Less than a week until Gallery Night! Check out the map of the different tour routes below. Free and open to the public!
Spotlight on...Rene Gomez!
La Galería del Barrio, located in Southside Cultural Center on Broad Street opened earlier this spring, and we are pleased to announce that the Galleria will be part of our June 20 Gallery Night.
We asked Rene Gomez, one of the artists with pieces in the opening exhibit, "A Soulful Sazón," a bit about the new gallery, his art, and baseball. To read more about Rene and see a gallery of his work, visit RI Latino Artists • Rene Gómez (rilatinoarts.org).
Q: You work both as a mural artist and as a painter on a smaller scale. What are the main differences in the process and do you prefer one more than the other?
I enjoy both murals and paintings and always see in my eyes my canvas paintings as potential murals being painted on walls. But my canvas paintings usually have a more meaningful connection with me since they have a connection with my life experiences. The primary challenge when creating a mural lies in scaling the artwork accurately. Various techniques, including freehand rendering and projector assistance, are available for this purpose plus many more methods. Personally, I employ a European-style method that suits my workflow in creating murals. I utilize the gridding method on my paintings when creating from sketch to canvas.
Q: Congratulations on being part of the opening exhibit at La Galería del Barrio. What are your thoughts about La Galleria del Barrio being one of the first - if not the first - gallery on Broad Street in Providence?
The establishment of a gallery dedicated to showcasing the remarkable artwork within the Hispanic community, particularly in the region where I have resided for the entirety of my life South Providence is meaningful. This space "La Galería del Barrio" is providing a platform to illuminate the richness of beauty and creativity of many artists in the local area and Rhode Island.
Q: You have a couple of portraits of baseball players in the opening exhibit. Are you a baseball fan? What is your team?
A: I have been crafting paintings inspired by my personal experiences and journey, particularly focusing on my upbringing, which involved actively watching baseball games and participating in Little League and Senior League baseball, as well as avidly collecting baseball cards during my teen years. Currently, I am engaged in developing a series depicting iconic figures from the New York Yankees, rendered in a pop art style within the format reminiscent of baseball cards. Following this project, I intend to pivot towards capturing the essence of Boston Red Sox legends. I'm still a Boston Red Sox fan; the 2004 team is my favorite because my dad got to see them win the championship before he passed away in 2007.
June 20 Gallery Night - 6:30 pm tour details announced!
We will leave at 6:30 pm from the WaterFire Arts Center at 475 Valley Street, and return to the WaterFire Arts Center around 8:30 pm.
This tour will be led by Gallery Night Guide Irene Yibirin (fluent in English and Spanish!) and will be via trolley or mini coach. We will visit the following locations and exhibits:
La Galería del Barrio | PVD. Located inside the Southside Cultural Center (SCCRI) on Broad Street, La Galería del Barrio is Providence's first urban art gallery dedicated solely to the art of Latinx, Afro-Latino and Indigenous-Latinx art. Gallery curator Marta V. Martínez with support from David Sánchez of SCC, brings the best in local art and artists to showcase Rhode Island's position as a true art mecca.
The Gallery at Sprout CoWorking. The Gallery at Sprout CoWorking is proud to present a group show from Sam Sparling, Vesna Longton, and Ruth Hauzinger. This exhibit is a multimedia showcase of organic forms, works and shapes that show us the beauty in life through these three different and unique perspectives.
WaterFire Arts Center. When I Get Home, a month-long group exhibition by the 2023-2024 WaterFire Accelerate Cohort, features the works of Kannetha Brown, Sydney Darrow, Emily Gray, Andrea Pascual, Adolfo Peralta, and Leiyana Simone Pereira. Ranging across a wide variety of media, these six artists are united by their collective interests in their roots, grief and growth. Exploring the human condition and connection, When I Get Home provides a space for all to commemorate the self, family, and loved ones. Also enjoy sips, snacks, and live music as part of the weekly Thursday Night TroopTop celebration!
REGISTER IN ADVANCE OR SHOW UP THE NIGHT OF!
Half of the seats on the trolley or mini coach will always be available (first-come, first-served), completely free, to anyone who shows up on Gallery Night! The other half of the seats are available to reserve in advance via Eventbrite. We ask that you donate $1 when you check out, for the convenience of guaranteeing your spot on the tour of your choice ahead of time.
Accessibility notes:
Many of the Gallery Night art spaces are wheelchair accessible. However, the trolleys we hire for Gallery Night cannot accommodate wheelchairs.
All tours involve some walking and some stops may include stairs.
We invite wheelchair users to enjoy self-guided tours on Gallery Night, and have created some suggestions (Make Your Own Tour tab page) where we note which galleries are wheelchair accessible.
Some notes to help you out the night of the event!
We recommend arriving to the Graduate 5 to 10 minutes before your tour time. One of our volunteers will be at a podium with a Gallery Night banner, near the main entrance, and will check you in and answer any questions!
If your plans change, please remember to cancel your Eventbrite reservation so that someone else can enjoy the tour.
Tours occasionally run late. We recommend allowing buffer time if you're planning on attending another event after ours.
And…enjoy a sneak peek of some of the artwork you can see at these spaces on gallery night!
June 20 Gallery Night - 6:00 pm tour details announced!
We will leave at 6:00 pm from the Graduate Hotel at 11 Dorrance Street, and return to the Graduate around 8:00 pm.
This tour will be led by Gallery Night Guide Sam Nehila and will be via trolley or mini coach. We will visit the following locations and exhibits:
Galerie le Domaine at Domain Properties presents the work of Jamie Murphy Hlynsky, American painter and collage artist. With a background as a professional illustrator and propmaker, she also works in the fine arts with her paintings and collages, with many of her works being exhibited in several museums, galleries, and private collections.
RISD Museum. The RISD Museum has a variety of different exhibits on view. On the Gallery Night tour, you can get a taste of the many amazing exhibits that the museum has to offer!
Visit AS220 Project Space to explore Studio Interior: Variation by Ida Schmulowitz and Filipinas by Hannah Liongoren in the Reading Room. Studio Interior: Variation shows interior-influenced compositions that are symbolic of adaptations in an ever changing dance capturing light and movement. In Filipinas, Liongoren blends semi autobiographical comic storytelling and sculptural objects to provide a vessel for the emotions, struggles, and triumphs of preserving a Filipina identity.
REGISTER IN ADVANCE OR SHOW UP THE NIGHT OF!
Half of the seats on the trolley or mini coach will always be available (first-come, first-served), completely free, to anyone who shows up on Gallery Night! The other half of the seats are available to reserve in advance via Eventbrite. We ask that you donate $1 when you check out, for the convenience of guaranteeing your spot on the tour of your choice ahead of time.
Accessibility notes:
Many of the Gallery Night art spaces are wheelchair accessible. However, the trolleys we hire for Gallery Night cannot accommodate wheelchairs.
All tours involve some walking and some stops may include stairs.
We invite wheelchair users to enjoy self-guided tours on Gallery Night, and have created some suggestions (Make Your Own Tour tab page) where we note which galleries are wheelchair accessible.
Some notes to help you out the night of the event!
We recommend arriving to the Graduate 5 to 10 minutes before your tour time. One of our volunteers will be at a podium with a Gallery Night banner, near the main entrance, and will check you in and answer any questions!
If your plans change, please remember to cancel your Eventbrite reservation so that someone else can enjoy the tour.
Tours occasionally run late. We recommend allowing buffer time if you're planning on attending another event after ours.
And…enjoy a sneak peek of some of the artwork you can see at these spaces on gallery night!
June 20 Gallery Night - 5:45 pm tour details announced!
We will leave at 5:45 pm from the Graduate Hotel at 11 Dorrance Street, and return to the Graduate around 7:45 pm.
This tour will be led by Gallery Night Guide Barbara Zdravesky.
This is a walking tour - make sure you wear comfortable shoes and dress for the weather! We will visit the following locations and exhibits:
The Gallery at City Hall. “In and Out of Focus; Reality and Memories” at City Hall’s Main Gallery explores the powerful space between appreciating the immediate moment and respecting the intangibility of our memories. The artists, Olive the Giant (Quinn Bryan) and Jaclyn Tomasso, use a range of color, scale, and subject in their painting technique and palette, to delve into the notion of being in the here and now, while also looking with wonderment on what came before and what a new day may bring.
BankRI Turks Head Gallery. BankRI Turks Head Gallery presents Pangea, a series by artist Ben Watkins. The word refers to the continent hypothesized by geologists when all land masses were joined together. This work is a light-hearted nod to the idea that we are all connected, which is an even more important concept after the collective experience of a worldwide pandemic.
RI Center for Photographic Arts. At the RI Center for Photographic Arts, the Vanta Guild Members present a group show, Family Business. The Vanta Guild is a collective of active, Rhode Island-based Black photographers who unapologetically celebrate and depict the experiences and imaginations of descendants of the African diaspora.
Anahid Ypres Art Studio. At Anahid Ypres’s studio you can get an inside look at the artist’s studio, and have the pleasure of seeing both in progress and finished paintings! Her work touches on subjects ranging from landscapes and the figure to abstracted still lifes. This month she has a guest artist, Adam Lima, who uses figuration and abstraction with a mix of somber colors and bright pastels to create a juxtaposition on the fears and joys of life.
REGISTER IN ADVANCE OR SHOW UP THE NIGHT OF!
Half of the spots on the tour will always be available (first-come, first-served), completely free, to anyone who shows up on Gallery Night! The other half of the spots are available to reserve in advance via Eventbrite. We ask that you donate $1 when you check out, for the convenience of guaranteeing your spot on the tour of your choice ahead of time.
Accessibility notes:
Many of the Gallery Night art spaces are wheelchair accessible. However, the trolleys we hire for Gallery Night cannot accommodate wheelchairs.
All tours involve some walking and some stops may include stairs. RI Center for Photographic Arts is on the 2nd floor of a building without an elevator, and Anahid Ypres Art Studio is on the 3rd floor of the same building.
We invite wheelchair users to enjoy self-guided tours on Gallery Night, and have created some suggestions (Make Your Own Tour tab page) where we note which galleries are wheelchair accessible.
Some notes to help you out the night of the event!
We recommend arriving to the Graduate 5 to 10 minutes before your tour time. One of our volunteers will be at a podium with a Gallery Night banner, near the main entrance, and will check you in and answer any questions!
If your plans change, please remember to cancel your Eventbrite reservation so that someone else can enjoy the tour.
Tours occasionally run late. We recommend allowing buffer time if you're planning on attending another event after ours.
And…enjoy a sneak peek of some of the artwork you can see at these spaces on gallery night!
June 20 Gallery Night - 5:30 pm tour details announced!
We will leave at 5:30 pm from the Graduate Hotel at 11 Dorrance Street, and return to the Graduate around 7:30 pm.
This tour will be led by Gallery Night Guide Danielle Wolfrum and will be via trolley or mini coach. We will visit the following locations and exhibits:
Studio Hop. Studio Hop is a local studio and shop specializing in contemporary fine art, hand crafts, jewelry, ceramics, and clothing.
Jewish Alliance of Greater Rhode Island. Dining in the Diaspora is a group exhibition by the Jewish Alliance of Greater Rhode Island about food, tradition, and welcoming folks to their literal and proverbial tables. Throughout two thousand years of exile the cuisine and customs of the Jewish diaspora have both influenced and been influenced by the cultures of their neighbors everywhere in the world in an ever-evolving culinary conversation. This exhibition is an opportunity to share stories of food, diaspora, and art about the act of welcoming, featuring the work of 20 local artists.
Paper Nautilus. Baiting Hollow at Paper Nautilus features collaborative and individual artworks by Kate Salke and Sylvia Atwood. The artists use found materials such as couch cushions and rock slabs as surfaces for oil pastel drawings and sculptural compositions. Gravity and levity unite in a curious puzzle of repeating forms, exploring permanence and passage.
REGISTER IN ADVANCE OR SHOW UP THE NIGHT OF!
Half of the seats on the trolley or mini coach will always be available (first-come, first-served), completely free, to anyone who shows up on Gallery Night! The other half of the seats are available to reserve in advance via Eventbrite. We ask that you donate $1 when you check out, for the convenience of guaranteeing your spot on the tour of your choice ahead of time.
Accessibility notes:
Many of the Gallery Night art spaces are wheelchair accessible. However, the trolleys we hire for Gallery Night cannot accommodate wheelchairs.
All tours involve some walking and some stops may include stairs.
We invite wheelchair users to enjoy self-guided tours on Gallery Night, and have created some suggestions (Make Your Own Tour tab page) where we note which galleries are wheelchair accessible.
Some notes to help you out the night of the event!
We recommend arriving to the Graduate 5 to 10 minutes before your tour time. One of our volunteers will be at a podium with a Gallery Night banner, near the main entrance, and will check you in and answer any questions!
If your plans change, please remember to cancel your Eventbrite reservation so that someone else can enjoy the tour.
Tours occasionally run late. We recommend allowing buffer time if you're planning on attending another event after ours.
And…enjoy a sneak peek of some of the artwork you can see at these spaces on gallery night!
June 20 Gallery Night - 5:00 pm tour details announced!
We will leave at 5:00 pm from the Graduate Hotel at 11 Dorrance Street, and return to the Graduate around 7:00 pm.
This tour will be led by Gallery Night Guide Frank Toti and will be via trolley or mini coach. We will visit the following locations and exhibits:
Asterfields. Asterfields is an independent design house where art meets life, celebrating the intersection of craft, color, and creativity. The studio designs products to be lived in, treasured, and worn out, and strives to inspire self-expression and celebrate the individuality of their customers. On view this month, founder Nicole Deponte’s work and oil paintings by artist Holly Wach.
Art in the Atrium First U. Art in the Atrium, a program focused on inspiring the community by presenting work by artists with diverse viewpoints, is holding their 2024 Member Show. The theme and the works in this exhibition will explore the Unitarian Universalist Principles.
AS220 Main Gallery. AS220 Main Gallery presents Sueña Conmigo by Jessica Reyes and Growing Pains by Callie Mulahey. Sueña Conmigo reflects the motivations of creation while enduring hardships of immigration and navigating cultural heritage. Reyes shares their interdisciplinary practice of tattooing and mixed media arts influenced by their indigenous Guatemalan roots. In Growing Pains, Mulahey presents a series of paintings and ceramic vessels illustrating a “quarter life crisis” marked by second guessing, unlearning, daydreaming, and healing, using nature and personal experiences to show the challenges of personal and creative growth.
AS220 Aborn Gallery. At the AS220 Aborn Gallery, experience Fox’s Wedding, a group exhibit that brings together the figurative and abstract works of Julian MacMillian, Amanda Grey, and Ashley Pelletier. Their work sparks conversation between visual languages and the history of painting through bold uses of color and shared themes on memory and emotion.
REGISTER IN ADVANCE OR SHOW UP THE NIGHT OF!
Half of the seats on the trolley or mini coach will always be available (first-come, first-served), completely free, to anyone who shows up on Gallery Night! The other half of the seats are available to reserve in advance via Eventbrite. We ask that you donate $1 when you check out, for the convenience of guaranteeing your spot on the tour of your choice ahead of time.
Accessibility notes:
Many of the Gallery Night art spaces are wheelchair accessible. However, the trolleys we hire for Gallery Night cannot accommodate wheelchairs.
All tours involve some walking and some stops may include stairs.
We invite wheelchair users to enjoy self-guided tours on Gallery Night, and have created some suggestions (Make Your Own Tour tab page) where we note which galleries are wheelchair accessible.
Some notes to help you out the night of the event!
We recommend arriving to the Graduate 5 to 10 minutes before your tour time. One of our volunteers will be at a podium with a Gallery Night banner, near the main entrance, and will check you in and answer any questions!
If your plans change, please remember to cancel your Eventbrite reservation so that someone else can enjoy the tour.
Tours occasionally run late. We recommend allowing buffer time if you're planning on attending another event after ours.
And…enjoy a sneak peek of some of the artwork you can see at these spaces on gallery night!
Thank you to all who attended May 16 Gallery Night!
Thank you to everyone who attended or participated in May 16 Gallery Night! The weather rallied, with the rain stopping and the sun coming out, in time for Gallery Night. It was a great night, with 5 full or nearly full tours, and many folks visiting individual galleries on their own. There were many repeat visitors - Gallery Night veterans, so to speak - but also a lot of first-timers!
In total, we had at least 783 people attending Gallery Night, including folks from all over Rhode Island, plus some out-of-state visitors as well, from Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Virginia, and Texas!
Enjoy some photos from just a few of the different spaces that participated in Gallery Night that evening, plus quotes from particpants, below.
May 16 Gallery Night - 6:30 pm tour details announced!
We will leave at 6:30 pm from the WaterFire Arts Center at 475 Valley Street, and return to the WaterFire Arts Center around 8:30 pm.
This tour will be led by Gallery Night Guide Frank Toti and will be via trolley or mini coach. We will visit the following locations and exhibits:
The Gallery at Sprout CoWorking. Sprout is pleased to present “All In!” This is a group show of 17 high school students from grades 9 through 12 who are part of the “Arts Academy” course at Bishop Hendricken High School. The work shows a wide range of media and themes and is primarily self-driven from the interests and explorations of the students. Some of the art students and their art teacher will be present for the opening on Gallery Night!
URI at RIC Alex and Ani Hall. “The Gift of Art to the State of Rhode Island” presented by the University of Rhode Island, features more than 250 artworks from K-12 students throughout the state. This mixed media exhibit gathers work from public and charter schools, with the honored selection of Coventry Public Schools to add 9 works to the permanent collection, due to their extraordinary work integrating the arts into the curriculum across disciplines.
Bannister Gallery at Rhode Island College. The Bannister Gallery presents its annual exhibition of work from graduating seniors of the Art department, including studio concentrations such as ceramics, metalsmithing, painting, printmaking, graphic design, and many more mediums. This exhibit displays the wide variety of degrees earned through the department.
WaterFire Arts Center. “Sculpting Silent Narratives: My Love Letters." Janice Lardey’s exhibit is a 2024 Interlace Project Grant Awardee, using fabric and an immersive maze set up explores her distinct textural and artistic style. She creates abstract depictions of women from several generations of her family on the fabric, exploring their likeness and narratives on the fabric.
REGISTER IN ADVANCE OR SHOW UP THE NIGHT OF!
Half of the seats on the trolley or mini coach will always be available (first-come, first-served), completely free, to anyone who shows up on Gallery Night! The other half of the seats are available to reserve in advance via Eventbrite. We ask that you donate $1 when you check out, for the convenience of guaranteeing your spot on the tour of your choice ahead of time.
Accessibility notes:
Many of the Gallery Night art spaces are wheelchair accessible. However, the trolleys we hire for Gallery Night cannot accommodate wheelchairs.
All tours involve some walking and some stops may include stairs.
We invite wheelchair users to enjoy self-guided tours on Gallery Night, and have created some suggestions (Make Your Own Tour tab page) where we note which galleries are wheelchair accessible.
Some notes to help you out the night of the event!
We recommend arriving to the Graduate 5 to 10 minutes before your tour time. One of our volunteers will be at a podium with a Gallery Night banner, near the main entrance, and will check you in and answer any questions!
If your plans change, please remember to cancel your Eventbrite reservation so that someone else can enjoy the tour.
Tours occasionally run late. We recommend allowing buffer time if you're planning on attending another event after ours.
And…enjoy a sneak peek of some of the artwork you can see at these spaces on gallery night!
May 16 Gallery Night - 6:00 pm tour details announced!
We will leave at 6:00 pm from the Graduate Hotel at 11 Dorrance Street, and return to the Graduate around 8:00 pm.
This tour will be led by Gallery Night Guide Irene Yibirin and will be via trolley or mini coach. We will visit the following locations and exhibits:
James Politsky Silkscreen Art Studio. James Polisky creates limited edition and one of a kind hand-printed silkscreens, blending his original drawings and designs with a color separation background. His body of work is mostly character driven, showing views of monotonic bliss or desperate uncertainty, blanketed by an appreciation of the greatness and power of the everyday to encourage you to stop and think.
Studio Hop. Studio Hop is a local studio and shop specializing in contemporary fine art, hand crafts, jewelry, ceramics, and clothing. This month, new paintings by Ann-Marie Gillett and R. Sawan White!
RISD Museum. The RISD Museum has a variety of different exhibits on view. On the Gallery Night tour, you can get a taste of the many amazing exhibits that the museum has to offer!
REGISTER IN ADVANCE OR SHOW UP THE NIGHT OF!
Half of the seats on the trolley or mini coach will always be available (first-come, first-served), completely free, to anyone who shows up on Gallery Night! The other half of the seats are available to reserve in advance via Eventbrite. We ask that you donate $1 when you check out, for the convenience of guaranteeing your spot on the tour of your choice ahead of time.
Accessibility notes:
Many of the Gallery Night art spaces are wheelchair accessible. However, the trolleys we hire for Gallery Night cannot accommodate wheelchairs.
All tours involve some walking and some stops may include stairs.
We invite wheelchair users to enjoy self-guided tours on Gallery Night, and have created some suggestions (Make Your Own Tour tab page) where we note which galleries are wheelchair accessible.
Some notes to help you out the night of the event!
We recommend arriving to the Graduate 5 to 10 minutes before your tour time. One of our volunteers will be at a podium with a Gallery Night banner, near the main entrance, and will check you in and answer any questions!
If your plans change, please remember to cancel your Eventbrite reservation so that someone else can enjoy the tour.
Tours occasionally run late. We recommend allowing buffer time if you're planning on attending another event after ours.
And…enjoy a sneak peek of some of the artwork you can see at these spaces on gallery night!
May 16 Gallery Night - 5:45 pm tour details announced!
We will leave at 5:45 pm from the Graduate Hotel at 11 Dorrance Street, and return to the Graduate around 7:45 pm.
This tour will be led by Gallery Night Guide Larisa Martino and will be via trolley or mini coach. We will visit the following locations and exhibits:
BankRI Turks Head Gallery presents “Pangea,” a series by artist Ben Watkins. The word refers to the continent hypothesized by geologists when all land masses were joined together. This work is a light-hearted nod to the idea that we are all connected, which after the collective experience of a worldwide pandemic, we now understand how real this concept is. His multi-colored assemblages use continuous lines and interlocking shapes to explore our own interdependence.
AS220 Project Space presents “Fragments,” an investigation of displacement, identity, and rituals within the multidisciplinary practice of Masha Ryskin. Expressed with attention to footprints and stains, this collection of work alludes to shifts in memory and history within the temporal quality of human experiences. In the Reading Room, “Forest of Magic '' by Vensa Longton, explores the intersection between who we are and our surroundings, and encourages moments of discovery through inner self connections and our interconnectedness with nature.
The Gallery at 134 Collaborative / Mathewson Street Church presents PHOTOGRAPHY by Catherine Ibern, exploring her work and unique take on the medium. Ibern uses photography to look at the world through a different lens, capturing the beauty of life from different angles. Through her work, Ibern invites viewers to look at the world through her lens and experience her deep appreciation for it
Art in the Atrium First U. Art in the Atrium, a program focused on inspiring the community by presenting work by artists with diverse viewpoints, is holding their 2024 Member Show. The theme and the works in this exhibition will explore the Unitarian Universalist Principles.
REGISTER IN ADVANCE OR SHOW UP THE NIGHT OF!
Half of the seats on the trolley or mini coach will always be available (first-come, first-served), completely free, to anyone who shows up on Gallery Night! The other half of the seats are available to reserve in advance via Eventbrite. We ask that you donate $1 when you check out, for the convenience of guaranteeing your spot on the tour of your choice ahead of time.
Accessibility notes:
Many of the Gallery Night art spaces are wheelchair accessible. However, the trolleys we hire for Gallery Night cannot accommodate wheelchairs.
All tours involve some walking and some stops may include stairs.
We invite wheelchair users to enjoy self-guided tours on Gallery Night, and have created some suggestions (Make Your Own Tour tab page) where we note which galleries are wheelchair accessible.
Some notes to help you out the night of the event!
We recommend arriving to the Graduate 5 to 10 minutes before your tour time. One of our volunteers will be at a podium with a Gallery Night banner, near the main entrance, and will check you in and answer any questions!
If your plans change, please remember to cancel your Eventbrite reservation so that someone else can enjoy the tour.
Tours occasionally run late. We recommend allowing buffer time if you're planning on attending another event after ours.
And…enjoy a sneak peek of some of the artwork you can see at these spaces on gallery night!
May 16 Gallery Night - 5:30 pm tour details announced!
We will leave at 5:30 pm from the Graduate Hotel at 11 Dorrance Street, and return to the Graduate around 7:30 pm.
This tour will be led by Gallery Night Guide Jenn Wilson.
This is a walking tour - make sure you wear comfortable shoes and dress for the weather! We will visit the following locations and exhibits:
The Gallery at City Hall. “In and Out of Focus; Reality and Memories” at City Hall’s Main Gallery explores the powerful space between appreciating the immediate moment and respecting the intangibility of our memories. The artists, Olive the Giant (Quinn Bryan) and Jaclyn Tomasso, use a range of color, scale, and subject in their painting technique and palette, to delve into the notion of being in the here and now, while also looking with wonderment on what came before and what a new day may bring.
AS220 Main Gallery. The Main Gallery at AS220 presents two exhibits this May. In “Still,” Anthony Medeiros presents a series of expressive paintings conveying untold narratives of grief, confusion and longing. Utilizing practices of collage and iridescent paint, “Still” unveils characters within the works and its viewers. Robert Snowden presents a series of paintings influenced by tribal and skeletal themes. Through a process reflecting on appearances and emotion, “Your Mask” is a product of childlike intuition uncovering the inherent masks that everyone holds.
AS220 Aborn Gallery. At the Aborn Gallery, Madison Emond presents a series of medium-format color images captured during their Fullbright Fellowship in Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand, with the Kaiwharawhara stream. “Field Notes from Kaiwharawhara” encourages meaningful connections through psychedelic beauty.
RI Center for Photographic Arts. “Behind the Photograph,” explores the role of Artificial Intelligence in image making, asking early adopters of AI based imaging to show what this technology is and what is possible. Through this exhibit, viewers and artists are encourages to embrace AI imaging’s growing presence in our life and explore the concept of “fakes.” In tandem with this exhibit, “Guardians of Arcadia: Jim Bremer,” uses photo illustration to create images of Arcadia, a pastoral paradise and the women guardians who oversee it. Brem’s work focuses on creating something larger than life that provokes wonder about the production process in the viewer.
REGISTER IN ADVANCE OR SHOW UP THE NIGHT OF!
Half of the spots on the tour will always be available (first-come, first-served), completely free, to anyone who shows up on Gallery Night! The other half of the spots are available to reserve in advance via Eventbrite. We ask that you donate $1 when you check out, for the convenience of guaranteeing your spot on the tour of your choice ahead of time.
Accessibility notes:
Many of the Gallery Night art spaces are wheelchair accessible. However, the trolleys we hire for Gallery Night cannot accommodate wheelchairs.
All tours involve some walking and some stops may include stairs. RI Center for Photographic Arts is on the 2nd floor of a building without an elevator.
We invite wheelchair users to enjoy self-guided tours on Gallery Night, and have created some suggestions (Make Your Own Tour tab page) where we note which galleries are wheelchair accessible.
Some notes to help you out the night of the event!
We recommend arriving to the Graduate 5 to 10 minutes before your tour time. One of our volunteers will be at a podium with a Gallery Night banner, near the main entrance, and will check you in and answer any questions!
If your plans change, please remember to cancel your Eventbrite reservation so that someone else can enjoy the tour.
Tours occasionally run late. We recommend allowing buffer time if you're planning on attending another event after ours.
And…enjoy a sneak peek of some of the artwork you can see at these spaces on gallery night!
May 16 Gallery Night - 5:00 pm tour details announced!
We will leave at 5:00 pm from the Graduate Hotel at 11 Dorrance Street, and return to the Graduate around 7:00 pm.
This tour will be led by Gallery Night Guide Rosemary Rocchio with Guest Guide Michael Rose will be via trolley or mini coach. We will visit the following locations and exhibits:
The Armenian Historical Association of Rhode Island (AHARI) explores the vibrancy of the Armenian community through the over 200 food-related businesses established and run by Armenians. With these companies, this still thriving piece of history is explored in their museum to highlight the contributions of the Armenian community to the state of Rhode Island.
Galerie le Domaine at Domain Properties presents the work of Jamie Murphy Hlynsky, American painter and collage artist. With a background as a professional illustrator and propmaker, she also works in the fine arts with her paintings and collages, with many of her works being exhibited in several museums, galleries, and private collections.
The Chazan Gallery at Wheeler showcases contemporary art for local, regional, and national artists to provide the opportunity to display their artwork and engage with the local community. The gallery will be presenting the last day of their All School Show, exhibiting the work of students of all ages.
The David Winton Bell Gallery at Brown University presents a comprehensive survey exhibition of artist Barbara T. Smith. An innovator within the performance art movement of the late 1960s, Smith has long produced work that explores the self, sexuality, gender roles, physical and spiritual sustenance, love, life, and death. Assembling an expansive range of artwork and performance-related ephemera, the exhibition will survey Smith’s bold experimentation.
REGISTER IN ADVANCE OR SHOW UP THE NIGHT OF!
Half of the seats on the trolley or mini coach will always be available (first-come, first-served), completely free, to anyone who shows up on Gallery Night! The other half of the seats are available to reserve in advance via Eventbrite. We ask that you donate $1 when you check out, for the convenience of guaranteeing your spot on the tour of your choice ahead of time.
Accessibility notes:
Many of the Gallery Night art spaces are wheelchair accessible. However, the trolleys we hire for Gallery Night cannot accommodate wheelchairs.
All tours involve some walking and some stops may include stairs.
We invite wheelchair users to enjoy self-guided tours on Gallery Night, and have created some suggestions (Make Your Own Tour tab page) where we note which galleries are wheelchair accessible.
Some notes to help you out the night of the event!
We recommend arriving to the Graduate 5 to 10 minutes before your tour time. One of our volunteers will be at a podium with a Gallery Night banner, near the main entrance, and will check you in and answer any questions!
If your plans change, please remember to cancel your Eventbrite reservation so that someone else can enjoy the tour.
Tours occasionally run late. We recommend allowing buffer time if you're planning on attending another event after ours.
And…enjoy a sneak peek of some of the artwork you can see at these spaces on gallery night!
Thank you to all who attended April 18 Gallery Night!
Spring is in the air...on our last Gallery Night, we had April showers!
Between our 5 guided tours and folks who visited the galleries and exhibits on their own, we had at least 300 people attend this Gallery Night…some of whom braved the weather for a walking tour to galleries in the downtown area!
More than 20 people joined Gallery Night Guide Frank Toti on a walking tour of downtown art spaces, including stops at the AS220 Main, Aborn, and Project Space Galleries and the BankRI TurksHead Gallery, and discussions about public art and architecture.
We had folks attend Gallery Night from Massachusetts, New York, Connecticut, and all the way from Illinois, Texas, South Carolina, and Virginia, not to mention from cities and towns throughout Rhode Island!
Spotlight on...Sara Ladds!
This month our spotlight is on textile designer Sara Ladds. She will give a short presentation on her work during the 6 pm tour's stop at Kreatelier, and tour-goers will be able to ask questions and browse the fabric and wallpaper showroom. You can also visit Kreatelier on your own anytime between 6 and 8 pm on April 18 Gallery Night.
Q: You were trained at RISD as a graphic designer. What's the difference for you between designing on paper vs. fabric?
A: As a graphic designer, one uses information to create a design with a specific message, such as a poster or a book cover. There are choices in type, image, and color which are arranged on a given dimension to inform. The similarities between graphic design and fabric design are the designing of similar elements such as pattern, color, and size/dimension on a flat, two-dimensional plane. But fabric is a moving, pliable medium that takes into consideration light, shape, function, style, trends, taste, etc. It has a longer presence where graphic design has a short window of purpose. And when it comes to interior fabrics, the fabric is part of a complex array of other elements such as rugs, artwork, furniture, etc. and they all need to "talk" to one another as a unified group. If it's done correctly.
Q: Art and design are often used interchangeably. Is there a distinction?
A: I am of the opinion that yes, there is a distinction. Art is an expression of the soul. It comes from a place of having something to say and the artist completely drives what is said and how it's conveyed. Design has a purpose. To communicate and inform (graphic design), to be functional (industrial/furniture design), to live in society (fashion, architecture design), and so on. There are many designers who are artists and artists who are designers in both life and work. The two principles can intertwine and there are a few who have mastered it brilliantly. But for me, there is a distinction in the "why" something is created which separates art from design.
Q: Do you have a favorite palette? A favorite design or one that you're most proud of?
A: I love color! It's the number one driving force in how I design. I have always gravitated towards the warmer hues - red, orange, pink - but my new collection is with a lot of blues and greens. Whatever the color, I tend to go for a lot of saturation. I would say one of my favorite patterns is the "Peony" pattern. It's graphic and soft in style, bold, and colorful.
More about Sara Ladds Design:
Sara Ladds Design was launched in early 2015 and is based in Providence, Rhode Island. The collections combine a particular style of bold pattern and vibrant color with attention to proportion and balance. Sara Ladds Design uses eco-friendly printing methods, including water-based pigment ink, regional production and sustainably sourced materials and all fabrics are produced in the USA.
More about Sara Ladds:
Sara Ladds grew up in New York City where fashion, art, architecture, and culture influenced her sense of style and design. After graduating from Rhode Island School of Design, Sara spent many years as an award-winning graphic designer. She was owner of Bachleitner Design and in 2005 she became the art director at Brown University. In 2012 she moved out of Providence to the beautiful coastal town of Little Compton where she began to rethink her life’s work and decided to fulfill a long-time dream of being a textile designer. Thus Sara Ladds Design was born and one need not look far to see how Sara’s years as a graphic designer has strongly influenced her textiles. Her attention to detail and color are complemented by bold, graphic patterns and her work offers a strong and refreshing addition to the world of residential textiles.
April 18 Gallery Night - 6:30 pm tour details announced!
We will leave at 6:30 pm from the WaterFire Arts Center at 475 Valley Street, and return to the WaterFire Arts Center around 8:30 pm.
This tour will be led by Gallery Night Guide Bradly VanDerStad and will be via trolley or mini coach. We will visit the following locations and exhibits:
David Winton Bell Gallery. The Bell Gallery at Brown University presents a comprehensive survey exhibition of artist Barbara T. Smith. An innovator within the performance art movement of the late 1960s, Smith has long produced work that explores the self, sexuality, gender roles, physical and spiritual sustenance, love, life, and death. Assembling an expansive range of artwork and performance-related ephemera, the exhibition will survey Smith’s bold experimentation.
RI Center for Photographic Arts. “George DeWolfe & Friends Lasting Landscapes - Lasting Influences” is the second in a series of exhibitions providing an updated look at landscape photography in the 21st century. This show gathers a collection of photographers that were influenced by DeWolfe and his contemplative approach to making photographs of the landscape.
WaterFire Arts Center. The month-long exhibition “ART is Everywhere: Art Inc., A Rhode Island PBS Exhibition” brings the essence of Rhode Island PBS’ short-video series ART inc. from the screen to the gallery. Some of the series' episodes will be played in the gallery as part of the exhibition as well as artwork and objects from about 7-10 artists/creatives featured in the film series. Delving into the heart of human expression, the series illuminates the transformative power of art—from its ability to soothe and inspire to its role as a catalyst for societal change.
REGISTER IN ADVANCE OR SHOW UP THE NIGHT OF!
Half of the seats on the trolley or mini coach will always be available (first-come, first-served), completely free, to anyone who shows up on Gallery Night! The other half of the seats are available to reserve in advance via Eventbrite. We ask that you donate $1 when you check out, for the convenience of guaranteeing your spot on the tour of your choice ahead of time.
Accessibility notes:
Many of the Gallery Night art spaces are wheelchair accessible. However, the trolleys we hire for Gallery Night cannot accommodate wheelchairs.
All tours involve some walking and some stops may include stairs.
We invite wheelchair users to enjoy self-guided tours on Gallery Night, and have created some suggestions (Make Your Own Tour tab page) where we note which galleries are wheelchair accessible.
Some notes to help you out the night of the event!
We recommend arriving to the Graduate 5 to 10 minutes before your tour time. One of our volunteers will be at a podium with a Gallery Night banner, near the main entrance, and will check you in and answer any questions!
If your plans change, please remember to cancel your Eventbrite reservation so that someone else can enjoy the tour.
Tours occasionally run late. We recommend allowing buffer time if you're planning on attending another event after ours.
And…enjoy a sneak peek of some of the artwork you can see at these spaces on gallery night!
April 18 Gallery Night - 5 pm tour details announced!
We will leave at 5:00 pm from the Graduate Hotel at 11 Dorrance Street, and return to the Graduate around 7:00 pm.
This tour will be led by Gallery Night Guide Frank Toti.
This is a walking tour - make sure you wear comfortable shoes and dress for the weather! We will visit the following locations and exhibits:
BankRI Turks Head Gallery is showing “Drawings and Watercolors by Thea Ernest.” Ernest’s watercolor sketches are spontaneous reactions to her environment. She is curious and willing to draw anything that catches her eye – an industrial building, tomato plants in their cages, people in a cafe, a sycamore tree or her neighbor’s house. She has an intimate, easy style that’s more about capturing the feel of a place than cataloging details. She loves to be out in the world chronicling the ever-changing landscape of the state.
AS220 Main Gallery. Drawing inspiration from practices of print trades and swaps in the printmaking world, “Swap/Exchange/Trade” transforms the tradition of the print exchange to a unique collection of artwork. In an active encouragement of play, experimentation and celebration of printmaking mediums, this exhibition underscores PVDPrintmakers’ mission to create accessible opportunities for printmakers of all backgrounds.
AS220 Aborn Gallery. “Crossroads” is a group exhibition of contemporary printmaking curated by Lois Harada that highlights works from artists at the intersection of multiple identities and experiences. This exhibition responds to the 2024 United States presidential election to reflect an increasingly divisive civic climate.
AS220 Project Space. ‘Homeisland, Home is Land’ explores the complexities of the diasporic experience through the art of Edwige Charlot and Noél Puéllo. This exhibition explores themes of dislocation, rupture, and the enduring power of collective memory, through a transdisciplinary printmaking practice. Both artists, descendants of the “First Contact Island,” navigate the parallels between self, community, and culture through this work.
REGISTER IN ADVANCE OR SHOW UP THE NIGHT OF!
Half of the spots on the tour will always be available (first-come, first-served), completely free, to anyone who shows up on Gallery Night! The other half of the spots are available to reserve in advance via Eventbrite. We ask that you donate $1 when you check out, for the convenience of guaranteeing your spot on the tour of your choice ahead of time.
Accessibility notes:
Many of the Gallery Night art spaces are wheelchair accessible. However, the trolleys we hire for Gallery Night cannot accommodate wheelchairs.
All tours involve some walking and some stops may include stairs.
We invite wheelchair users to enjoy self-guided tours on Gallery Night, and have created some suggestions (Make Your Own Tour tab page) where we note which galleries are wheelchair accessible.
Some notes to help you out the night of the event!
We recommend arriving to the Graduate 5 to 10 minutes before your tour time. One of our volunteers will be at a podium with a Gallery Night banner, near the main entrance, and will check you in and answer any questions!
If your plans change, please remember to cancel your Eventbrite reservation so that someone else can enjoy the tour.
Tours occasionally run late. We recommend allowing buffer time if you're planning on attending another event after ours.
And…enjoy a sneak peek of some of the artwork you can see at these spaces on gallery night!
April 18 Gallery Night - 6:00 pm tour details announced!
We will leave at 6:00 pm from the Graduate Hotel at 11 Dorrance Street, and return to the Graduate around 8:00 pm.
This tour will be led by Gallery Night Guide Shannon Hadfield and will be via trolley or mini coach. We will visit the following locations and exhibits:
Studio Hop. Studio Hop is a local studio and shop specializing in contemporary fine art, hand crafts, jewelry, ceramics, and clothing.
Kreatelier. Kreatelier, a fabric concept store and interior decor studio, features the work and collection by Sara Ladds. Ladds’ collections combine a particular style of bold pattern and vibrant color with attention to proportion and balance. After graduating from Rhode Island School of Design, Sara spent many years as an award-winning graphic designer before fulfilling her dream of being a textile designer, and this background shapes her textiles and style. Ladds will be there to give a brief presentation on her work and answer any questions viewers may have.
Holly Wach Art. Holly Wach’s work focuses on creating portraits and first-hand observations of birds and wildlife in the natural world. Through these encounters, she creates an entry point for the viewer to slow down from a life filled with distractions and form a closer relationship to nature and its creatures. See the artist's studio with both in-progress and finished works, firsthand!
REGISTER IN ADVANCE OR SHOW UP THE NIGHT OF!
Half of the seats on the trolley or mini coach will always be available (first-come, first-served), completely free, to anyone who shows up on Gallery Night! The other half of the seats are available to reserve in advance via Eventbrite. We ask that you donate $1 when you check out, for the convenience of guaranteeing your spot on the tour of your choice ahead of time.
Accessibility notes:
Many of the Gallery Night art spaces are wheelchair accessible. However, the trolleys we hire for Gallery Night cannot accommodate wheelchairs.
All tours involve some walking and some stops may include stairs.
We invite wheelchair users to enjoy self-guided tours on Gallery Night, and have created some suggestions (Make Your Own Tour tab page) where we note which galleries are wheelchair accessible.
Some notes to help you out the night of the event!
We recommend arriving to the Graduate 5 to 10 minutes before your tour time. One of our volunteers will be at a podium with a Gallery Night banner, near the main entrance, and will check you in and answer any questions!
If your plans change, please remember to cancel your Eventbrite reservation so that someone else can enjoy the tour.
Tours occasionally run late. We recommend allowing buffer time if you're planning on attending another event after ours.
And…enjoy a sneak peek of some of the artwork you can see at these spaces on gallery night!
April 18 Gallery Night - 5:45 pm tour details announced!
We will leave at 5:45 pm from the Graduate Hotel at 11 Dorrance Street, and return to the Graduate around 7:45 pm.
This tour will be led by Gallery Night Guide Jenn Wilson and will be via trolley or mini coach. We will visit the following locations and exhibits:
Rhode Island State Archives. The RI State Archives exhibit celebrates the cross section of art and history in its first ever exhibit of student created artwork inspired by the historic documents preserved at the Archives. Students from Ponaganset High School, South Kingstown High School, and Beacon Charter High School for the Arts chose to tell these Rhode Island stories through paintings, mixed media, pottery, and other artistic forms, sharing the story of Rhode Island through a new lens.
Galerie le Domaine at Domain Properties is opening its 2024 season with the printwork of Lois Harada. Lois holds a BFA degree from RISD and has been working at DWRI Letterpress since 2011. She is an accomplished and creative printmaker and received several awards and residencies.
RISD Museum has a variety of different exhibits on view. On the Gallery Night tour, you can get a taste of the many amazing exhibits that the museum has to offer!
REGISTER IN ADVANCE OR SHOW UP THE NIGHT OF!
Half of the seats on the trolley or mini coach will always be available (first-come, first-served), completely free, to anyone who shows up on Gallery Night! The other half of the seats are available to reserve in advance via Eventbrite. We ask that you donate $1 when you check out, for the convenience of guaranteeing your spot on the tour of your choice ahead of time.
Accessibility notes:
Many of the Gallery Night art spaces are wheelchair accessible. However, the trolleys we hire for Gallery Night cannot accommodate wheelchairs.
All tours involve some walking and some stops may include stairs.
We invite wheelchair users to enjoy self-guided tours on Gallery Night, and have created some suggestions (Make Your Own Tour tab page) where we note which galleries are wheelchair accessible.
Some notes to help you out the night of the event!
We recommend arriving to the Graduate 5 to 10 minutes before your tour time. One of our volunteers will be at a podium with a Gallery Night banner, near the main entrance, and will check you in and answer any questions!
If your plans change, please remember to cancel your Eventbrite reservation so that someone else can enjoy the tour.
Tours occasionally run late. We recommend allowing buffer time if you're planning on attending another event after ours.
And…enjoy a sneak peek of some of the artwork you can see at these spaces on gallery night!
April 18 Gallery Night - 5:30 pm tour details announced!
We will leave at 5:30 pm from the Graduate Hotel at 11 Dorrance Street, and return to the Graduate around 7:30 pm.
This tour will be led by Gallery Night Guide Sam Nehila and will be via trolley or mini coach. We will visit the following locations and exhibits:
The Gallery at City Hall is joining forces with the SGCI (Southern Graphics Council International) Printmaking Conference, which is coming to Providence in April. They are curating a group print show, “Making an Impression: Building on Knowledge in Providence Printmaking.” The show will let us see the relationships, inspirations, and influences that contribute to a vibrant printmaking community over time, all in the backdrop of our own City Hall, reinforcing our commitment to artmaking as a civic-minded act that requires us to learn, experiment and pass it on.
Bannister Gallery at Rhode Island College. “Paper Trails: Selection from the RIC Print Trade” looks at the print exchange tradition at the Rhode Island College Printmaking Department which has taken place since 2005, where students and faculty of the Rhode Island College Printmaking Department create an edition of prints to trade with the other artists involved. Unthemed and with only a set paper size as a guide, exchange participants create innovative and unique prints that add to or start their classmates’ own art collections. Curated by RIC Alumnus Sam Nehila ’19, this exhibition digs into the past and traces common trends in subject matter as well as the range of technical experimentation of RIC printmakers throughout the years.
The Gallery at Sprout CoWorking features an exhibit created for Earth day by the artist, Liliana Fijman. Inspired by a sculpture of the same name, “Air - a breath on the line” was created by Fijman for the VI WTA International biennial in Mexico, which challenged artists to make the intangible tangible. Her work involved and collaborated with the children of the Community Libraries of Providence, where children and their families were encouraged to use air to make art.
REGISTER IN ADVANCE OR SHOW UP THE NIGHT OF!
Half of the seats on the trolley or mini coach will always be available (first-come, first-served), completely free, to anyone who shows up on Gallery Night! The other half of the seats are available to reserve in advance via Eventbrite. We ask that you donate $1 when you check out, for the convenience of guaranteeing your spot on the tour of your choice ahead of time.
Accessibility notes:
Many of the Gallery Night art spaces are wheelchair accessible. However, the trolleys we hire for Gallery Night cannot accommodate wheelchairs.
All tours involve some walking and some stops may include stairs.
We invite wheelchair users to enjoy self-guided tours on Gallery Night, and have created some suggestions (Make Your Own Tour tab page) where we note which galleries are wheelchair accessible.
Some notes to help you out the night of the event!
We recommend arriving to the Graduate 5 to 10 minutes before your tour time. One of our volunteers will be at a podium with a Gallery Night banner, near the main entrance, and will check you in and answer any questions!
If your plans change, please remember to cancel your Eventbrite reservation so that someone else can enjoy the tour.
Tours occasionally run late. We recommend allowing buffer time if you're planning on attending another event after ours.