Event
May 13, 2025, 6:30–7:30pm

Artists at Work: Aryel René Jackson in Conversation with Zalika Azim

For this Artists at Work, ISCP artist-in-residence Aryel René Jackson will be joined by artist and educator Zalika Azim. They will speak about Jackson’s recent projects that draw from Black speculative traditions and natural phenomena, such as geological formations, weather patterns, and soil, as frameworks for exploring time, memory, and identity. Together, Jackson and Azim will discuss how both of their practices engage land not only as a geographic space, but as an archive of cultural narrative and belonging.  

Their conversation will reflect on how artistic methodologies, like working with soil, archival research, and non-linear storytelling, can surface relationships between personal memory and broader social histories. A Q&A with the audience will follow. 

Aryel René Jackson is an interdisciplinary artist based in Austin, Texas whose video, installation, and performance work examines entanglements of historical memory, environmental transformation, and personal narrative through speculative frameworks, including Black quantum futurism and alternative histories. Jackson’s recent projects use metaphors of time travel and wormholes to explore the lived experience of chronic phantom pain. Their work has been exhibited at institutions including The Museum of Modern Art, New York; The Contemporary Austin, Texas; and SculptureCenter, New York, among others.

Zalika Azim is an interdisciplinary artist and educator born in Brooklyn, New York, with ancestral roots in Aiken, South Carolina, and Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago. Azim’s practice explores Black memory, migration, and the poetics of domestic space through photography, installation, and archival intervention. Drawing from familial histories and speculative narratives, her practice interrogates the intersections of personal and collective memory, often employing fragmented imagery and layered compositions to evoke the fluidity of time and identity. Azim’s work has been exhibited at institutions such as Prospect New Orleans, Louisiana and Baxter Street at the Camera Club of New York. Currently, she is an artist-in-residence at Pioneer Works, New York.

This program is supported by Vision Fund; Hartfield Foundation; James Rosenquist Foundation; Joe Sultan; Lèna Saltos; Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation; New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council; Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso; New York City Council District 34; New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature; Dr. Samar Maziad; Sarah Jones; van Beuren Charitable Foundation; William Talbott Hillman Foundation; and Woodman Family Foundation.
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This in-person event will be live streamed through Instagram: @iscp_nyc

Accessibility information: Please note that the entrance to ISCP has seven steps and a ramp, which is ADA compliant. There are seven artist studios and one exhibition space which can be accessed on the first floor of ISCP. There is an accessible bathroom on the first floor at the end of the hallway, up one step, where the artist studios are located. A temporary ramp can be installed to cover the step. To access the second floor, there is a staircase with a grab bar installed on the right side with 22 steps. The second floor has 22 artist and curator studios, one exhibition space, and a lounge where remarks by our guest speaker will take place. To access the third floor there is a staircase with a grab bar installed on the right side with 24 steps. The third floor has five artist and curator studios. ISCP  can access a freight elevator to bring visitors between the first and second floors on request.

ISCP can offer two reserved parking spaces on request for people with disabilities. Please email programs@iscp-nyc.org to request a parking space and/or freight elevator usage.

6:30–7:30pm

Participating Residents

ISCP Talk
May 7, 2025, 6:30–7:30pm

Some Bullheaded Girls: Amy Bravo in Conversation with Anne-Laure Lemaitre

In conjunction with the exhibition Amy Bravo: Some Bullheaded Girls, artist Amy Bravo will speak with curator Anne-Laure Lemaitre about her creative process and the new works she produced for this presentation. They will also discuss how Bravo’s work engages with themes related to family history and intergenerational legacy and trauma. 

Born in New Jersey, Bravo is a New York-based artist from a Cuban and Italian family. Fusing family history and mythology, she creates surreal, assemblage compositions that explore ideas around inheritance, memory, and biography. She has exhibited work at Semiose Gallery, Paris; Swivel Gallery, New York; The FLAG Art Foundation, New York; and SESC Pompéia, São Paulo, among others. Her work will be featured in an upcoming group exhibition at the Buffalo AKG Art Museum. Bravo is a 2024 recipient of The New York Community Trust’s Edward and Sally Van Lier Fund Residency at ISCP. 

Anne-Laure Lemaitre is a curator, creative strategist and producer specialized in purpose driven large-scale in situ art. She has over fifteen years of experience creating global art infused activations, larger than life installations and complex site-specific curatorial programs around the world for corporate and institutional clients alike. The importance of anchoring art in its context as a means to further its impact remains Lemaitre’s focus, presenting fresh perspectives and exploring new conceptual territories.

This program is supported by The New York Community Trust’s Edward and Sally Van Lier Fund; Hartfield Foundation; James Rosenquist Foundation; Joe Sultan; Lèna Saltos; Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation; New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council; Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso; New York City Council District 34; New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature; Dr. Samar Maziad; Sarah Jones; van Beuren Charitable Foundation; William Talbott Hillman Foundation; and Woodman Family Foundation.
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This in-person event will be live streamed through Instagram: @iscp_nyc.

Accessibility information: Please note that the entrance to ISCP has seven steps and a ramp, which is ADA compliant. There are seven artist studios and one exhibition space which can be accessed on the first floor of ISCP. There is an accessible bathroom on the first floor at the end of the hallway, up one step, where the artist studios are located. To access the second floor there is a staircase with a grab bar installed on the right side with 22 steps. The second floor has 22 artist and curator studios, one exhibition space, and a lounge where remarks by our guest speaker will take place. To access the third floor there is a staircase with a grab bar installed on the right side with 24 steps. The third floor has five artist and curator studios. ISCP  can access a freight elevator to bring visitors between the first and second floors on request.

ISCP can offer two reserved parking spaces on request for people with disabilities. Please email programs@iscp-nyc.org to request a parking space and/or freight elevator usage.

6:30–7:30pm

Participating Residents

Open Studios
April 25–April 26, 2025

Spring Open Studios 2025

The International Studio & Curatorial Program (ISCP) Spring Open Studios is a presentation of international contemporary art by the 34 artists and curators from 26 countries in residence. Guest speaker curator Kate Fowle will make remarks at 7pm during the opening reception.

This event is free and open to the public.

Three times a year, ISCP invites the public to engage with its cohort of international artist and curator residents in their individual studios. Residents present recent projects, work in progress, site-specific installations and their archives to a large audience of professionals and art enthusiasts from New York and beyond. Concentrated in a three-story postindustrial loft building in East Williamsburg, ISCP supports the creative advancement of artists and curators from around the world, presents exhibitions and talks year-round, and fosters cultural exchange. From 1994 to the present, ISCP has hosted over 2,000 alumni hailing from more than 105 countries. Today, ISCP’s Open Studios, a three-decade tradition, continues to be the organization’s public favorite event.

Visitors can also explore two solo exhibitions on view at ISCP: Hellen Ascoli: The World Upside Down and Amy Bravo: Some Bullheaded Girls. Hellen Ascoli approaches weaving as a form of translation—a way to reveal personal and shared histories through intricately patterned textiles. Her vibrant compositions, which extend from textiles to collage, drawing and video, are inspired by weaving traditions and material culture from her home country of Guatemala as well as decolonial writings. Through surreal, assemblage compositions, Amy Bravo explores ideas around inheritance, memory, and biography. Fusing family history and mythology, she creates deeply personal works that question and reinterpret the stories passed on to her. 

The exhibitions are curated by Melinda Lang, Director of Programs and Exhibitions at ISCP. 

Open Studios participating artists and curators:

Asal Andarzipour (Canada/Iran); Jean Claracq (France); Adèle Essle Zeiss (Sweden); Matthias Garff (Germany); Braxton Garneau (Canada); Kaija Hinkula (Finland); Szu-Ying Hsu (Taiwan); Aryel René Jackson (United States); Hong Seon Jang (South Korea/United States); Angel Lartigue (United States); Laura Lappi (Finland/United States); Ailyn Lee (South Korea/United States); Sujin Lim (South Korea/United States); Simon Liu (Hong Kong/United States); Inge Meijer (The Netherlands); Azita Moradkhani (Iran/United States); Cem Örgen (Turkey); Hermes Payrhuber (Austria/United States); Tamen Pérez (Costa Rica/United States); Charlie Perez-Tlatenchi (United States/Mexico); Sadhna Prasad (India); Tora Schultz (Denmark); Pou-Ching Tsai (Taiwan); Adriane de Souza (Brazil/Qatar); Hanae Utamura (Japan/United States); Marianne Vlaschits (Austria); Sebastián Vidal Mackinson (Argentina); Alice Wang (United States/China/Canada); Apichaya Wanthiang (Norway/Thailand/Belgium); Sasha Wortzel (United States); Hannah Woo (South Korea); Sinae Yoo (South Korea); Akeema-Zane (United States/Trinidad and Tobago); Sarah Zapata (United States)

ISCP thanks the following residency sponsors:

Alberta Foundation for the Arts; Behdad Esfahbod; Alfred Kordelin Foundation; Alice and Lawrence Weiner; Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso; Canada Council for the Arts; Danish Arts Foundation; DOOSAN Art Center; Edmonton Arts Council; Every Page Foundation; Federal Ministry for Arts, Culture, Civil Service and Sport of Austria; Fire Station–Qatar Museums; Hartfield Foundation; Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation; IASPIS–The Swedish Arts Grants Committee’s International Programme for Visual Artists; Inlaks Shivdasani Foundation; Jane Farver Memorial Fund; KdFS–Kulturstiftung des Freistaates Sachsen; La Fondation pour l’Art Contemporain Claudine et Jean-Marc Salomon; Ministry of Culture, Taiwan; Mondriaan Fund; OCA–Office for Contemporary Art Norway; SAHA Association; Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation; The New York Community Trust’s Edward and Sally Van Lier Fund; The Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation; New York City Council District 34; New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council; New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature; Uniarts Helsinki’s Academy of Fine Arts and Saastamoinen Foundation; and Vision Fund.

This program is also generously supported, in part, by the Consulate General of Denmark;  Consulate General of the Netherlands; Consulate General of Sweden; The Royal Norwegian Consulate General in New York; Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso; Grimm Artisanal Ales; Hartfield Foundation; Materials for the Arts; James Rosenquist Foundation; The Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation; New York City Council Member for the 34th District; New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council; New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature; van Beuren Charitable Foundation; and William Talbott Hillman Foundation.

In addition to the many individuals who support ISCP, the members of Director’s Circle are also thanked for their largesse: Anne Altchek, Barbara van Beuren, Younghee Kim-Wait, Doreen Small, and Laurie Sprayregen.
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Please note that the entrance to ISCP has seven steps and a ramp, which is ADA compliant. There are seven artist studios and one exhibition space which can be accessed on the first floor of ISCP. There is an accessible bathroom on the first floor at the end of the hallway, up one step, where the artist studios are located. To access the second floor there is a staircase with a grab bar installed on the right side with 22 steps. The second floor has 22 artist and curator studios, one exhibition space, and a lounge where remarks by our guest speaker will take place. To access the third floor there is a staircase with a grab bar installed on the right side with 24 steps. The third floor has five artist and curator studios. ISCP can access a freight elevator to bring visitors between the first and second floors on request.

ISCP can offer two reserved parking spaces on request for people with disabilities. Please email programs@iscp-nyc.org to request a parking space and/or freight elevator usage.

Opening Reception: Apr 25, 2025, 6–9pm
Open Hours: 1–6pm
Download Press Release (PDF)