NEWS

On View

AMANT
315 Maujer St, Brooklyn, NY 11206


On Education

March 20- August 17, 2025

curated by Tobi Maier, Patricia Hernandez and Ian Wallace

On Education is a thematic group exhibition that features unconventional artistic perspectives on the subject of education. As opposed to the utopian narratives and aims that often frame such conversations, this exhibition examines the various kinds of surveillance, control, and symbolic violence experienced by subjects within the educational system. Featuring painting, collage, photography, video, installation, sound, and conceptual interventions, the exhibition confronts the traumas and atmosphere of institutionalized education through diverse lenses. On Education acknowledges the precarity and challenges of being educated today, shaped by issues like endemic underfunding, spiraling culture wars, unsustainable debt, and the lasting impacts of racism and colonialism. Despite these issues, the exhibition also invites reflection on alternative, more productive models for the future.  

Farrington Smith Gallery
1924 Saint Claude Ave | New Orleans LA


Loud Voids and Screaming Silences

August 09 – October 05, 2025

Curated by Ina Kaur 

The exhibition explores silence and void not as emptiness, but as charged spaces—sites of resistance, survival, and memory. Whether self-imposed, culturally conditioned, or institutionally enforced, silence becomes a language: one shaped by trauma, care, erasure, and endurance.

Loud Voids and Screaming Silences gathers works across mediums that speak to what remains unspoken. Through gestures both subtle and forceful, artists engage with personal and collective histories—those muted by patriarchy, ecological devastation, displacement, and generational suppression. Here, silence holds weight, they do not diminish; they accumulate. Seen through feminist and ecological lenses, the exhibition considers how absence becomes articulation, and how silence can function not as erasure, but as strategy and a loud presence.

In a world where noise often overwhelms and so many voices go unheard, this exhibition invites intimate witnessing. It holds space for the unsaid, the withheld, and the quietly defiant—where even stillness becomes a scream.