Please join us tomorrow when Artists; Susan Carr and Abraham Storer have a conversation about her current work at the farm projects. The talk is at 5 PM and open to the public. This exhibition is presented concurrently with Nancy Berlin: considering change.
We hope to see you!
Come meet these clay slices in person @farmprojects at my show "mother cake" opening May 23 and up till June 8!
This is an animation process called stratacut in which you create a non-drying clay loaf (the grandfather of stratacut David Daniels calls this a "time loaf") and stop-motion it as you slice it (take a photo for each slice and then compile--I used plastalina). This is the letter N for a very special other project I have been brooding on for quite some time involving some very magical people. More on that reveal later this summer! Also huge shout out to my intern Asani who helped me craft these loaves and also was witness to me cutting my fingers many times!! This is dangerous kids! Realized that a kitchen knife was best. Also big ups to @taymations who has incredible tutorials online. Check him out.
Enjoy. I'm most excited about the abstracted imagery in the beginning. This is a super fun process and I love the unexpected results.
Experimental animator at heart I guess...
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#experimentalanimation #mayaerdelyi #stratacutanimation #clayanimation #farmprojects
Nancy Berlin, Considering Change here through May 18.
This exhibition brings together works from two of Berlin's ongoing series: Flight Patterns and Constant Revisions. In Flight Patterns, Berlin begins with pages from vintage bird guides adhered to panel or paper, then builds upon them with taped lines, acrylic paint, and ink to trace the shifting migration paths of bird species in the face of climate change.
Berlin's process is inseparable from her subject. She builds up surfaces through accumulated layers of painted prints, drawings, and digital photographs, then tears, rips, tapes, and strips them back. Paint and ink are applied and rubbed away; sections are preserved and others are surrendered. The result is work that embodies, rather than merely depicts, the indiscriminate and relentless nature of change, environmental, political, and personal.
Many directions, 2026, mixed media on wood panel, 24 x 12 inches
Sudden change, 2025, mixed media on wood panel, 24 inches x 12 inches
Flight patterns, 2025, mixed media on wood panel, 12 x 6 inches
Susan Carr, Little Happiness
On view: May 02-18, 2026
Artist talk with Abraham Storer: Saturday, May 16, 5pm
Little Happiness brings together a body of sculptural work rooted in Carr's lifelong devotion to paint and color. Carr approaches sculpture with the eye and instincts of a painter, treating color not as surface decoration but as structure. Working from her studio on Cape Cod, Carr conceives of each sculpture as a component of a three-dimensional painting: individual pieces that function independently and together, inviting the viewer to move around them and experience color and form from every angle. The works are at once deeply personal and openly accessible, transforming private feeling into something immediate and shared.
Susan Carr- Little Happiness here though May 18.
opening reception Saturday, May 08, 5-7.
This show is presented concurrently with Nancy Berlin- Considering Change
Please join us for a night of celebrating Peter Scarbo Frawley starting at 5pm. An evening of sharing stories and works inspired by Pete.
We hope to see you! everyone is invited. If you didn’t know Pete you will!
Peter Scarbo Frawley (1943–2025), concrete poet, actor, performer, and writer. He transformed language into object, stripping words to their simplest form while uncovering endless layers within them. Typewriter poems from his time as a fellow at the Fine Arts Work Center (FAWC) in 1969-71.