rickety, structures prop up the remains, evidence of a desire for connection despite the condition of extreme isolation, a faint beacon at the top of the small barren hill still stands. 

The artist, like scores of others, has managed to tread water on the precarious raft of creative-class 1099 labor struggle, the joys and difficulties of coalition building in an era of unprecedented atomization under capitalist identity regimes, the prospect of creating an alternative space of experience outside of the mirrored cave of post-modern, hyper-accelerated procession of images of social control through ceaseless consumption of self, diverting the wasteful stream of the ecological and human exploitation through material reclamation using amateur low waste, functional design tools and production strategies, the instrumentalized fetishization of self-care practices optimized to maximize efficiency disguised as spirituality, the neoliberal pleasures of Neko Atsume and Abstract Painting, and the reduction of language limited to hot-takes under 280 characters. #thirsty #sweaty #moodbored FollowLikeSubscribe  

The project will end with the ritual burning of one of the altars designed for the occasion onto which visitors are invited to add their own messages to the fire. During the run of the show, production begins on a new artist book relaunching the dormant Silver Galleon Press to catalog the work but, more importantly, to thank the community the artist is indebted to. Immediately preceding the exhibition is the new piece NFT(Not F*cking Telling) a 5-act stage play adapted for and performed in a bank.

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NFT (Not F*cking Telling)

5-act stage play adapted for a bank.

2021

The artist will be premiering NFT(Not F*cking Telling). A 5-act stage play adapted for and performed in a bank with opportunities for audience engagement. The 15-minute performance inverts the genre, aesthetic, and production value of the Hollywood buddy heist film wherein guests are invited to assist in the rapid in situ installation of the work for the purpose of documentation in the form of analog instant photography. The result of which is placed in a sealed envelope signed and dated by the participants. After an equally urgent clean-up crew, the group may either hop into their respective getaway Lyfts or steal away to burn the evidence.

Guests that wish to participate should be aware of some sporadic environmental effects in the form of strobe, noise, darkness, as well as the ongoing challenges of existing indoors during a pandemic. Loose fitting clothes and functional shoes recommended to traverse the piece quickly and safely and/or formalwear for added challenge and distinction. The work may be experienced in a passive spectator fashion with no loss of fidelity of the work. Masks required throughout, some masks will be available for those that wish to conceal their identity. This event is FREE. BYO.

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Brandon Alvendia is an artist, independent curator, and educator.

Brandon researches and regularly collaborates with artist-run initiatives around North America to develop site-specific community-driven exhibitions, events, and publications that create space for experimentation, discussion, and collaboration. He is the founder of Chicago alternative spaces artLedge (2004-2007 w/ Caleb Lyons), BEN RUSSELL (2009-2011 w/Ben Russell), The Storefront (2010-2014), and Silver Galleon Press (2008-present).

In 2020, Brandon was Saturday editor and livestream producer/host for The Quarantine Times (published by Public Media Institute), organized the Zoom happenings OFFICE PARTY 1&2 for the 6th edition of the Common Field Convening, and closed the year out with an internet performance series for public intimacies, curated by Abigail Satinsky at Tufts University Art Galleries, Boston titled The Love Bug (Fwd:LOVE-LETTER-FOR-YOU). He is currently an Independent Curators International Research Fellow supported by the Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation and the Hartfield Foundation. The area of focus is on artist-run alternative spaces operating within the Mississippi River Basin region of the United States.

Brandon has taught at the School of The Art Institute, University of Illinois, and Columbia College, all in Chicago, and Maine College of Art (MECA) in Portland, ME. He is an alum of The School of the Art Institute of Chicago (BFA ‘03), the University of Illinois at Chicago (MFA ‘07), Copycat Academy (Toronto, 2014), and Independent Curators International Curatorial Intensive (New Orleans, 2015).

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Jul
31
to Sep 1

Before the After Party

Before the After Party is a long-postponed group exhibition featuring five 2019 ACRE Residents: Amy Cousins, Charles Ryan Long, Christopher Sonny Martinez, Toisha Tucker and Zachary Hutchinson.

Co-curated by Nick Wylie, Sofia Moreno and Paula Volpato.

  • Closing celebration: Friday, August 27th 7-10pm

    With artists, free beer, and recent Wave Farm resident, Kamikaze Jones, will be playing disco, club, and queer porn selections to dance to under the fuzzy disco ball~

  • Remaining open hours: Saturday, August 28th 12-8pm and Sunday, August 29th 12-3pm.

Before the Afterparty-01.png

Before the After Party is one in a sea of exhibitions opening after waking from a long slumber of indeterminate postponement. At the first public Co-Prosperity opening since we started referring to the pandemic in the past tense, we see a glimpse of time travels queerer than the sticky ticking of lockdown time.

Recorded history would have us believe that homosexuals and transgender folks are modern inventions, born of ever-shifting recent language—“Inverts,” “Comrades,” “Fairies,” or wordlessly with a flip of the wrist, a bandana in the back pocket, a sly look over the shoulder. For a window of time queer life was marked by a non-participation in normative biological time—puberty, dating, living, kids, nest, retirement. By contrast, queers often had long, studious childhoods, and grew up to enjoy what might look like a prolonged adolescence—a continued participation in countercultural parties, protests and pageantry usually seen as the realm of teens and young adults tasting what it might feel like to be free. The queer refusal to leave the party at the end of the night, to go home to a normative life and sleep it off, is where the queer possibilities begin, the transient site of the After Party.

Recalling pasts that are still present, the exhibition invites us to imagine how to revere the radical legacies that haunt us while demanding futures queerer and more beautiful than the ones on offer. Charles Ryan Long sees a near future marked by the inevitable “end of white manhood” and shows us a path to an Afro futurism paved in love and rage.  If you want to rage, love, come to a party where you’ll be invited to throw Toisha Tucker’s weighted confetti at sundown, be transfixed by Amy Cousins’ mammalian disco ball near the almost-lifesized protesters who brought Chicago our first queer dance party, check your look against images of queer revelry captured by Christopher Sonny Martinez, look at slide shows of what will be while containing your excitement in the bracelet you’re clutching, and at some point find a corner to drift off, wrapped in Zachary Hutchinson’s festooned blankets of the recent past. When you leave you won’t know what time it is.

The exhibition, already displaced in time, will be displaced in space as well. Launching in Chicago at the outset of summer, it will then have a second life as the first show at Co-Prosperity Catskill, a new space in the New York town where Washington Irving’s short story Rip Van Winkle was born. The antihero of the story is a colonial buffoon who takes a too-strong drink from giants and sleeps through the American Revolution. When he finally wakes up and goes to drink more at King George’s Pub, he finds that the name of the colonizing monarch has been erased. 

In some ways it can be nice to imagine going to sleep one day and waking up in a world changed by revolution. There’s also the rebel’s somniphobia- fear of not being awake for Marx’s millenarian moments when we have so much rage and love to help fuel them. Could the queer future be in the gay past, though? We could just do the separatist thing of our foreparents- run away to farms and say, “wake me when it’s over, when you’re having the after parties.” Who knows-  let’s dance together again, we’ll probably remember the moves.

Amy Cousins

Amy Cousins is an artist and educator from Houston, Texas living in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She has a BFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art and an MFA from Tyler School of Art & Architecture. Her work has been exhibited nationally at venues including Moore College of Art in Philadelphia, the Visual Arts Center at Boise State University, and the Lawrence Arts Center in Kansas. Cousins was an artist-in-residence at Illinois State University in 2018 and at ACRE Residency in 2019. She is a 2020 recipient of InLiquid’s Wind Fellowship.

Zachary Hutchingson

Zachary Hutchinson (b. 1991) is an artist living and working in Chicago IL. Hutchinson came to Chicago in 2010 to attend school at the School of the Art Institute Chicago where she earned her BFA in interdisciplinary arts in 2015. Hutchinson continued her education at the University of Illinois - Chicago earning a MFA in moving image in 2017. She has shown work globally in places like Montreal, Mexico City, San Francisco CA, NYC, Los Angeles CA, Portland OR, Austin TX, Berlin Germany, Athens Greece, Glasgow United Kingdom, Iceland, Venice, and extensively in Chicago IL. She is currently an adjunct professor at UIC and was recently listed as one of the Chicago Film 50 for the 2020.

Charles Ryan Long

charles ryan long is a Chicago born and based interdisciplinary maker and shaker. He uses varying mediums as pathways to making works that seek to pierce through our current realities making way for futures not yet imagined. His works seek to prod the viewer/ participant into dialogues that make visible both our personal and communal roles in what comes next.

 Christopher Sonny Martinez

Christopher Sonny Martinez is a filmmaker and photographer born and raised in Oak Cliff, Texas. Martinez has lived and produced work in Chicago, IL, New York, NY, and Dallas, TX. Martinez’s work breeds intimate moments from a Queer Chicano lens.

 Toisha Tucker

Tucker is an interdisciplinary conceptual artist and writer. Their work explores three often-overlapping veins of critique. They use art as a mode of cultural organizing illuminating social constructions of gender, race, and identity. They posit incisive critiques of contemporary and historical events of Western society. They delve into the anthropomorphic relationship between technology and humans, contemporary dystopia and human empathy. Their practice is process and research based and manifests through text-based prints, photographs, video, performative pieces, sculptural installations, analog and virtual physical labor, crafting, repetition, and other media that aim to directly engage with the body. Tucker’s work reflects their deep desire for precision in material, firsthand experiential evidence, and fabrication that conveys these elements. Many of the pieces are ongoing and mutable. Tucker resides in the Bronx with their partner, a thriving aloe plant named Wednesday and a fiddle leaf fig named Newton.

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