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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Explore Hunterdon County
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260124T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260126T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20260118T232405Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260118T232407Z
UID:10014293-1769252400-1769446800@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Deep Seated: Chairs & the Stories They Tell
DESCRIPTION:Deep Seated explores chairs\, ancient furniture still ubiquitous today. Responding directly to human anatomy and our need for rest and repose\, the chair also resonates with a multiplicity of connotations. Chairs enable us\, punish us\, connect us\, elevate us\, isolate us\, and appear as rich symbols in dreams\, fairy tales\, and religious myths. \n\n\n\nInstead of representations of chairs – paintings\, prints\, sculptures\, films\, or images in which chairs are a central element – Deep Seated explores chairs as artifacts\, objects\, and the stories they carry with them. \n\n\n\nDeep Seated is a Museum of Everyday Life project\, curated by Founder Clare Dolan.
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/deep-seated-chairs-the-stories-they-tell-2/2026-01-24
LOCATION:ArtYard\, 13 Front Street\, Frenchtown\, New Jersey\, 08825
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Untitled.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260124T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260124T150000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20260119T000615Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260119T000616Z
UID:10014399-1769252400-1769266800@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Drawing 101 Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Drawing 101\, let’s draw! Stop being afraid of drawing and learn to use the basic steps when you draw\, such as shapes\, line and values. In this relaxed workshop students learn the basic principles of drawing including proportion\, mass\, value and line. Working with charcoal\, on a variety of still life subjects\, students will improve their drawing skills as they increase their understanding of structure and composition. \n\n\n\nBring with you: \n\n\n\nNewsprint pad 14”x17” \n\n\n\nCharcoal pencil…soft \n\n\n\nVine Charcoal…soft \n\n\n\nKneaded eraser \n\n\n\nPink eraser
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/drawing-101-workshop
LOCATION:Hunterdon Art Museum\, 7 Lower Center St\, Clinton\, New Jersey\, 08809\, United States
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Hunterdon-Art-Museum-River-Mural-in-Progress.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260123T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260125T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20260118T232405Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260118T232407Z
UID:10014292-1769166000-1769360400@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Deep Seated: Chairs & the Stories They Tell
DESCRIPTION:Deep Seated explores chairs\, ancient furniture still ubiquitous today. Responding directly to human anatomy and our need for rest and repose\, the chair also resonates with a multiplicity of connotations. Chairs enable us\, punish us\, connect us\, elevate us\, isolate us\, and appear as rich symbols in dreams\, fairy tales\, and religious myths. \n\n\n\nInstead of representations of chairs – paintings\, prints\, sculptures\, films\, or images in which chairs are a central element – Deep Seated explores chairs as artifacts\, objects\, and the stories they carry with them. \n\n\n\nDeep Seated is a Museum of Everyday Life project\, curated by Founder Clare Dolan.
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/deep-seated-chairs-the-stories-they-tell-2/2026-01-23
LOCATION:ArtYard\, 13 Front Street\, Frenchtown\, New Jersey\, 08825
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Untitled.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260122T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260122T193000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20260118T232718Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260118T232749Z
UID:10014301-1769104800-1769110200@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Latin Ballroom with Michael Sazonov Trial Class
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a trial class ahead of the start of Michael Sazonov’s new Latin Ballroom dance series designed to light the fire for movement within and keep you dancing long after the session ends. \n\n\n\nThe upcoming Latin Ballroom with Michael Sazonov is a six-week\, easy-going dance workshop series that takes us on a down-to-earth dance tour of salsa\, mambo\, merengue\, cumbia\, and tango\, where you will not only learn new dance styles and modes of movement\, but also gain confidence in distinguishing types of rhythm\, music\, and instrumentation along the way. \n\n\n\nNo partners needed\, no experience necessary. \n\n\n\nLet’s take the mystique out of the discoteca and bring that groove into your own home.
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/latin-ballroom-with-michael-sazonov-trial-class
LOCATION:ArtYard\, 13 Front Street\, Frenchtown\, New Jersey\, 08825
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Untitled.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260109T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260109T190000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20251217T033605Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251217T033612Z
UID:10013874-1767985200-1767985200@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:New Jersey Ballet Residency Show & Tell
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a culmination of New Jersey Ballet’s week-long Works & Process creative residency at ArtYard. NJ Ballet will share company favorites and will offer an inside look at the creative process of choreographer Roderick George’s newest work Wings of Desire\, commissioned by New Jersey Ballet\, ArtYard\, and Works & Process\, before it is performed at Guggenheim New York on January 10 and New Jersey Center for the Performing Arts on April 24 and 25. \n\n\n\nInspired by classical ballets like Giselle\, Romeo and Juliet\, and La Bayadère\, Wings of Desire explores themes of relationships\, sensuality\, morality\, and the human gaze\, and the idea that the most iconic love stories are intertwined with loss — characters who surrender to love only to face death.  At its core\, it’s a raw and emotionally charged ballet that confronts the passage of time and our resistance to accepting fate from the moment we begin to breathe. And just as we gain breath\, we will one day lose it. Set to an original score that bridges past and future musical traditions\, this work celebrates freedom\, connection\, and the extraordinary artistry of the dancers of New Jersey Ballet.
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/new-jersey-ballet-residency-show-tell
LOCATION:ArtYard\, 13 Front Street\, Frenchtown\, New Jersey\, 08825
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251218T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251218T190000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20251217T032734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251217T032738Z
UID:10013873-1766077200-1766084400@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Night of the Radishes: Radish-carving workshop
DESCRIPTION:Join us to create an epic holiday tableau out of carved radishes\, inspired by the Night of the Radishes (Spanish: Noche de Rábanos) in Oaxaca\, Mexico. A tradition dating back to 1897\, the Noche begins with a community of vegetable carvers who transform quantities of radishes into festive holiday scenes. Visitors line up by the thousands to glimpse the ephemeral results: since the radishes wilt soon after cutting\, the works must be enjoyed soon after. \n\n\n\nPlease bring a small cutting board and vegetable peeler or knife. ArtYard will provide the radishes and toothpicks.
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/night-of-the-radishes-radish-carving-workshop
LOCATION:ArtYard\, 13 Front Street\, Frenchtown\, New Jersey\, 08825
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Untitled.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250608T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250608T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011140Z
UID:10013084-1749380400-1749402000@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Soft as Earth Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:It starts with something as elemental as a lump of clay — rocks\, eroded over eons by water\, wind\, and heat that flow and settle in layers of sediment. \nSoft as Earth features the works of ceramic artists Janny Baek\, Brian Guerin\, and Tom Hubben. As artists\, their work represents different approaches to form — a vessel\, an object of the imagination\, a mountain. They are risk takers\, each pushing the boundaries of what the medium of clay can contain both figuratively and structurally\, asking of it\, and its traditions — how flexible are you\, how can you be expanded\, what can you become? \nBaek\, Guerin\, and Hubben employ hand building as their primary technique\, and their work suggests a direct link between neurons and fingers\, translating and sculpting\, speaking a language of form\, scale\, materiality\, and wonder. These artists have navigated a precarious path through the demands of the material itself — preparing\, stretching\, forming\, carving\, adding and subtracting\, then a slow and careful drying process\, and several firings during which unexpected things can\, and do\, occur. Anarchic\, chaotic\, inspired accidents and wild experimentation tell a story of transformation that has taken a while to arrive here — 29\,000 years\, in fact\, of working with that lump of clay. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/soft-as-earth-exhibition/2025-06-08
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250608T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250608T150000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010258Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011246Z
UID:10013055-1749380400-1749394800@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Words That Start Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Words That Start offers a loose and idiosyncratic survey of 17 contemporary artists working with text in painting\, drawing\, and sculpture. The spectra — from literal to abstract\, demanding to dissolving\, traditionally functional to highly formal — unravel into spirals like cursive loops that begin to bump into each other and ultimately raise questions of how meaning is made in the first place\, and how it can be made to fall apart. This exhibition spans Studio Route 29’s Beauty Gallery and ArtYard’s Courtyard Gallery. \nThe exhibition features work by artists Theo Baransky\, Judy Barnett\, Chris Corr-Barberis\, Carlo Daleo\, Kayla Ephros\, Gabriel Garza\, Peter Harris\, Otis Houston Jr.\, Olin Johnson\, Michael Mangino\, Mick McDonough\, Rotimi Osinubi\, Dorian Reid\, Barb Riddle\, Jennifer Chai Shear\, Eric Spencer\, and Marisa Takal. \nStudio Route 29 is located at 62A Trenton Ave. Public gallery hours are Wednesday to Saturday 11 AM to 3 PM or by appointment. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/words-that-start-exhibit/2025-06-08
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250607T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250607T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011140Z
UID:10013083-1749294000-1749315600@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Soft as Earth Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:It starts with something as elemental as a lump of clay — rocks\, eroded over eons by water\, wind\, and heat that flow and settle in layers of sediment. \nSoft as Earth features the works of ceramic artists Janny Baek\, Brian Guerin\, and Tom Hubben. As artists\, their work represents different approaches to form — a vessel\, an object of the imagination\, a mountain. They are risk takers\, each pushing the boundaries of what the medium of clay can contain both figuratively and structurally\, asking of it\, and its traditions — how flexible are you\, how can you be expanded\, what can you become? \nBaek\, Guerin\, and Hubben employ hand building as their primary technique\, and their work suggests a direct link between neurons and fingers\, translating and sculpting\, speaking a language of form\, scale\, materiality\, and wonder. These artists have navigated a precarious path through the demands of the material itself — preparing\, stretching\, forming\, carving\, adding and subtracting\, then a slow and careful drying process\, and several firings during which unexpected things can\, and do\, occur. Anarchic\, chaotic\, inspired accidents and wild experimentation tell a story of transformation that has taken a while to arrive here — 29\,000 years\, in fact\, of working with that lump of clay. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/soft-as-earth-exhibition/2025-06-07
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250607T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250607T150000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010258Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011246Z
UID:10013054-1749294000-1749308400@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Words That Start Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Words That Start offers a loose and idiosyncratic survey of 17 contemporary artists working with text in painting\, drawing\, and sculpture. The spectra — from literal to abstract\, demanding to dissolving\, traditionally functional to highly formal — unravel into spirals like cursive loops that begin to bump into each other and ultimately raise questions of how meaning is made in the first place\, and how it can be made to fall apart. This exhibition spans Studio Route 29’s Beauty Gallery and ArtYard’s Courtyard Gallery. \nThe exhibition features work by artists Theo Baransky\, Judy Barnett\, Chris Corr-Barberis\, Carlo Daleo\, Kayla Ephros\, Gabriel Garza\, Peter Harris\, Otis Houston Jr.\, Olin Johnson\, Michael Mangino\, Mick McDonough\, Rotimi Osinubi\, Dorian Reid\, Barb Riddle\, Jennifer Chai Shear\, Eric Spencer\, and Marisa Takal. \nStudio Route 29 is located at 62A Trenton Ave. Public gallery hours are Wednesday to Saturday 11 AM to 3 PM or by appointment. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/words-that-start-exhibit/2025-06-07
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250601T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250601T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011140Z
UID:10013082-1748775600-1748797200@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Soft as Earth Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:It starts with something as elemental as a lump of clay — rocks\, eroded over eons by water\, wind\, and heat that flow and settle in layers of sediment. \nSoft as Earth features the works of ceramic artists Janny Baek\, Brian Guerin\, and Tom Hubben. As artists\, their work represents different approaches to form — a vessel\, an object of the imagination\, a mountain. They are risk takers\, each pushing the boundaries of what the medium of clay can contain both figuratively and structurally\, asking of it\, and its traditions — how flexible are you\, how can you be expanded\, what can you become? \nBaek\, Guerin\, and Hubben employ hand building as their primary technique\, and their work suggests a direct link between neurons and fingers\, translating and sculpting\, speaking a language of form\, scale\, materiality\, and wonder. These artists have navigated a precarious path through the demands of the material itself — preparing\, stretching\, forming\, carving\, adding and subtracting\, then a slow and careful drying process\, and several firings during which unexpected things can\, and do\, occur. Anarchic\, chaotic\, inspired accidents and wild experimentation tell a story of transformation that has taken a while to arrive here — 29\,000 years\, in fact\, of working with that lump of clay. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/soft-as-earth-exhibition/2025-06-01
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250601T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250601T150000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010258Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011246Z
UID:10013053-1748775600-1748790000@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Words That Start Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Words That Start offers a loose and idiosyncratic survey of 17 contemporary artists working with text in painting\, drawing\, and sculpture. The spectra — from literal to abstract\, demanding to dissolving\, traditionally functional to highly formal — unravel into spirals like cursive loops that begin to bump into each other and ultimately raise questions of how meaning is made in the first place\, and how it can be made to fall apart. This exhibition spans Studio Route 29’s Beauty Gallery and ArtYard’s Courtyard Gallery. \nThe exhibition features work by artists Theo Baransky\, Judy Barnett\, Chris Corr-Barberis\, Carlo Daleo\, Kayla Ephros\, Gabriel Garza\, Peter Harris\, Otis Houston Jr.\, Olin Johnson\, Michael Mangino\, Mick McDonough\, Rotimi Osinubi\, Dorian Reid\, Barb Riddle\, Jennifer Chai Shear\, Eric Spencer\, and Marisa Takal. \nStudio Route 29 is located at 62A Trenton Ave. Public gallery hours are Wednesday to Saturday 11 AM to 3 PM or by appointment. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/words-that-start-exhibit/2025-06-01
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250531T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250531T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011140Z
UID:10013081-1748689200-1748710800@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Soft as Earth Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:It starts with something as elemental as a lump of clay — rocks\, eroded over eons by water\, wind\, and heat that flow and settle in layers of sediment. \nSoft as Earth features the works of ceramic artists Janny Baek\, Brian Guerin\, and Tom Hubben. As artists\, their work represents different approaches to form — a vessel\, an object of the imagination\, a mountain. They are risk takers\, each pushing the boundaries of what the medium of clay can contain both figuratively and structurally\, asking of it\, and its traditions — how flexible are you\, how can you be expanded\, what can you become? \nBaek\, Guerin\, and Hubben employ hand building as their primary technique\, and their work suggests a direct link between neurons and fingers\, translating and sculpting\, speaking a language of form\, scale\, materiality\, and wonder. These artists have navigated a precarious path through the demands of the material itself — preparing\, stretching\, forming\, carving\, adding and subtracting\, then a slow and careful drying process\, and several firings during which unexpected things can\, and do\, occur. Anarchic\, chaotic\, inspired accidents and wild experimentation tell a story of transformation that has taken a while to arrive here — 29\,000 years\, in fact\, of working with that lump of clay. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/soft-as-earth-exhibition/2025-05-31
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250531T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250531T150000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010258Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011246Z
UID:10013052-1748689200-1748703600@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Words That Start Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Words That Start offers a loose and idiosyncratic survey of 17 contemporary artists working with text in painting\, drawing\, and sculpture. The spectra — from literal to abstract\, demanding to dissolving\, traditionally functional to highly formal — unravel into spirals like cursive loops that begin to bump into each other and ultimately raise questions of how meaning is made in the first place\, and how it can be made to fall apart. This exhibition spans Studio Route 29’s Beauty Gallery and ArtYard’s Courtyard Gallery. \nThe exhibition features work by artists Theo Baransky\, Judy Barnett\, Chris Corr-Barberis\, Carlo Daleo\, Kayla Ephros\, Gabriel Garza\, Peter Harris\, Otis Houston Jr.\, Olin Johnson\, Michael Mangino\, Mick McDonough\, Rotimi Osinubi\, Dorian Reid\, Barb Riddle\, Jennifer Chai Shear\, Eric Spencer\, and Marisa Takal. \nStudio Route 29 is located at 62A Trenton Ave. Public gallery hours are Wednesday to Saturday 11 AM to 3 PM or by appointment. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/words-that-start-exhibit/2025-05-31
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250525T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250526T160000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T005308Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T005427Z
UID:10013027-1748170800-1748275200@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Alex Callender Exhibit: American Lawn
DESCRIPTION:In American Lawn\, Alex Callender imagines the ubiquitous familiarity of lawn grass as a conflicted terrain that holds ongoing questions of public and private space\, haunted vegetation\, and the legacies of colonialism and settler land management in our current era of climate devastation. \nThrough Callender’s reframing of historical materials in the painted plane\, we encounter fragments of flooding lawns that designate the iconic green turf of private property\, landscapes of leisure\, and idealized pastoral imagery. The monotone palette of industrialized lawn plants like Kentucky Bluegrass are interrupted by both plantation cane grasses (sugar) and wild grasses like Bluestems\, Lovegrass\, Vetiver… grasses that are self-seeding and drought-resistant\, cultivate soil restoration\, brace the flow of waters\, and offer refuge to pollinators and varied wildlife. \nIn these scenes of twilight and geographical uncertainty\, the landscape and the water’s edge merge closer together to reveal a historical Atlantic space — a place that loops. A site to explore American mythologies about land and conquest\, invoking the kinds of manufactured environments that have comfortably maintained and spatially defined structures of racial and ecological supremacy. What plants get caught up in stories of human violence? \nHistorical materials like 18th Century merchant ledgers\, venture tourism steamships\, and the photos and company charters of the Boston Fruit Company (later\, the United Fruit Company)\, speak to us of the economic waterways connecting trade\, banking\, and financial instruments of the American Northeast to other slave societies of the Caribbean and Atlantic world. In this painted world\, spaces across geographical relations are layered\, tethered by shared social and ecological histories\, possibility\, and longing. The settler landscape becomes unsettled\, while figures emerge in the shadow of grasses to confront each other or sometimes hold each other. Often situated close to the foreground\, the lawn becomes a stage or interstitial space\, filled with historical remnants\, overgrowth\, and folds of blue fabric that look sometimes like rolls of colonial indigo textiles and sometimes like blue plastic tarpaulin\, a material that reminds us of both endless development and its aftermath. In these works the lawn delineates a politics of middle distance — both foreground and background\, you stand on it and walk in between it\, only sometimes thinking about the kinds of erasure the space bears witness to. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/alex-callender-exhibit-american-lawn/2025-05-25
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250525T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250525T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011140Z
UID:10013080-1748170800-1748192400@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Soft as Earth Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:It starts with something as elemental as a lump of clay — rocks\, eroded over eons by water\, wind\, and heat that flow and settle in layers of sediment. \nSoft as Earth features the works of ceramic artists Janny Baek\, Brian Guerin\, and Tom Hubben. As artists\, their work represents different approaches to form — a vessel\, an object of the imagination\, a mountain. They are risk takers\, each pushing the boundaries of what the medium of clay can contain both figuratively and structurally\, asking of it\, and its traditions — how flexible are you\, how can you be expanded\, what can you become? \nBaek\, Guerin\, and Hubben employ hand building as their primary technique\, and their work suggests a direct link between neurons and fingers\, translating and sculpting\, speaking a language of form\, scale\, materiality\, and wonder. These artists have navigated a precarious path through the demands of the material itself — preparing\, stretching\, forming\, carving\, adding and subtracting\, then a slow and careful drying process\, and several firings during which unexpected things can\, and do\, occur. Anarchic\, chaotic\, inspired accidents and wild experimentation tell a story of transformation that has taken a while to arrive here — 29\,000 years\, in fact\, of working with that lump of clay. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/soft-as-earth-exhibition/2025-05-25
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250525T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250525T150000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010258Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011246Z
UID:10013051-1748170800-1748185200@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Words That Start Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Words That Start offers a loose and idiosyncratic survey of 17 contemporary artists working with text in painting\, drawing\, and sculpture. The spectra — from literal to abstract\, demanding to dissolving\, traditionally functional to highly formal — unravel into spirals like cursive loops that begin to bump into each other and ultimately raise questions of how meaning is made in the first place\, and how it can be made to fall apart. This exhibition spans Studio Route 29’s Beauty Gallery and ArtYard’s Courtyard Gallery. \nThe exhibition features work by artists Theo Baransky\, Judy Barnett\, Chris Corr-Barberis\, Carlo Daleo\, Kayla Ephros\, Gabriel Garza\, Peter Harris\, Otis Houston Jr.\, Olin Johnson\, Michael Mangino\, Mick McDonough\, Rotimi Osinubi\, Dorian Reid\, Barb Riddle\, Jennifer Chai Shear\, Eric Spencer\, and Marisa Takal. \nStudio Route 29 is located at 62A Trenton Ave. Public gallery hours are Wednesday to Saturday 11 AM to 3 PM or by appointment. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/words-that-start-exhibit/2025-05-25
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250524T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250525T160000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T005308Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T005427Z
UID:10013026-1748084400-1748188800@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Alex Callender Exhibit: American Lawn
DESCRIPTION:In American Lawn\, Alex Callender imagines the ubiquitous familiarity of lawn grass as a conflicted terrain that holds ongoing questions of public and private space\, haunted vegetation\, and the legacies of colonialism and settler land management in our current era of climate devastation. \nThrough Callender’s reframing of historical materials in the painted plane\, we encounter fragments of flooding lawns that designate the iconic green turf of private property\, landscapes of leisure\, and idealized pastoral imagery. The monotone palette of industrialized lawn plants like Kentucky Bluegrass are interrupted by both plantation cane grasses (sugar) and wild grasses like Bluestems\, Lovegrass\, Vetiver… grasses that are self-seeding and drought-resistant\, cultivate soil restoration\, brace the flow of waters\, and offer refuge to pollinators and varied wildlife. \nIn these scenes of twilight and geographical uncertainty\, the landscape and the water’s edge merge closer together to reveal a historical Atlantic space — a place that loops. A site to explore American mythologies about land and conquest\, invoking the kinds of manufactured environments that have comfortably maintained and spatially defined structures of racial and ecological supremacy. What plants get caught up in stories of human violence? \nHistorical materials like 18th Century merchant ledgers\, venture tourism steamships\, and the photos and company charters of the Boston Fruit Company (later\, the United Fruit Company)\, speak to us of the economic waterways connecting trade\, banking\, and financial instruments of the American Northeast to other slave societies of the Caribbean and Atlantic world. In this painted world\, spaces across geographical relations are layered\, tethered by shared social and ecological histories\, possibility\, and longing. The settler landscape becomes unsettled\, while figures emerge in the shadow of grasses to confront each other or sometimes hold each other. Often situated close to the foreground\, the lawn becomes a stage or interstitial space\, filled with historical remnants\, overgrowth\, and folds of blue fabric that look sometimes like rolls of colonial indigo textiles and sometimes like blue plastic tarpaulin\, a material that reminds us of both endless development and its aftermath. In these works the lawn delineates a politics of middle distance — both foreground and background\, you stand on it and walk in between it\, only sometimes thinking about the kinds of erasure the space bears witness to. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/alex-callender-exhibit-american-lawn/2025-05-24
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250524T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250524T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011140Z
UID:10013079-1748084400-1748106000@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Soft as Earth Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:It starts with something as elemental as a lump of clay — rocks\, eroded over eons by water\, wind\, and heat that flow and settle in layers of sediment. \nSoft as Earth features the works of ceramic artists Janny Baek\, Brian Guerin\, and Tom Hubben. As artists\, their work represents different approaches to form — a vessel\, an object of the imagination\, a mountain. They are risk takers\, each pushing the boundaries of what the medium of clay can contain both figuratively and structurally\, asking of it\, and its traditions — how flexible are you\, how can you be expanded\, what can you become? \nBaek\, Guerin\, and Hubben employ hand building as their primary technique\, and their work suggests a direct link between neurons and fingers\, translating and sculpting\, speaking a language of form\, scale\, materiality\, and wonder. These artists have navigated a precarious path through the demands of the material itself — preparing\, stretching\, forming\, carving\, adding and subtracting\, then a slow and careful drying process\, and several firings during which unexpected things can\, and do\, occur. Anarchic\, chaotic\, inspired accidents and wild experimentation tell a story of transformation that has taken a while to arrive here — 29\,000 years\, in fact\, of working with that lump of clay. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/soft-as-earth-exhibition/2025-05-24
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250524T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250524T150000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010258Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011246Z
UID:10013050-1748084400-1748098800@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Words That Start Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Words That Start offers a loose and idiosyncratic survey of 17 contemporary artists working with text in painting\, drawing\, and sculpture. The spectra — from literal to abstract\, demanding to dissolving\, traditionally functional to highly formal — unravel into spirals like cursive loops that begin to bump into each other and ultimately raise questions of how meaning is made in the first place\, and how it can be made to fall apart. This exhibition spans Studio Route 29’s Beauty Gallery and ArtYard’s Courtyard Gallery. \nThe exhibition features work by artists Theo Baransky\, Judy Barnett\, Chris Corr-Barberis\, Carlo Daleo\, Kayla Ephros\, Gabriel Garza\, Peter Harris\, Otis Houston Jr.\, Olin Johnson\, Michael Mangino\, Mick McDonough\, Rotimi Osinubi\, Dorian Reid\, Barb Riddle\, Jennifer Chai Shear\, Eric Spencer\, and Marisa Takal. \nStudio Route 29 is located at 62A Trenton Ave. Public gallery hours are Wednesday to Saturday 11 AM to 3 PM or by appointment. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/words-that-start-exhibit/2025-05-24
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250518T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250519T160000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T005308Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T005427Z
UID:10013025-1747566000-1747670400@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Alex Callender Exhibit: American Lawn
DESCRIPTION:In American Lawn\, Alex Callender imagines the ubiquitous familiarity of lawn grass as a conflicted terrain that holds ongoing questions of public and private space\, haunted vegetation\, and the legacies of colonialism and settler land management in our current era of climate devastation. \nThrough Callender’s reframing of historical materials in the painted plane\, we encounter fragments of flooding lawns that designate the iconic green turf of private property\, landscapes of leisure\, and idealized pastoral imagery. The monotone palette of industrialized lawn plants like Kentucky Bluegrass are interrupted by both plantation cane grasses (sugar) and wild grasses like Bluestems\, Lovegrass\, Vetiver… grasses that are self-seeding and drought-resistant\, cultivate soil restoration\, brace the flow of waters\, and offer refuge to pollinators and varied wildlife. \nIn these scenes of twilight and geographical uncertainty\, the landscape and the water’s edge merge closer together to reveal a historical Atlantic space — a place that loops. A site to explore American mythologies about land and conquest\, invoking the kinds of manufactured environments that have comfortably maintained and spatially defined structures of racial and ecological supremacy. What plants get caught up in stories of human violence? \nHistorical materials like 18th Century merchant ledgers\, venture tourism steamships\, and the photos and company charters of the Boston Fruit Company (later\, the United Fruit Company)\, speak to us of the economic waterways connecting trade\, banking\, and financial instruments of the American Northeast to other slave societies of the Caribbean and Atlantic world. In this painted world\, spaces across geographical relations are layered\, tethered by shared social and ecological histories\, possibility\, and longing. The settler landscape becomes unsettled\, while figures emerge in the shadow of grasses to confront each other or sometimes hold each other. Often situated close to the foreground\, the lawn becomes a stage or interstitial space\, filled with historical remnants\, overgrowth\, and folds of blue fabric that look sometimes like rolls of colonial indigo textiles and sometimes like blue plastic tarpaulin\, a material that reminds us of both endless development and its aftermath. In these works the lawn delineates a politics of middle distance — both foreground and background\, you stand on it and walk in between it\, only sometimes thinking about the kinds of erasure the space bears witness to. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/alex-callender-exhibit-american-lawn/2025-05-18
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250518T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250518T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011140Z
UID:10013078-1747566000-1747587600@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Soft as Earth Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:It starts with something as elemental as a lump of clay — rocks\, eroded over eons by water\, wind\, and heat that flow and settle in layers of sediment. \nSoft as Earth features the works of ceramic artists Janny Baek\, Brian Guerin\, and Tom Hubben. As artists\, their work represents different approaches to form — a vessel\, an object of the imagination\, a mountain. They are risk takers\, each pushing the boundaries of what the medium of clay can contain both figuratively and structurally\, asking of it\, and its traditions — how flexible are you\, how can you be expanded\, what can you become? \nBaek\, Guerin\, and Hubben employ hand building as their primary technique\, and their work suggests a direct link between neurons and fingers\, translating and sculpting\, speaking a language of form\, scale\, materiality\, and wonder. These artists have navigated a precarious path through the demands of the material itself — preparing\, stretching\, forming\, carving\, adding and subtracting\, then a slow and careful drying process\, and several firings during which unexpected things can\, and do\, occur. Anarchic\, chaotic\, inspired accidents and wild experimentation tell a story of transformation that has taken a while to arrive here — 29\,000 years\, in fact\, of working with that lump of clay. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/soft-as-earth-exhibition/2025-05-18
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250518T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250518T150000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010258Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011246Z
UID:10013049-1747566000-1747580400@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Words That Start Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Words That Start offers a loose and idiosyncratic survey of 17 contemporary artists working with text in painting\, drawing\, and sculpture. The spectra — from literal to abstract\, demanding to dissolving\, traditionally functional to highly formal — unravel into spirals like cursive loops that begin to bump into each other and ultimately raise questions of how meaning is made in the first place\, and how it can be made to fall apart. This exhibition spans Studio Route 29’s Beauty Gallery and ArtYard’s Courtyard Gallery. \nThe exhibition features work by artists Theo Baransky\, Judy Barnett\, Chris Corr-Barberis\, Carlo Daleo\, Kayla Ephros\, Gabriel Garza\, Peter Harris\, Otis Houston Jr.\, Olin Johnson\, Michael Mangino\, Mick McDonough\, Rotimi Osinubi\, Dorian Reid\, Barb Riddle\, Jennifer Chai Shear\, Eric Spencer\, and Marisa Takal. \nStudio Route 29 is located at 62A Trenton Ave. Public gallery hours are Wednesday to Saturday 11 AM to 3 PM or by appointment. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/words-that-start-exhibit/2025-05-18
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250517T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250517T200000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20241218T121639Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241218T121724Z
UID:10012362-1747512000-1747512000@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Flemington DIY Jazz Shows
DESCRIPTION:The 2025 schedule is as follows: \n– January 17: Nate Tota Quartet\n– January 25: Winard Harper & Jeli Posse plus tap dancer Megha Vadehra\n– February 22: Marel Hidalgo Quartet\n– March 16: Sasha Berliner Quintet\n– April 19: Olli Soikkeli NY Trio\n– May 17: Heyman \nAll shows kick off at 8pm with most advanced tickets $18 and $22 at the door. Shows are all ages and note alcohol is not permitted inside the space. \nFor tickets and more information\, visit www.flemingtondiy.org/jazz.
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/flemington-diy-jazz-shows/2025-05-17
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets,Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/LOGOdiy-f.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250517T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250518T160000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T005308Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T005427Z
UID:10013024-1747479600-1747584000@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Alex Callender Exhibit: American Lawn
DESCRIPTION:In American Lawn\, Alex Callender imagines the ubiquitous familiarity of lawn grass as a conflicted terrain that holds ongoing questions of public and private space\, haunted vegetation\, and the legacies of colonialism and settler land management in our current era of climate devastation. \nThrough Callender’s reframing of historical materials in the painted plane\, we encounter fragments of flooding lawns that designate the iconic green turf of private property\, landscapes of leisure\, and idealized pastoral imagery. The monotone palette of industrialized lawn plants like Kentucky Bluegrass are interrupted by both plantation cane grasses (sugar) and wild grasses like Bluestems\, Lovegrass\, Vetiver… grasses that are self-seeding and drought-resistant\, cultivate soil restoration\, brace the flow of waters\, and offer refuge to pollinators and varied wildlife. \nIn these scenes of twilight and geographical uncertainty\, the landscape and the water’s edge merge closer together to reveal a historical Atlantic space — a place that loops. A site to explore American mythologies about land and conquest\, invoking the kinds of manufactured environments that have comfortably maintained and spatially defined structures of racial and ecological supremacy. What plants get caught up in stories of human violence? \nHistorical materials like 18th Century merchant ledgers\, venture tourism steamships\, and the photos and company charters of the Boston Fruit Company (later\, the United Fruit Company)\, speak to us of the economic waterways connecting trade\, banking\, and financial instruments of the American Northeast to other slave societies of the Caribbean and Atlantic world. In this painted world\, spaces across geographical relations are layered\, tethered by shared social and ecological histories\, possibility\, and longing. The settler landscape becomes unsettled\, while figures emerge in the shadow of grasses to confront each other or sometimes hold each other. Often situated close to the foreground\, the lawn becomes a stage or interstitial space\, filled with historical remnants\, overgrowth\, and folds of blue fabric that look sometimes like rolls of colonial indigo textiles and sometimes like blue plastic tarpaulin\, a material that reminds us of both endless development and its aftermath. In these works the lawn delineates a politics of middle distance — both foreground and background\, you stand on it and walk in between it\, only sometimes thinking about the kinds of erasure the space bears witness to. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/alex-callender-exhibit-american-lawn/2025-05-17
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250517T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250517T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011140Z
UID:10013077-1747479600-1747501200@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Soft as Earth Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:It starts with something as elemental as a lump of clay — rocks\, eroded over eons by water\, wind\, and heat that flow and settle in layers of sediment. \nSoft as Earth features the works of ceramic artists Janny Baek\, Brian Guerin\, and Tom Hubben. As artists\, their work represents different approaches to form — a vessel\, an object of the imagination\, a mountain. They are risk takers\, each pushing the boundaries of what the medium of clay can contain both figuratively and structurally\, asking of it\, and its traditions — how flexible are you\, how can you be expanded\, what can you become? \nBaek\, Guerin\, and Hubben employ hand building as their primary technique\, and their work suggests a direct link between neurons and fingers\, translating and sculpting\, speaking a language of form\, scale\, materiality\, and wonder. These artists have navigated a precarious path through the demands of the material itself — preparing\, stretching\, forming\, carving\, adding and subtracting\, then a slow and careful drying process\, and several firings during which unexpected things can\, and do\, occur. Anarchic\, chaotic\, inspired accidents and wild experimentation tell a story of transformation that has taken a while to arrive here — 29\,000 years\, in fact\, of working with that lump of clay. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/soft-as-earth-exhibition/2025-05-17
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250517T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250517T150000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010258Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011246Z
UID:10013048-1747479600-1747494000@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Words That Start Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Words That Start offers a loose and idiosyncratic survey of 17 contemporary artists working with text in painting\, drawing\, and sculpture. The spectra — from literal to abstract\, demanding to dissolving\, traditionally functional to highly formal — unravel into spirals like cursive loops that begin to bump into each other and ultimately raise questions of how meaning is made in the first place\, and how it can be made to fall apart. This exhibition spans Studio Route 29’s Beauty Gallery and ArtYard’s Courtyard Gallery. \nThe exhibition features work by artists Theo Baransky\, Judy Barnett\, Chris Corr-Barberis\, Carlo Daleo\, Kayla Ephros\, Gabriel Garza\, Peter Harris\, Otis Houston Jr.\, Olin Johnson\, Michael Mangino\, Mick McDonough\, Rotimi Osinubi\, Dorian Reid\, Barb Riddle\, Jennifer Chai Shear\, Eric Spencer\, and Marisa Takal. \nStudio Route 29 is located at 62A Trenton Ave. Public gallery hours are Wednesday to Saturday 11 AM to 3 PM or by appointment. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/words-that-start-exhibit/2025-05-17
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250511T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250512T160000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T005308Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T005427Z
UID:10013023-1746961200-1747065600@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Alex Callender Exhibit: American Lawn
DESCRIPTION:In American Lawn\, Alex Callender imagines the ubiquitous familiarity of lawn grass as a conflicted terrain that holds ongoing questions of public and private space\, haunted vegetation\, and the legacies of colonialism and settler land management in our current era of climate devastation. \nThrough Callender’s reframing of historical materials in the painted plane\, we encounter fragments of flooding lawns that designate the iconic green turf of private property\, landscapes of leisure\, and idealized pastoral imagery. The monotone palette of industrialized lawn plants like Kentucky Bluegrass are interrupted by both plantation cane grasses (sugar) and wild grasses like Bluestems\, Lovegrass\, Vetiver… grasses that are self-seeding and drought-resistant\, cultivate soil restoration\, brace the flow of waters\, and offer refuge to pollinators and varied wildlife. \nIn these scenes of twilight and geographical uncertainty\, the landscape and the water’s edge merge closer together to reveal a historical Atlantic space — a place that loops. A site to explore American mythologies about land and conquest\, invoking the kinds of manufactured environments that have comfortably maintained and spatially defined structures of racial and ecological supremacy. What plants get caught up in stories of human violence? \nHistorical materials like 18th Century merchant ledgers\, venture tourism steamships\, and the photos and company charters of the Boston Fruit Company (later\, the United Fruit Company)\, speak to us of the economic waterways connecting trade\, banking\, and financial instruments of the American Northeast to other slave societies of the Caribbean and Atlantic world. In this painted world\, spaces across geographical relations are layered\, tethered by shared social and ecological histories\, possibility\, and longing. The settler landscape becomes unsettled\, while figures emerge in the shadow of grasses to confront each other or sometimes hold each other. Often situated close to the foreground\, the lawn becomes a stage or interstitial space\, filled with historical remnants\, overgrowth\, and folds of blue fabric that look sometimes like rolls of colonial indigo textiles and sometimes like blue plastic tarpaulin\, a material that reminds us of both endless development and its aftermath. In these works the lawn delineates a politics of middle distance — both foreground and background\, you stand on it and walk in between it\, only sometimes thinking about the kinds of erasure the space bears witness to. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/alex-callender-exhibit-american-lawn/2025-05-11
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250511T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250511T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011140Z
UID:10013076-1746961200-1746982800@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Soft as Earth Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:It starts with something as elemental as a lump of clay — rocks\, eroded over eons by water\, wind\, and heat that flow and settle in layers of sediment. \nSoft as Earth features the works of ceramic artists Janny Baek\, Brian Guerin\, and Tom Hubben. As artists\, their work represents different approaches to form — a vessel\, an object of the imagination\, a mountain. They are risk takers\, each pushing the boundaries of what the medium of clay can contain both figuratively and structurally\, asking of it\, and its traditions — how flexible are you\, how can you be expanded\, what can you become? \nBaek\, Guerin\, and Hubben employ hand building as their primary technique\, and their work suggests a direct link between neurons and fingers\, translating and sculpting\, speaking a language of form\, scale\, materiality\, and wonder. These artists have navigated a precarious path through the demands of the material itself — preparing\, stretching\, forming\, carving\, adding and subtracting\, then a slow and careful drying process\, and several firings during which unexpected things can\, and do\, occur. Anarchic\, chaotic\, inspired accidents and wild experimentation tell a story of transformation that has taken a while to arrive here — 29\,000 years\, in fact\, of working with that lump of clay. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/soft-as-earth-exhibition/2025-05-11
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250511T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250511T150000
DTSTAMP:20260617T111948
CREATED:20250305T010258Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T011246Z
UID:10013047-1746961200-1746975600@explorehunterdonnj.com
SUMMARY:Words That Start Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Words That Start offers a loose and idiosyncratic survey of 17 contemporary artists working with text in painting\, drawing\, and sculpture. The spectra — from literal to abstract\, demanding to dissolving\, traditionally functional to highly formal — unravel into spirals like cursive loops that begin to bump into each other and ultimately raise questions of how meaning is made in the first place\, and how it can be made to fall apart. This exhibition spans Studio Route 29’s Beauty Gallery and ArtYard’s Courtyard Gallery. \nThe exhibition features work by artists Theo Baransky\, Judy Barnett\, Chris Corr-Barberis\, Carlo Daleo\, Kayla Ephros\, Gabriel Garza\, Peter Harris\, Otis Houston Jr.\, Olin Johnson\, Michael Mangino\, Mick McDonough\, Rotimi Osinubi\, Dorian Reid\, Barb Riddle\, Jennifer Chai Shear\, Eric Spencer\, and Marisa Takal. \nStudio Route 29 is located at 62A Trenton Ave. Public gallery hours are Wednesday to Saturday 11 AM to 3 PM or by appointment. \nLearn more HERE!
URL:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/event/words-that-start-exhibit/2025-05-11
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Hunterdon Arts,Hunterdon Arts|Main Streets
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorehunterdonnj.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ArtYard-21314793_2003944743171441_3570870580823395726_n-1.jpg
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