Thursday, April 09, 2026

Call for Artists: Signal Box Public Art Project

The Bethesda Arts & Entertainment District has announced a Call for Artists for the second phase of their Signal Box Public Art Project in downtown Bethesda, MD.  The A&E District will select 10 artists whose original designs will be printed onto a vinyl wrap to adorn 10 Signal Boxes located throughout downtown Bethesda.  This new project will beautify the signal boxes, provide an opportunity to local artists (including high school artists) and bring more public art to our community. 

Artists must be 14 years of age or older and residents of Washington, D.C., Maryland, or Virginia. Each selected artist will be paid $650 for the use of their design, and the deadline to apply is Thursday, April 30, 2026.

More info here.

Application here.

Monday, March 23, 2026

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Woman, plotting her revenge upon a Washington Color School landscape

"A woman, plotting her revenge upon a Washington Color School landscape." 22x28, c. 2926, mixed media painting on paper. Will be at the next Affordable Art Fair New York City next March 18-22.

woman, plotting her revenge upon a Washington Color School landscape


Friday, February 27, 2026

Retrospective by Amber Robles-Gordon

Healing Forward: Rituals of Self-Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation

Retrospective by Amber Robles-Gordon.

Exhibition Dates: February 9 - April 30, 2026

Location: Community Folk Art Center, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY

Artist Talk: March 20, 2026 at 6:30 pm

Talking Stick Workshop: March 21, 2026. Register here.

Healing Forward: Rituals of Self-Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation, is a retrospective exhibition that traces the throughline of healing—personal, communal, spiritual, and ecological—across the artistic career of Amber Robles-Gordon. Bringing together installations, quilts, assemblages, and collages created over more than a decade, the exhibition reveals how healing has functioned not only as a thematic concern, but as a methodology and ethical framework within the artist’s practice.

Robles-Gordon’s work has long been rooted in self-awareness, reflection, and repair—of the self, of collective memory, and of the environments we inhabit. Drawing from Afro-Caribbean spiritual traditions, decolonial histories, feminist thought, and ecological consciousness, her artworks operate as sites of reckoning and renewal. They ask viewers to confront inherited systems of harm while offering space for breath, ritual, protection, and transformation. The exhibition is organized into three interrelated sections, each articulating a distinct yet overlapping mode of healing and awareness.

As a focal aspect of this exhibition Robles-Gordon creates installations that build upon history, personal and ancestral memory and Afro-futurism to establish bird and totemic like data transference structures. Her installation formula is grounded in visual and/or asymmetrical balance. Each installation centralizes a large quilt. Which represents the body of the bird. The remaining medium to smaller artworks are arranged in pairs. One for the left side and its pair on the right side to create the wings. Ultimately, manifesting transference mechanisms in an asymmetrical arrayment of aesthetic and didactic messaging.

I. Reflections of Universal and Societal Healing

This section foregrounds Robles-Gordon’s engagement with collective trauma, historical rupture, and the interdependence of liberation struggles. Works such as Sacred CoEvolution: Undoing the Enchainment of Being(s) and Successions: Traversing U.S. Colonialism examine how colonial violence, racialized power structures, and ecological exploitation remain embedded in contemporary life. Through layered materials, symbolic forms, and spiritual cosmologies, these works insist that healing must be collective, relational, and accountable. Revolution: Is Dawning Because Our Liberation Will Always Be Bound Together further emphasizes solidarity, resistance, and the necessity of communal repair.

II. Healing Through Objects and the Environment

Here, healing emerges through material intimacy and spatial intervention. Installations such as Casting and Protection Work, Place of Breath and Birth, and In Tribute to Love, Nature, and Friendship activate objects, textiles, and natural elements as carriers of memory, care, and protection. These works reflect the artist’s belief that environments—both built and natural—hold emotional and spiritual residue, and that art can recalibrate these spaces toward balance, safety, and restoration. Viewers are invited to move through, around, and within these works, encountering healing as a physical and sensory experience.

III. Healing Through Belief, Practice, and Activation

The final section centers ritual, spirituality, and embodied action as tools for survival and transformation. At the Altar: Dance of the Serpents and Above All You Must Not Play at God draw directly from ceremonial structures, ancestral knowledge, and sacred symbolism. These works operate as altars, thresholds, and invitations—asking viewers to consider belief not as abstraction, but as an active practice capable of generating protection, empowerment, and agency.

Collectively, Healing Forward positions Amber Robles-Gordon’s practice as an evolving archive of healing strategies—one that moves from introspection to communal activation. The retrospective affirms that healing is neither linear nor passive, but a continual process of reflection, confrontation, and collective care. In doing so, the exhibition invites audiences to consider their own roles within systems of harm and repair, and to imagine healing not only as recovery, but as a radical, forward-moving force.

Thursday, February 26, 2026

Downtown Fairfax Art Walk

As part of the Spotlight on the Arts closing day celebrations, May 3rd, the Fairfax  Commission on the Arts is teaming up to create a vibrant Art Walk throughout downtown Fairfax!

Artists, performers, dancers, painters, poets, fashionistas — all art forms and mediums are invited to participate. This is a community-wide art social, networking, and connection event designed to bring together our local businesses and creative tribes for an unforgettable day of artful energy.

Keep it simple or go big — bring a sketchbook and picnic blanket, set up a table, pop up an easel — it’s all welcome!

A limited number of tent spaces are available, along with flexible sidewalk space throughout the downtown area. They"re partnering with local businesses, boutiques, and shops to create a vibrant, walkable experience that encourages visitors to explore and support the entire community. 

The Call for entry form is a preliminary information gathering system. More information will be sent out to participating members who enter by 3-15-26. Get the form from Cheryl Neway, Commissioner for COA, Designer, Artist and owner of Perfect Mistakes ®️

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Wanna go to an opening this Sunday? Todd Gardner

Todd Gardner opens with a reception this Sunday, March 1st, 12:45 - 2P at the Blanche Ames Gallery, Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Frederick, 4880 Elmer Derr Road, Frederick, MD 21703.

Todd Gardner

Come hear 23 very short stories, a little poetry and a short 10 minute film made with Todd's iPhone. He will be also giving a short artist talk / presentation.  Refreshments will be served.

Sunday, February 22, 2026

A woman considering her next move upon a Jackson Pollock landscape

"A woman considering her next move upon a Jackson Pollock landscape." 22x32 inches, 2026 mixed media painting on 600 pound paper. Will be at the next Affordable Art Fair in New York City next month!

A woman considering her next move upon a Jackson Pollock landscape