EFA GREENHOUSE BENEFIT DISCO

DATES:
November 9, 2023
VIP Preview - 5 p.m.
Donor Event - 6 - 8 p.m.

LOCATION:
EFA Project Space
323 West 39th Street
New York, NY 10018

2nd Floor

Save the date for EFA’s first inaugural Greenhouse Benefit Disco party! Join us for this special celebration of our thriving community of artists, intended to cultivate crucial funds for our year-round work nurturing our artist-driven programs!

The festivities will feature an art sale of over 100+ works donated by EFA Artist Members across all three major programs.

There will also be a live DJ, catered bites and cocktails, and a raffle with exclusive prizes not to be missed!

More information will be coming soon.

Funds raised through ticket and art sales at this event will directly support our continued dedication to cultivating a spirit of cultural growth, creative community, and new interactions between artists and the public.

EFA OPEN STUDIOS 2023

DATES:
Thursday, October 12, 6 – 9 p.m. (opening night)
Friday, October 13, 6 – 9 p.m.
Saturday, October 14, 2 – 6 p.m.

LOCATION:
EFA Center
323 West 39th Street
New York, NY 10018

EFA OPEN STUDIOS is an annual event that welcomes the public to visit the studios and galleries of the EFA building in Midtown Manhattan. It is an opportunity to see the most recent works by artists and gain meaningful insight into their creation process. We invite curators, collectors, dealers, artists, and art lovers to join in a meaningful dialog with our internationally recognized members. The EFA Studio Program is a vibrant and diverse community of over 70 artists working in a wide range of media and artistic sensibilities. All are professional artists with established studio practices and career honors. The EFA Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop and EFA Project Space will be open for tours.

PARTICIPATING ARTISTS (Floors 3 - 10):
Samira Abbassy | Fanny Allié | Keren Anavy | Shimon Attie | Allen Thomas Ball | Laura A. Barbata | Keren Benbenisty | Wafaa Bilal | Rhona Bitner | m Burgess | Mattia Casalegno | Patty Cateura | Cecile Chong | Elizabeth Colomba | Vicky Colombet | Pamela Council | Michael Eade | Nazli Efe | Sally Egbert | Jonathan Ehrenberg | Cui Fei | Jason File | Guido Garaycochea | Del Geist | Katya Grokhovsky | Mahmoud Hamadani | Liselot van der Heijden | Pablo Helguera | Amy Hill | Janet Loren Hill | Adam Hurwitz | Akira Ikezoe | Noormah Jamal | Edgar Jerins | Melissa Joseph | Kosuke Kawahara | Tamiko Kawata | Calvin Kim | Justin Kim | Yongjae Kim | Greg Kwiatek | Sarah Leahy | Hayoon Jay Lee | Patricia Leighton | Dana Levy | Anina Major | Michael Mandiberg | Watson Mere | Cheryl Molnar | Carlos Motta | Amy Myers | Nazanin Noroozi | Whitney Oldenburg | Bundith Phunsombatlert | Thomas Pihl | Simonette Quamina | Armita Raafat | Maria D. Rapicavoli | Yali Romagoza | Javier Romero | Alex Schweder | Finnegan Shannon | Susan Silas | Karina Skvirsky | Howard Smith | Suzanne Song | Xin Song | Jia Sung | Carlos Vega | Marjorie Welish | A young Yu

ADDITIONAL SPECIAL EVENTS:

EFA PROJECT SPACE 2nd Floor
Return To Sender
Curated by Mariame Kaba
On View: September 14, 2023 - October 28, 2023

EFA ROBERT BLACKBURN PRINTMAKING WORKSHOP 2nd Floor
Take a self-guided tour through the oldest, longest community printmaking workshop in the country. And, the only community printshop in Manhattan with Stone Lithography!

STANLEY CENTER FOR PEACE AND SECURITY ACQUISITION

Trace EB on long term loan to the Stanley Center for Peace and Security

DATES:

Long term loan

LOCATION:
209 Iowa Avenue, Muscatine, Iowa 52761, USA

Trace EB will be on a long-term loan to the Stanley Center for Peace and Security for their new campus.

The Stanley Center was founded in 1956 by C. Maxwell “Max” and Elizabeth M. “Betty” Stanley. Max was a professional engineer and businessman. Betty was a devoted philanthropist and avid supporter of the arts, education, and the environment.

The Stanley family intentionally based the center in Muscatine, Iowa—home to Max Stanley’s two Fortune 500 companies, which still exist today.

Photo by Federico Savini


EFA OPEN STUDIOS 2022

DATES:
Thursday, October 20, 6 – 9 p.m. (opening night)
Friday, October 21, 6 – 9 p.m.
Saturday, October 22, 2 – 6 p.m.

LOCATION:
EFA Center
323 West 39th Street
New York, NY 10018

A free timed-entry ticket is required.

Vaccine proof and masks are required.
Unvaccinated children may attend if they wear a mask.
For groups, please email deric@efanyc.org in advance.

EFA OPEN STUDIOS is an annual event that welcomes the public to visit the studios and galleries of the EFA building in Midtown Manhattan. It is an opportunity to see the most recent works by artists and gain meaningful insight into their creative process. We invite curators, collectors, dealers, artists, and art lovers to join in a meaningful dialog with our internationally recognized members. The EFA Studio Program is a vibrant and diverse community of over 75 artists working in a wide range of media and artistic sensibilities. All are professional artists with established studio practices and career honors. The EFA Robert Blackburn Print Making Workshop and EFA Project Space will be open for tours and demos.

PARTICIPATING ARTISTS (Floors 3 - 10):
Samira Abbassy | Fanny Allié | Keren Anavy | Shimon Attie | Allen T. Ball | Laura A. Barbata | Mahsa Biglow | Wafaa Bilal | Rhona Bitner | m Burgess | Mattia Casalegno | Patty Cateura | Cecile Chong | Elizabeth Colomba | Vicky Colombet | Michael Eade | Nazli Efe | Sally Egbert | Jonathan Ehrenberg | Cui Fei | Jason File | Guido Garaycochea | Del Geist | Katya Grokhovsky | Mahmoud Hamadani | Liselot van der Heijden | Pablo Helguera | Amy Hill | Janet Loren Hill | Adam Hurwitz | Akira Ikezoe | Edgar Jerins | Richard Jochum | Melissa Joseph | Kosuke Kawahara | Tamiko Kawata | Justin Kim | Yongjae Kim | Greg Kwiatek | Sarah Leahy | Hayoon Jay Lee | Patricia Leighton | Dana Levy | Anina Major | Michael Mandiberg | Katinka Mann | Watson Mere | Cheryl Molnar | Carlos Motta | Amy Myers | Nazanin Noroozi | Whitney Oldenburg | Bundith Phunsombatlert | Thomas Pihl | Simonette Quamina | Armita Raafat | Maria D. Rapicavoli | Javier Romero | Heather Rubinstein | Alex Schweder | Susan Silas | Karina Skvirsky | Howard Smith | Suzanne Song | Xin Song | Jia Sung | Steed Taylor | Carlos Vega | Marjorie Welish | A young Yu


MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART, JACKSONVILLE

Topography 1 at Museum of Contemporary Art

Photo by Federico Savini

DATES:
On View March 25, 2022 - February 12, 2023

LOCATION:
MOCA Jacksonville

Take a virtual tour here.

View more

In honor of the University of North Florida's fiftieth anniversary and highlighting MOCA's affiliation as a cultural institute of UNF, FIFTY showcases the work of artists with substantial professional careers who have graduated from UNF's Department of Art, Art History, and Design. 

Featuring fifty artists working across a breadth of media—from photography to painting, film to ceramics, and sculpture to printmaking—the diversity of work on display is reflective of the variety of art disciplines taught at UNF, as well as the wealth of career opportunities that UNF alumni choose to explore. The first exhibition of its kind, FIFTY, demonstrates the strength of art and creativity at UNF and its continued impact and reach in Jacksonville, the nation, and worldwide. 

Co-curated by Caitlín Doherty, Executive Director, MOCA Jacksonville, and Louise Freshman Brown, Distinguished Professor Emerita, University of North Florida. Questions? Contact Shannon Cullen, Coordinator of Membership Engagement, MOCA Jacksonville, at shannon.cullen@unf.edu or 904-620-4215.

Presenting Sponsor | Community First Credit Union of Florida
Sponsor | Marilyn and Charles Gilman

Additional support by the City of Jacksonville, the Cultural Council of Greater Jacksonville, The Florida Division of Cultural Affairs, The National Endowment for the Arts, and the University of North Florida.


DREAD IN THE EYES

Slash Pine 4, Bark, beeswax, charcoal on panel, 48” x 24”

DATES:

January 13 – April 1, 2022

Reception: March 12, 5-8 PM

LOCATION:
The Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts

Checklist PDF

Press Release PDF

Viewing Room

Darker themes have soaked into the artwork being made at EFA Studios. Recent times have tested many people’s optimism and it is no surprise that artists have picked up on a sense of dread and upheaval in the air. Fire, disease, flood, and food insecurity are in the media and evident on our streets. Artists are barometers of change, sensing the coming storm, and recording its erratic progress. The artists in this exhibition have created visual traces and frameworks for contemplating the turmoil that is often seen at a remove on screens. Some artists have worked in this vein for years already, having been buffeted by the stress of precarity and sensitivity to injustice. Others know of deep loss that has no resolution. There is dread but also hope in the eyes of artists. 

Kosuke Kawahara confronts terror head-on by imagining the worst, the bodies left on the side of the road, the leering skull faces of despair, and the rot and putridness of disease. By addressing these negative fantasies he is able to work through the black feelings and live in the present smiling. Greg Kwaitek paints a storm-battered boat. It is an apt emblem for our times, though the image is timeless like a romantic tragedy. Or perhaps it is the prelude to an elaborate comedy? The tempest scene is paired with a painting of a horseback rider who stalks the horizon in a gasmask recalling a long-ago war or a dreadful future of environmental collapse. 

Loss is softened by time and is the ground for new growth in the work of Sally Egbert and Michael Eade. Egbert’s paintings run cool and hot in their gauzy ambiguity punctuated by fragile flowers or the scribbled line of a vase. Her moody canvases sometimes suggest a field of light filtered through water or shifting atmosphere, and other times glower in somber purples and night blues. Michael Eade paints glittering burned-out landscapes. A season after the fire, they bloom with new life. 

Whitney Oldenburg creates awkwardly present sculptures. They are like something—cave-like, womb-like, tumor-like—but never settle into a final form. Some pieces like “holding 800” contain personal items squirreled away in their hidden interiors. Others purportedly represent household objects like a drying rack or an electric razor. Through accretions of various materials, they are worked and reworked into strange limbic externalizations. Across from Whitney’s abstraction is a realist image by Edgar Jerins. A man is smoking in a bedroom littered with trash. Through the window is a cold winter city. The man’s youth is betrayed by the hopelessness in his eyes. Jay Alone depicts the anomie and dread of dead-end masculinity. 

A cabinet of curiosities with gristly sculptures, bones, teeth, evil eyes, and dolls with multiple heads and other unknown horrors brings the idea of dread to the level of burlesque. On view is a sampling of items collected and made by Samira Abbassy. A vicious vagina dentata, a widow’s veil, and half-born fetuses speak of the indignities of being a woman in an absurd world.  

Allen Thomas Ball uses residue from the land to make paintings and installations which deal with humankind’s effect on the environment. On view are three panels of earth and bark which suggest a scorched and forbidding vision of our planet where nature and even our atmosphere might be a relic. Nearby is Cheryl Molnar’s cut-paper collage inspired by the Griffith Park fires. The image taps into the Los Angeles noir binary of pleasure and doom. LA represents the apotheosis and unraveling of the American dream, where progress runs out of land, where fires, mudslides, and earthquakes replace seasons.

Riptide is a handmade film by Nazanin Noroozi which is set to an ethereal soundtrack by Joël Fajerman. Noroozi uses family footage from pre-revolutionary Iran, vintage computer graphics, and collage elements to tell a doomsday story with a hauntingly light touch. Suggestions of a meteor strike and ecological collapse are mixed with war games and nostalgia for a lost world. This creates a melancholic space that speaks to the pain of dislocation and loss which can come from human or cosmic origin.

Jason File’s film traces the role of toilet paper in America and its global trading partners from 1960’s advertising to 1980–90s footage of TP’ing as a suburban ritual of celebration and pranking to darker contemporary news footage of consumers fighting over shortages. The film is set to a pre-9/11 song appropriated as an emblem of the conflation of underground cool and consumer ecstasy. The film is a spot-on critique of hysteria in American culture and the thin line between abundance and fearful hoarding.

The Last Man by Dana Levy eerily combines security camera feeds from cities around the world recorded during the COVID-19 lockdown with scenes from The Last Man on Earth, a 1964 science fiction film starring Vincent Price. The contemporary imagery of deserted streets easily overlaps the dialog in which a pandemic has turned most humans into vampires leaving Price alone to wander the empty streets and lament society’s sudden fall.

We do not know how fundamental change is going to come about - suddenly and painfully, gradually and hopefully, or like a clap of the hands the spell of the now will be broken. Katya Grokhovsky’s drawing of a naked individual with long blond hair and a red penis stares up to the heavens as if asking what’s next? Their arms are outstretched waiting for applause or perhaps a parachute of provisions

Artists:

Samira Abbassy | Allen Thomas Ball | Michael Eade | Sally Egbert | Jason File | Katya Grokhovsky | Edgar Jerins | Kosuke Kawahara | Greg Kwiatek | Dana Levy | Cheryl Molnar | Nazanin Noroozi | Whitney Oldenburg

Curated by Deric Carner


GARMENT DISTRICT SPACE FOR PUBLIC ART

On view March - April 2022

209 West 38th Street Space for Public Art

NEW YORK – March 15, 2022 – The Garment District Alliance announced its latest public art exhibits, showcasing a mixed-media installation consisting of 10 works crafted by New York-based artist Allen Thomas Ball. 

Located in a street-level window at 215 West 38th Street, the free exhibit is accessible to the public through April 22nd. The installation by Ball is part of the Garment District Space for Public Art program, which showcases artists in unusual locations and, over 16 years, has produced more than 200 installations, exhibits, and performances.

“We’re proud to present Allen’s fascinating exhibit as part of our series of public art installations this spring,” said Barbara A. Blair, president of the Garment District Alliance. “This exhibition features wonderful pieces encouraging viewers to think deeply about our planet, and we hope all enjoy the installation when visiting the Garment District.”

The Garment District is home to diverse business sectors, from technology to hospitality, and includes thousands of people working in the creative economy, including fine and performing artists, designers, architects, photographers, and more than a hundred theaters, galleries, performance spaces, and studios.

For more information on the Garment District Space for Public Art, please visit http://garmentdistrictnyc.com/arts/


EFA OPEN STUDIOS 2021

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DATES:
Thursday, October 21st, 6 - 9 pm (opening night)
Friday, October 22nd, 6 - 9pm
Saturday, October 23rd, 2 - 6pm

LOCATION:
EFA Center
323 West 39th Street
New York, NY 10018

Timed entry ticket is required upon entry

Check out the feature in Hyperallergic here

Check out my email campaign here.

Vaccine-proof masks are required.
Unvaccinated children may attend if they wear a mask.
For groups, please email deric@efanyc.org in advance.

EFA OPEN STUDIOS is an annual event of the EFA Studio Program that invites the public to explore and interact with our member artists in the intimate setting of their studios. It is an opportunity to see the most recent works by artists at the site of their origin and gain meaningful insight into their creation process. The EFA Studio Program is a vibrant and diverse community of over 70 artists working in various media and artistic sensibilities. All are professional artists with established studio practice and recognized careers. Rarely can curators, collectors, dealers, artists, and art lovers see so many internationally recognized artists working under one roof in Midtown Manhattan?

PARTICIPATING ARTISTS (Floors 3 - 10):
Samira Abbassy | Fanny Allié | Keren Anavy | Noel W. Anderson | Shimon Attie | Allen T. Ball | Laura A. Barbata | Keren Benbenisty | Masha Biglow | Wafaa Bilal | Rhona Bitner | Martha Burgess | Mattia Casalegno | Patty Cateura | Cecile Chong | Elizabeth Colomba | Vicky Colombet | Michael Eade | Sally Egbert | Jonathan Ehrenberg | Odette England | Cui Fei | Jason File | Del Geist | Katya Grokhovsky | Mahmoud Hamadani | Pablo Helguera | Amy Hill | Janet Loren Hill | Adam Hurwitz | Akira Ikezoe | Edgar Jerins | Richard Jochum | Melissa Joseph | Kosuke Kawahara | Tamiko Kawata | Justin Kim | Yongjae Kim | Greg Kwiatek | Sarah Leahy | Hayoon Lee | Patricia Leighton | JC Lenochan | Dana Levy | Anina Major | Michael Mandiburg | Katinka Mann | Jeanette May | Cheryl Molnar | Amy Myers | Nazanin Noroozi | Morgan O’Hara | Whitney Oldenburg | Thomas Pihl | Simonette Quamina | Armita Raafat | Maria D. Rapicavoli | Javier Romero | Heather Bause Rubinstein | Alex Schweder | Susan Silas | Karina Skvirsky | Howard Smith | Suzanne Song | Xin Song | Steed Taylor | Dannielle Tegeder | A young Yu | Liselot van der Heijden | Carlos Vega | Marjorie Welish


ARTIST TALK AT WILLIAM RIS GALLERY

DATES:

November 7, 2020

LOCATION:
1291 Main Rd, Jamesport, NY 11947

On SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7th, 1 PM the William Ris Gallery will welcome NYC artist Allen Thomas Ball for the second of its monthly collaborations with the EFA Studios North Fork Residency & the Potato Farm Project partnership program with the Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts Studio Program & The Potato Farm Project bring EFA Member Artists to live and work in South Jamesport for a month. During the artists’ month-long stay on the North Fork, each participant has an artist talk at William Ris Gallery.
Make plans to drop in on November 7th at 1 pm, and meet me and hear how I use nature’s elements and share observations & environmental concerns.
A proper safety protocol will be followed.

Gratitude to The Potato Farm Project, EFA Studios, @vaidehikinkhabwala & @wanderlust_dhruv, and @williamrisgallery.

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EFA [VIRTUAL] OPEN STUDIOS

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The Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts Annual Open Studios. Video links below

EFA Virtual Open Studios 2020 - Lunch With Studio Director Bill Carroll

New Member Panel

Download the Press Release

EFA Website

PARTICIPATING ARTISTS:
Samira Abbassy | Clytie Alexander | Fanny Allié | Noel W. Anderson | Shimon Attie | Keren Benbenisty | Wafaa Bilal | Rhona Bitner | Martha Burgess | Mattia Casalegno | Jordan Casteel | Patty Cateura | Cecile Chong | Elizabeth Colomba | Vicky Colombet | Sarah Dineen | Michael Eade | Sally Egbert | Jonathan Ehrenberg | Cui Fei | Del Geist | Alex Gingrow | Mahmoud Hamadani | Valerie Hegarty | Pablo Helguera | Amy Hill | Adam Hurwitz | Akira Ikezoe | Edgar Jerins | Richard Jochum | Sophie Kahn | Tamiko Kawata | Arghavan Khosravi | Justin Kim | Yongjae Kim | Greg Kwiatek | Doron Langberg | Sarah Leahy | Patricia Leighton | Dana Levy | Patte Loper | Katinka Mann | Jeanette May | Park McArthur | Cheryl Molnar | Amy Myers | Morgan O’Hara | Thomas Pihl | Shahpour Pouyan | Simonette Quamina | Armita Raafat | Maria D. Rapicavoli | Javier Romero | Heather Bause Rubinstein | Alex Schweder | Karina Skvirsky | Howard Smith | Suzanne Song | Xin Song | Steed Taylor | Dannielle Tegeder | Scott Teplin | Liselot van der Heijden | Carlos Vega | Marjorie Welish | Saya Woolfalk


GALERIE MICHAEL BARGO

Trace 55 at Galerie Michael Bargo

New York-based dealer, stylist, and designer, Michael Bargo, reinterprets the history of decorative arts for contemporary sensibilities. At Galerie Michael Bargo almost all pieces are for sale. Bargo has been a major actor of the New York City design scene for the past decade. With his faithful assistants, his two cats Ossie and Scotty and dog Temo, Bargo has been juggling between projects throughout the United States and Europe. 


MORONGO VALLEY

DATES:

Indefinite

LOCATION:
Morongo Valley California, USA

Art Off Screen

Morongo Valley is an ephemeral installation located in the Mojave Desert that highlights indigenous stones excavated in situ and encased in local soil and water.

The installation is part of "Art off Screen," an international exhibition of artwork in outward-facing locations, allowing the community to view the work from the outside. The exhibition is intended to provide access to art beyond a screen during the pandemic when many art exhibitions are closed or moved online.

At least 20% of proceeds go to the Artist Relief Fund, The Bail Project, Equal Justice Initiative, NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund, The Loveland Foundation, or another cause of the artist’s choice.

Art off Screen aims to inspire creativity, amplify voices, encourage change, and share messages of hope and healing. The exhibition is made possible by Eileen Jeng Lynch and can be viewed on Neumeraki.com. and here.