Arrivals Fall 2023

Photo credit: Paula Court
Yve Laris Cohen, Assistant Professor, Sculpture
 
Yve Laris Cohen stages systems of contingency and support through duplicating, reconstituting, or weakening elements of theatrical and exhibition architecture. His work mobilizes performance as a site of institutional friction and vulnerability. Laris Cohen’s work has been featured in solo exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 2022, and the Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, in 2018. Additional solo presentations include those at Performance Space New York and The Kitchen, New York, where he has been an advisor for Dance and Process. Group exhibitions include those at SculptureCenter, New York; Abrons Arts Center, New York; Hessel Museum of Art at Bard, Annandale-on-Hudson; and the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia. He participated in the 2014 Whitney Biennial and Performa 2019. Laris Cohen graduated from the University of California, Berkeley, and holds an MFA in Visual Arts from Columbia University.
 
Photo credit: Grace Roselli
Abigail Lucien, Assistant Professor, Sculpture
 
Abigail Lucien is a Haitian-American interdisciplinary artist and educator. Their work addresses themes of (be)longing, futurity, myth, and place by considering our relationship to inherited colonial structures and systems of belief/care. Working across sculpture, literature, and time-based media, Abigail’s practice is auto-ethnographic: referencing found objects and familiar surroundings as a way to implicate the body’s relationship to material and place—interpreting concepts such as loss, love, and grief as a fluid procession rather than a state to reach or become. Past exhibitions include SculptureCenter (NY), MoMA PS1 (NY), Deli Gallery (NY), Tiwani Contemporary (London, UK), Museum of Contemporary Art Panamá (Panamá), Frost Art Museum (Miami, FL), Atlanta Contemporary (Atlanta, GA), and The Fabric Workshop and Museum (Philadelphia, PA). Residencies include the Amant Studio & Research Residency (NY), the Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture (Madison, ME), the Eugeniusz Geppert Academy of Fine Arts (Wrocław, Poland), The Luminary (St. Louis, MO), Santa Fe Art Institute (Santa Fe, NM), ACRE (Steuben, WI), and Ox-Bow School of Art & Artist Residency.
 
Alva Mooses, Assistant Professor, Printmaking
 
Alva Mooses is an interdisciplinary artist who lives and works in Brooklyn. Her work crosses sculpture, printmaking, and papermaking, using earth-based materials to create an index of place and signal the memory of geological time. She has exhibited her work, curated exhibitions, and organized educational projects in the U.S., Europe, and Latin America for over a decade.  She is a member of the editorial advisory board for Latinx Spaces and has organized collaborations and community art initiatives in Mexico, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, El Salvador, and Argentina.  Alva holds a BFA from The Cooper Union and an MFA from Yale University, and has completed residencies and fellowships at Greenwich House Pottery, The Center for Book Arts, Casa Wabi (Mexico), Tou Trykk (Norway), and The University of Chicago, among others.  Her recent group and solo exhibitions include: (Be)Longing at Tiger Strikes Asteroid in Brooklyn (2022); Ear to the Earth at Front Art Space (2022); Space Coiled Like A Serpent at the Lower East Side Printshop (2021); You Enter Dancing/ There’s Always Sign at The Clemente Center (2021); Cito, Longe, Tarde at Haynes Project in Chicago (2020), Se Entra Bailando at Socrates Sculpture Park (2019), Buen Vivir at the Mexic-Arte Museum in Austin (2018), and Retrato de un Paisaje at the Museo Sívori in Buenos Aires (2018).
 

Katie Hood Morgan, Acting Administrative Director and Chief Curator, Hunter College Art Galleries
 
Katie Hood Morgan is a curator and arts producer whose active projects include a forthcoming permanent collection exhibition with the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art at SUNY New Paltz.  Prior experience includes: Program Director of FOR-SITE Foundation; Curator of Exhibitions and Public Programs at the San Francisco Art Institute; and Assistant Curator at the CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, all in San Francisco, CA. She has organized major exhibitions and public programs with artists and collectives including Ai Weiwei, Patti Smith, Jill Magid, Postcommodity, and Bill Fontana. She recently managed the touring exhibitions Carlos Villa: Worlds in Collision, the first-ever major museum retrospective for a Filipino-American artist, and Hunter East Harlem Gallery’s 26-artist exhibition, Dust Specks on the Sea: Sculpture from the French Caribbean and Haiti.  She has contributed to programming and curatorial projects at institutions including the Oakland Museum of California; the de Young Museum; SFMOMA; and MASS MoCA.

 

Departures 2023

Andrea Blum, Professor of Studio Art
 
Andrea Blum came to Hunter as a Visiting Professor in 1986, and is stepping away after 37 years as a Full Professor and Associate Chair for Studio Art.  She has helped shape the Studio Art program over the decades, and has pushed to assemble a new generation of artists here who can lead the program forward.  Thank you, Andrea!  Andrea designs work for Public Space in Europe and the United States that range in site and scale from urban space and parks, to exhibition design, libraries, domestic space, and furniture. She exhibits in museums, galleries, and other international exhibition venues, and has had numerous one-person exhibitions including Kunsthaus Baselland, CH; La Conservera Centro de Arte Contemporaneo, SP; Stroom Center for Art & Architecture, NL; Henry Moore Institute, UK; and Le Crestet Centre D’art Contemporarin, FR. Blum built special projects for the 51st Venice Biennale, IT; Maison Rouge, Paris, FR ; the MUDAM Luxembourg; l’Observatoire, FR; and was the Set Designer for the Opera La Favorite  by Donizetti commissioned by Theatre des Champs-Elysees, Paris.  Andrea has been the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, Graham Foundation Fellowship, SJ Weiler Fund Award, Art Matters, NYSCA and National Endowment for the Arts Grants, and in 2005 was named Chevalier, Order of Arts and Letters, by the French Minister of Culture.  In Fall 2024, she will have an exhibition of her work at the 205 Hudson Gallery.

 


Maria Loh, Professor of Art History
 
Hired in 2106 as Professor of Art History, with a specialty in Italian renaissance art, Maria Loh is departing Hunter for the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, NJ, where she will be the Professor of Art History in the School of Historical Studies.  Maria was an important teacher and advisor at Hunter; her graduate seminars attracted both art history students and studio artists, and she will be missed.  Maria received her MA/PhD in Art History from University of Toronto, and before coming to Hunter, she taught in the Department of History of Art at University College London.  She is the author of three books: Titian Remade. Repetition and the Transformation of Early Modern Italian Art (Getty Research Institute, 2007); Still Lives. Death, Desire, and the Portrait of the Old Master (Princeton, 2015); and Titian’s Touch. Art, Magic, & Philosophy (Reaktion, 2019)—and the editor of two special issues of the Oxford Art Journal: “Early Modern Horror” (2011) and “Mal’occhio: Looking Awry at the Renaissance” (co-edited with Patricia Rubin, 2009). She has been a regular contributor to Art in America and has also written on portraiture and loss; “special affect” in early modern painting and sculpture; melancholia and the Renaissance in Ottocento Italy; remakes in Chinese cinema; repetition in Hitchcock’s Vertigo; and the work of Sherrie Levine. Her fourth book, Liquid Sky, will explore visual representations of the early modern sky. 

 

Joachim Pissarro, Bershad Professor of Art History
 
Joachim Pissarro first taught at Hunter in 2002, as a Visiting Professor, and has been, since 2007, the Bershad Professor of Art History and Director of the Hunter College Galleries.  Joachim came to Hunter from the Museum of Modern Art’s Department of Painting and Sculpture, where he organized the exhibitions Pioneering Modern Painting: Cézanne and Pissarro 1865–1885 (2005); Out of Time: A Contemporary View (with Eva Respini, 2006); and Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night (2008-09).  From 1997 to 2000, he was the Seymour H. Knox, Jr. Curator of European and Contemporary Art at the Yale University Art Gallery, and before that he was Chief Curator at the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth.  Joachim brought his curatorial expertise to Hunter, and under his directorship the Hunter College Art Galleries flourished.  He organized a number of exhibitions with students and colleagues at Hunter, including to: Night: Contemporary Representations of the Night (2008), a contemporary response to his Van Gogh show at MoMA; Notations: the Cage Effect Today (2012); and Buren, Mosset, Parmentier, Toroni (2016).  Joachim established the ongoing MAs Curate MFAs program, and was a much sought-after advisor and mentor for both MA and MFA students.  He received his M. Phil. in History of Art from the Courtauld Institute, London, and a Ph D. in History of Art from the University of Texas at Austin.  Beyond Hunter, Joachim was a founding partner of PARALLEL (with partners, architects John Keenen and Terry Riley), and in 2021 joined forces with Philippe de Montebello and Jennifer Stockman in creating GMSG (Global Museum Strategies Group), consulting and helping to develop museum projects, mostly in China and the Gulf Region.
 
Sarah Watson, Chief Curator and Director of Administration
 
Sarah Watson earned her MA in Art History from Hunter College in 2010, and returned to Hunter as Curator in 2012.  She leaves Hunter as Chief Curator and Director of Administration of the Hunter College Art Galleries, to serve as Director of the Joseph S. Murphy Institute at the CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies (SLU); Sarah earned her second MA, in Urban Studies, from SLU.  The growth of the Hunter College Art Galleries and the success of the department’s Advanced Curatorial Certificate would not have been possible without Sarah’s professionalism and dedication. She has been an important mentor to a generation of curatorial students and gallery employees, and has pushed to make the galleries’ programing responsive to Hunter’s diverse communities.  Sarah has had a shaping hand in every exhibition, catalogue, and program produced at the Leubsdorf and 205 Hudson galleries since 2012, and her absence will be felt.  Among the exhibitions Sarah curated or co-organized with Hunter students, colleagues in the galleries, or visiting curators are Vistas Latinas: Archives of a Collective, 1989–2014 (2014); Robert Barry: All the things I know . . . 1962 to the present (2015); The Experimental Television Center: A History, Etc… (2015); Elective Affinities: A Library (2017); Ugo Rondinone: I Love John Giorno (2017); The School of Survival: Learning with Juan Downey (2018); Axis Mundo: Queer Networks in Chicano L.A. (2018); Refiguring the Future (2019); Constance DeJong: A Survey Exhibition (2021)and The Black Index (2022), a nationally touring exhibition organized with curator Bridget Cooks of the University of California, Irvine.  

 

Spring 2023 BFA Thesis Exhibition / May 18

 


remnants
Bertha and Karl Leubsdorf Gallery
Hunter West Building
132 East 68th Street
New York, NY
May 18 – June 10
Opening reception: May 18, 5–7pm

The Hunter College BFA Program and the Hunter College Art Galleries are pleased to present the Spring 2023 BFA Thesis Exhibition, remnants, at the Bertha and Karl Leubsdorf Gallery, May 18 – June 10, 2023. The exhibition will feature works by Karne Vera, Nisida Spera, Jossie Rivera, Laura Messner, Frances Matassa, Israel Kidda, and Ophelia Arc. The gallery is free and open to the public Tuesday – Saturday, 12–5pm

 

 

Hunter Master’s Thesis Showcase / May 16

 

 

6:00 Session I;
Introduction Cynthia Hahn, Prof Hunter Cuny
Jen vander Els “The Chicana Mural Movement: A Reclamation of Mesoamerican Iconography.”
Lauren Gonzalez “Making and Taking: Evaluating the Ethnographic Gaze in Graciela Iturbide’s Los que viven en la arena”
Liz Janoff “Time, Text, and Image in Bernadette Mayer’s Memory”
Each session will be followed by discussion and a short break

7:00 Session II
moderator Kristen Racaniello GC Cuny
Dasha Badikova “Tractatus de herbis, Botanical Guide to the Universe (A Case Study for Morgan MS M.873)”
Sarah Ganzel “The Lives and Afterlives of the Arenberg Gospels: Materializing Medieval Oaths”
Danny Berman “Seeing Christ Face-to-Face: Vision, Presence, and Spiritual Journey to God in a Fourteenth-Century French Book of Hours”

8:00 Session III
Charles Morrow “Simone Martini’s St. Louis Altarpiece: Materiality, Franciscan Propaganda, and Sacral Angevin Dynastic Object”
Marie Catalano “Impressions of an Urban Vision: Art Across the Park (1980 and 1982)”
Karina Grady “To Love, and To Be Loved: The Art and Relationships of Gwen John (1876-1939)”

  1.  

C. C. Wang Book Launch and Conversations / April 29

Saturday April 29, 2023, 4–6pm

Bertha & Karl Leubsdorf Gallery
Hunter College West Building Lobby
132 E. 68th Street
NY, NY 10065

Gallery entrance is on the south side of 68th St. between Lexington and Park Aves.

In concert with the exhibition C. C. Wang: Lines of Abstraction the Hunter College Art Galleries in collaboration with the Weisman Museum of Art at the University of Minnesota and Hirmer Publishers have produced the first retrospective monograph on the renowned artist, collector, and connoisseur C. C. Wang. To celebrate the launch of C. C. Wang: Lines of Abstraction the Hunter College Art Galleries have organized an afternoon of conversations hosted by the publication editors Hunter College Professor Wen-shing Chou and University of Minnesota Twin Cities Professor Daniel M. Greenberg with Arnold Chang, scholar, artist, and former student of C. C. Wang; Joseph Scheier-Dolberg, Oscar Tang and Agnes Hsu-Tang Associate Curator of Chinese Paintings at the MET; Elizabeth Hammer, Executive Director of the Hammond Museum and Japanese Stroll Garden; Lesley Ma, Ming Chu Hsu and Daniel Xu Associate Curator of Asian Art in the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art at the MET; Margaret Liu Clinton, Hunter College MA Art History candidate; and Jordan Homstad, University of Minnesota undergraduate alumni.

Support for this publication is provided by the Wolf Kahn Foundation and Emily Mason and Alice Trumbull Mason Foundation on behalf of artists Emily Mason and Wolf Kahn.

Goldberg Visiting Curator: Kate Fowle / April 26

Wednesday, April 26, 2023

ROOSEVELT HOUSE

47-49 East 65th Street

New York, NY 10065

7:00PM – 9:00PM

For nearly 30 years, Kate Fowle has developed an international practice as a curator, writer, educator, and director. Currently she is the curatorial senior director at Hauser & Wirth, after being director of MoMA PS1 from 2019–2022. Prior to this she was the inaugural chief curator and artistic director at Garage Museum of Contemporary Art in Moscow, Russia, as well as the director-at-large of Independent Curators International (ICI) in New York, where she was the executive director from 2009–13. Previously, Fowle was the inaugural international curator at the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing, China, after co-founding the Master’s Program in Curatorial Practice for California College of the Arts in San Francisco in 2002, for which she was the Chair until 2007. Before moving to the United States, she was co-founder of Smith + Fowle in London from 1996–2002 and curator at the Towner Art Gallery and Museum in Eastbourne, East Sussex from 1994-1996. Initially, Fowle was trained as an artist from 1989-1993.

Her recent curatorial projects include solo exhibitions and commissions with David Adjaye, Rasheed Araeen, John Baldessari, Sammy Baloji, Louise Bourgeois, Marcel Broodthaers, Urs Fischer, Rashid Johnson, Irina Korina, Daniel Lind Ramos, Robert Longo, Anri Sala, Taryn Simon, Juergen Teller, and Rirkrit Tirivanija, as well as co-curating the 2021 Greater New York exhibition at MoMA PS1 and The Paradoxes of Internationalism at the Museo Tamayo in Mexico City. She has written extensively on Ilya Kabakov, Sterling Ruby, Taryn Simon, and Qiu Zhijie among others, and published numerous articles on curating and exhibition histories. Fowle has written three books: Exhibit Russia: The New International Decade 1986-1996 (2016); Rashid Johnson: Within Our Gates (2016); and Proof: Francisco Goya, Sergei Eisenstein, Robert Longo (2017).

 

SPRING 2023 MFA THESIS EXHIBITIONS / April 20

The Spring 2023 MFA Thesis Thesis Exhibition will be presented in two parts at the 205 Hudson Gallery:

Part I
Estuary
April 20 – May 2
Eiko Nishida, Ashlyn Diaz, Corinne Bernard, Lauryn Welch, Paul Anagnostopoulos, Jordany Genao, Jiwoong Jang

10 AM – 7 PM, Every day
Opening Reception:
Thursday, April 20th, 6–9 PM
205 Hudson Gallery (Entrance on Canal Street)


Part II
May 11 – May 23

Liza Lacroix, David Thonis, Jared Friedman, Andreia Santana, Rafael Yaluff

Please check back for more information.

Exhibition Tour of C. C. Wang: Lines of Abstraction / April 13

 

Join graduate student curators for a guided tour of C. C. Wang: Lines of Abstraction.

This tour is free and open to the public. No registration is needed.

April 13, 6PM

Exhibition Tour of C. C. Wang: Lines of Abstraction
Bertha and Karl Leubsdorf Gallery
Hunter College West Building
132 East 68th Street
New York, NY

C. C. Wang: Lines of Abstraction was developed through a two-semester curatorial seminar at Hunter College led by Professor Wen-shing Chou with M.A. Art History students Thais Bignardi-Engstrom, Carolyn Bishop, Rawls Bolton, Jeremy Gloster, Sophie Kaufman, Emerald Lucas, Lindsey Poremba, and Mia Ye.

Ida y Vuelta opens March 30 at Hunter East Harlem Gallery

Ida y Vuelta: Migration Experiences in Contemporary Puerto Rican Art

 

March 30 – September 30

Organized by the Center for Puerto Rican Studies and Hunter East Harlem Gallery
2180 3rd Avenue
New York, NY

 

Ida y Vuelta: Experiencias de la migración en el arte puertorriqueño contemporáneo is an expansive exhibition of 19 Puerto Rican artists whose works express their varied interpretations of the experience of migration—often formulated from direct experience—whether they refer to their own emigration or to the process of adapting to a new environment. 

We will celebrate the grand opening of this exhibition on Thursday, March 30th, with a reception open to the public. Guest curator Laura Bravo, Ph.D and several exhibition artists will be present.

Featured artists include:

Abdiel Segarra Ríos, Adál Maldonado, Anabel Vázquez Rodríguez, Anaida Hernández, Antonio Martorell, Brenda Cruz, Carlos Ruiz Valarino, Edra Soto, John Betancourt, José Ortiz Pagán, Máximo Colón, Marta Mabel Pérez, Mónica Félix, Nayda Collazo Llorens, Norma Vila Rivero, Osvaldo Budet Meléndez, Pedro Vélez, Quintín Rivera Toro, Víctor Vázquez

Curated by Laura Bravo, PhD., with Assistant Curator Donald Escudero. 

Time in Harlem: Isaac Diggs and Edward Hillel in Conversation

Flex Space, Hunter College MFA Building
205 Hudson Street at Canal
Thursday, March 23, 2023, 6-8pm

 

In celebration of their exhibition Isaac Diggs & Edward Hillel: Time in Harlem, the artists will be in conversation with Kunbi Oni, Collection Specialist in the department of Drawings and Prints at MOMA, on Thursday, March 23, 6-8pm, to discuss the rewards and challenges of revisiting past work, designing and publishing photo books, and long term artistic collaboration. Available for sale will be Hunter East Harlem Gallery’s publication, 125th Street: Photography in Harlem (Hirmer Verlag, 2022), which features many of Diggs & Hillel’s images as well as dozens of other artists who have documented the historic thoroughfare. 

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/time-in-harlem-isaac-diggs-and-edward-hillel-in-conversation-tickets-558936733817

C. C. Wang: Lines of Abstraction Tour & Reception for Asia Week NY

Friday, March 17

Leubsdorf Gallery
132 East 68th Street
New York, NY, 10065

Tour 10:30–11:30am, followed by a coffee/tea reception

RSVP here

Join the Hunter College Art Galleries during Asia Week NY for a morning tour and reception of C. C. Wang: Lines of Abstraction. Led by exhibition co-curator Daniel M. Greenberg, this walkthrough will introduce viewers to the life and art of C.C. Wang (1907-2003).  Born to a family of scholar-officials at the twilight of the Qing dynasty, Wang mastered the traditional ink and brush techniques in Republican Shanghai and immigrated to New York City in 1949.  Although he is well known for his discerning connoisseurial eye and world class collection of classical Chinese art, Wang’s own artistic practice has long been overlooked.  In this walkthrough, we will explore how Wang built upon both his deep knowledge of Chinese painting and the artistic climate in postwar New York to create distinctly cross-cultural works of modern American art. 

Curated by Wen-shing Chou and Daniel M. Greenberg with Hans Hofmann Graduate Curatorial Fellow Margaret Liu Clinton.

C. C. Wang: Lines of Abstraction was developed through a two-semester curatorial seminar at Hunter College led by Professor Wen-shing Chou with M.A. Art History students Thais Bignardi-Engstrom, Carolyn Bishop, Rawls Bolton, Jeremy Gloster, Sophie Kaufman, Emerald Lucas, Lindsey Poremba, and Mia Ye.

C. C. Wang: Lines of Abstraction is made possible by the generous support of the James Howell Foundation, the Leubsdorf Fund, the Wolf Kahn Foundation and Emily Mason and Alice Trumbull Mason Foundation on behalf of artists Emily Mason and Wolf Kahn, and the Renate, Hans, and Maria Hofmann Trust.

 

MFA & BFA Open Studios / March 4, 5 – 9pm

 

MFA & BFA Open Studios
March 4, 5 – 9pm
205 Hudson Street, NYC 10013 (Entrance on Canal Street)

More than 120 studios will be open, showcasing the work of current MFA & BFA students. There will be a fundraising exhibition featuring student work, with all proceeds benefiting the MFA & BFA programs.

 

In accordance with CUNY policy, all guests must show valid proof of vaccination upon entry.
Minimum requirement is two does of Moderna or Pfizer; or one dose of J&J. Masking is encouraged.

No pets allowed unless they are ADA service animals.

Doors will close at 8:30pm. All visitors must vacate the building by 9pm.

https://www.huntermfastudio.org/mfa-bfa-open-studios-spring-2023

Terrible Terrible Through March 4

Terrible Terrible is an exhibition of work by 35 artists who are entering their second semester of the MFA program at Hunter College. 

205 Hudson Gallery
Hunter College MFA Campus
205 Hudson Street
New York, NY

Through March 4

The gallery is open to the 205 Hudson Community and by appointment.

Terrible Terrible was organized by Dana Notine.

Poster designed by E. Rady and Aashish Gadani.

 

C. C. Wang: Lines of Abstraction through April 29

February 2–April 29, 2023
Gallery Hours: Tuesday-Saturday, 12–5 pm

Opening Reception: February 2, 7–9 pm

Bertha and Karl Leubsdorf Gallery
132 East 68th Street
New York, NY 10065
Entrance between Lexington and Park Avenues

 

Born to a family of scholar-officials at the twilight of the Qing dynasty, C. C. Wang (Wang Chi-ch’ien 王己千, 1907–2003) mastered the traditional ink and brush techniques in Republican Shanghai and immigrated to New York City in 1949. There he sought to preserve the tradition of classical Chinese painting through engagement with new ideas, materials, and forms. Drawing inspiration from past masters in the history of Chinese painting, as well as New York’s artistic climate in the wake of World War II, Wang advanced breakthrough transformations in ink painting.

C. C. Wang is best known as a preeminent twentieth-century connoisseur and collector of pre-modern Chinese art, a reputation that often overshadows his own art. Held twenty years after the artist’s death, C. C. Wang: Lines of Abstraction recenters Wang’s extraordinary career on his own artistic practice to reveal an original quest for tradition and innovation in the global twentieth century. Spanning seven decades, the exhibition focuses on the artist’s distinctive synthesis of Chinese ink painting and American postwar abstraction.

In concert with the exhibition, the Hunter College Art Galleries are producing a comprehensive catalogue published in collaboration with the Weisman Museum of Art at the University of Minnesota and Hirmer Publishers. This book is the first retrospective monograph on the renowned artist, collector, and connoisseur C. C. Wang (1907–2003) and features texts by scholars Wen-shing Chou, Daniel M. Greenberg, Joseph Scheier-Dolberg, and Arnold Chang with additional contributions by Hunter College Graduate Art History candidates and an undergraduate student from the University of Minnesota. Support for this publication is provided by the Wolf Kahn Foundation and Emily Mason and Alice Trumbull Mason Foundation on behalf of artists Emily Mason and Wolf Kahn.

Curated by Wen-shing Chou and Daniel M. Greenberg with Hans Hofmann Graduate Curatorial Fellow Margaret Liu Clinton.

C. C. Wang: Lines of Abstraction was developed through a two-semester curatorial seminar at Hunter College led by Professor Wen-shing Chou with M.A. Art History students Thais Bignardi-Engstrom, Carolyn Bishop, Rawls Bolton, Jeremy Gloster, Sophie Kaufman, Emerald Lucas, Lindsey Poremba, and Mia Ye.

C. C. Wang: Lines of Abstraction is made possible by the generous support of the James Howell Foundation, the Leubsdorf Fund, the Wolf Kahn Foundation and Emily Mason and Alice Trumbull Mason Foundation on behalf of artists Emily Mason and Wolf Kahn, and the Renate, Hans, and Maria Hofmann Trust.

Please find the full press kit here. For further press inquiries please contact Sarah Watson, Chief Curator, at swat@hunter.cuny.edu.