Progressive art studios have navigated (even taken advantage of) this strange and difficult time to cultivate a heightened sense of connection; the various ways programs have responded sheds new light on how they see themselves and their true potential.
Pulling from Arts of Life artists, the broader contemporary art community, as well as his personal collection, Tyson Reeder has assembled an exhibition representing a diverse range of concepts and approaches. The resulting installation is bright and lively - an exuberant arrangement of individualistic and intuitive works.
From the Whitney Biennial to SFMOMA, the past year has been a remarkable one for Marlon Mullen. Mullen (born 1963) maintains a prolific painting practice at NIAD’s studio in Richmond, California. Represented exclusively by JTT in New York and Adams & Ollman in Portland, Mullen has upcoming exhibitions at Adams & Ollman, Independent Art Fair, and the Frans Hals Museum.
SUMMERTIME, the latest forward-thinking initiative spearheaded by arts professionals coming from progressive art studios, opened on December 13th in Brooklyn. In addition to inclusive gallery programming, this non-profit collective aims to cultivate a communal space for contemporary artists with developmental disabilities to create work alongside artists without…
Drawing inspiration from diverse interests - including animals and the environment, identity, family history, and civil rights activism, Dorrie Reid’s disarming works reflect a joyful approach to art-making. Endlessly imaginative, her artistic practice becomes a natural extension of memory and personal experience…
Generated through interweaving narratives from the news, historical events, his imagination, and personal memories, William Tyler’s fantastically inventive drawings are abundant with distinctive imagery ranging from the everyday to the magical. Having maintained a creative practice in Creative Growth’s Oakland studio since November of 1977, Tyler has produced an extensive and complex body of work spanning forty years.
Over the past 35 years, Oakland-based artist Kerry Damianakes has amassed an extensive body of unconventional and playful works directly informed by her desire to reproduce the everyday. Damianakes remains primarily committed to an ongoing series of velvety oil pastel drawings - faithful tributes to foods that alternately elicit a state of well-being or decadence.
While spending time listening to Daniel Johnston in the days since his passing, we feel both heartbreak and tremendous gratitude. His life’s work reflects a singular creative brilliance, defined by cacophonous visions of unrequited love, the Devil, and his “eternal struggle” with manic-depression…
Hostick’s current solo exhibition and Yellow at Western Exhibitions includes a selection of 11 works completed over the past several years. Unframed, these intimate graphite and colored pencil drawings are mounted directly on the wall, allowing viewers to experience the salient physicality of their surfaces without a barrier. Born in 1962, Andrew Hostick has maintained a creative practice at Visionaries + Voices’ Cincinnati studio since 2010.
Heavily driven by an ongoing fascination with pop culture, Dave Krueger’s maximalist aesthetic is defined by dense systems of geometric shapes and asymmetrical grids. Between fantastical narrative passages, the surface is populated with symbols, numbers, occasional text fragments, and numerous decorative patterns comprised of diamonds, asterisks, zigzags, circles, crosses, and X’s.
Our latest curatorial endeavor, Slow Read at Circle Contemporary in Chicago, is a diverse selection of recent works that represent ongoing pursuits of material manipulation and process, while remaining tethered to narrative, memory, or the spiritual.
Our recent discussion with Cara Levine, an LA-based conceptual artist who has been involved with several West Coast progressive art studios in various capacities since 2011.
Since 2014, Disparate Minds has been an itinerant endeavor which initially began through an extended road trip to visit progressive art studios across the country. Advancing this project in Chicago begins with the understanding that there’s something radical and crucially important happening in these studios which transcends art and disability
Based in suburban LA, Hugo Rocha creates uncanny works demonstrating his particular sense of drama and ongoing interest in telenovelas, re-imagining still images from favorite episodes in dynamic and engaging ways. Rocha’s fascinations are translated into portraits of cartoonish characters within elaborate, eerily staged interiors and landscapes.
This year begins with stunning solo exhibitions featuring two of this movement’s greatest contemporary artists - Helen Rae at The Good Luck Gallery in Los Angeles and Marlon Mullen at JTT in New York.
Titus’ work is divergent from traditional concepts of drawing in that the element of mask-making is central to his execution. Rather than creating sculptural paper masks, Titus instead uses the process and materials of drawing to engage the paper, resulting in a two-dimensional object with a compelling language of drawing - agile lines articulated in his distinct hand…
A robust visual language slowly unfurls across Albarran’s supersaturated drawings, her personal preoccupations translated here through densely applied colored pencil marks. Endearing yet grotesque tableaux are populated by impossible pregnancies, deconstructed cheeseburgers, disarticulated jaws, splayed toes and fingers, disembodied eyeballs, knobby phalluses, and prolapsed organs.
Coming to America at Shrine marks Billy White’s well-deserved inaugural solo exhibition in New York, offering an exuberant selection of recent work; the paintings and sculptures currently on view dynamically illustrate White’s definitive creative focus and sustained capacity for fearless reinvention. ..
#1 Under Control World Tour featured ten drawings and four paintings by the prolific Brooklyn based artist in Western Exhibitions’ intimate back gallery. The tight installation felt appropriate for Pellew’s populous works; as usual the drawings were teeming with congregations of favorite music and TV icons, the occasional friend in real life, and fantastic alternate identities…
Paired at Firstdraft in Woolloomooloo, Sydney is the culmination of in-depth investigation by Harriet Body of collaborations between artists with and without disabilities. Body, who has maintained a collaborative creative relationship for several years with Thom Roberts at Studio A, has traveled throughout Australia and elsewhere to visit progressive art studios with a specific interest in collaboration…
We were recently commissioned by the Capital City Arts Initiative to write the following exhibition essay for Visual Oasis: Works from Creative Growth. Visual Oasis brings together a diverse selection of works by Creative Growth artists employing various approaches to drawing, painting, and fiber art at CCAI’s Courthouse Gallery…
Circle Contemporary, the only Chicago space dedicated to integrated programming, has consistently offered ambitious and thoughtful group exhibitions since its founding early last year. Curated by Corrie Thompson, Mysterious Feelings brings together a highly varied selection of Chicago-based artists
Byron Smith’s Cover Girls offers earnest and adoring tributes to glamorous movie, TV, and music industry icons. Smith’s drawings are typified by a hyperbolic allure, with an archetypal framework revealed collectively throughout the portrait series; this becomes most evident in simplified yet distinctive feminine features - elongated eyelashes radiating outward from almond-shaped lids, cherry red lacquered fingernails and lips, pronounced cupid’s bows, and wide, toothy grins....
Disparate Minds co-founders Tim Ortiz and Andreana Donahue discuss current concerns at the intersection of art and disability studies while highlighting neurodivergent artists’ contributions to the contemporary art discourse...
From the initial mark placed on a blank page, the artist is laid bare. As Philip Guston said, that first mark is necessarily destructive. The pristine blank page is perfect and once marked is ruined and only saved when the artist finds a way, through magic, to transform it into something better than before. The artist leads the way into the unknown, owning the details of each choice. To mark a blank page becomes a tremendous proposition and responsibility, to set out without direction and asking the viewer to follow.
As a painter, thinker, and self-described “indigenous male earthling of the United States of America”, Wilmington-based artist Carl Bailey explores concepts with a sense of wonder.
Never driven by the consensus narrative, he is only concerned with primary sources -
artworks and their respective artists, their relationship to time and place, and discovering their universal humanity...
Cincinnati-based artist Curtis Davis blurs the boundaries between painting and sculpture, alternating between totemic mixed-media assemblages and large scale panels. Davis’ mysterious abstractions conjure various interpretations, yet curious elements ground the viewer...
Helen Rae, one of the progressive art studio movement's rising stars, currently has recent work on view at White Columns in NYC, marking her first east coast solo exhibition. Rae is quickly emerging as an important figure in this movement; her work is striking, wildly popular, and at 78 years old, her practice is one of great dynamism and momentum.
Galleries
Summertime
White Columns
Shrine
Fleisher/Ollman
Adams and Ollman
Western Exhibitions
Gavin Brown's Enterprise
Christian Berst Art Brut
Ricco Maresca
Intuit: The Center for Intuitive and Outsider Art
JTT
Jack Fischer Gallery
DAC Gallery
Andrew Edlin Gallery
The Good Luck Gallery
Carl Hammer Gallery
Institute 193
Henry Boxer Gallery
American Folk Art Museum
American Visionary Art Museum
Studios
Alabama
Studio by the Tracks, Irondale
Alaska
The Canvas, Juneau
Arizona
Hozhoni Artists, Flagstaff
California
Axis Dance Company, Oakland
Creativity Explored, San Francisco
Creative Growth, Oakland
ECF Art Centers, Los Angeles
Tierra Del Sol Studios, Los Angeles
Hope Center for the Arts, Anaheim
NIAD, Richmond
Neighborhood Center for the Arts, Grass Valley
The Studio, Eureka
Florida
Creative Clay, Petersburg
Illinois
Arts Of Life, Chicago
Project Onward, Chicago
Little City Center For The Arts, Palatine
Kentucky
Latitude Artist Community, Lexington
Maine
Spindleworks, Brunswick
The Theater Project, Brunswick
The Art Department, Portland
Yes Art Works, Auburn, Portland & Saco
Maryland
Art Enables, Washington DC
Make Studio, Baltimore
Massachusetts
Gateway Arts, Brookline
Outside The Lines Studio (RHD), Boston
Michigan
Paint a Miracle Art Studio, Rochester
Soul Studio, Bloomfield
Minnesota
Interact, Minneapolis
Missouri
Blank Canvas Studios, St. Charles
Artists First, Maplewood
New Jersey
Arts Unbound, Orange
New Mexico
North Fourth Art Center (VSA), Albuquerque
New York
Arts Work at Autism Services Inc., Buffalo & Williamsville
LAND, NYC
Main View Gallery, Oneonta
Pure Vision Arts, NYC
Starlight Studio and Art Gallery, Buffalo
North Carolina
Open Hearts Art Center, Asheville
Ohio
Blue Shoe Arts, Lancaster
Inside Out Studio, Hamilton
Open Door Art Studio, Columbus
Passionworks, Athens
Rendville ArtWorks, Rendville
Shared Lives Studio, Toledo
Visionaries and Voices, Cincinnati
Oregon
Portland Art And Learning Studio, Portland
OSLP Arts & Culture Program, Eugene
Full Life, Portland
Living Opportunities Studio, Medford
Port City Project Grow, Portland
Pennsylvania
Creative Citizen Studios, Pittsburgh
Center For Creative Works (RHD), Philadelphia
Friendship Heart Gallery, Lancaster
Rhode Island
Flying Shuttles, Providence
Texas
ARC of The Arts (ARC), Austin
My Possibilities, Plano
Vermont
Grace, Hardwick
Wisconsin
Artworking, Madison
Encore!, Madison
International
StudioA, Australia Gugging Artists, Austria
Arts Access Australia, Australia
Arts Project Australia, Australia
Creahm, Belgium
Creative Spirit, Canada
Bifrost, Denmark
Die Schlumper, Germany
KCAT, Ireland
Kettuki, Finland
Able Art, Japan
Galerie Atelier Herenplaats, Netherlands
Kunst & Vliegwerk, Netherlands
Project Ability, Scotland
In mid-March, responses to the rapidly escalating COVID-19 pandemic forced, as with many aspects of society, the indefinite closure of progressive art studios. During this time, studios hustled to adapt, inventing diverse methods in order to sustain their organizations.