Collapsed Entanglements

Katie Simmons

Large yellow-toned fabric piece featuring delicate line drawings of reclining figures, insects, and birds, creating a dreamlike composition.

Opens Thu Apr 2, 6-8pm

On view April 2-30, 2026

Sanger Gallery

sponsored by We*Cycle

Artist and wildlife biologist Katie Simmons blurs the line between body and environment, creating intimate, imagined ecosystems on fabric dyed with natural materials. Using silk and cotton stained with hickory, walnut, and other plant-based dyes, Simmons draws interconnected forms that reflect the flora and fauna associated with each material—reminding us that we are never separate from the living world around us.

Rooted in ecology, care, and kinship, her work embraces impermanence: the fabric yellows, frays, and changes over time, just as all life does. Simmons, an MFA candidate at Colorado State University and a practicing wildlife biologist, brings a deep scientific understanding to her artistic practice, offering viewers a quiet yet powerful meditation on shared vulnerability and interdependence in a time of rapid change.

Salt Water Soul: Black Portraits of Key West

Ajuan Mance

Digital artwork of Cheryl Derricotte wearing glasses, large hoop earrings, and a patterned headscarf, with text about her artistic practice and design work in the background.

Opens Thu Mar 5, 6-8pm

On view March 5-26, 2026

Zabar Lobby Gallery

sponsored by Moondog Café & Bakery

During her May 2024 residency at the PEAR House, Ajuan Mance conducted interviews and took reference photos of Black residents of Key West, with the goal of creating a portrait series that celebrates the diversity of Black life and history on the island. The resulting hand-drawn works blend transcription, portraiture, and collage—layering each subject’s words with vibrant visual elements inspired by Key West’s natural landscape, architecture, and cultural traditions.

A Professor of African American literature at Mills College in Oakland, California, Mance is also an acclaimed visual artist whose work combines bold color and expressive line with themes of race, gender, identity, and community. Her illustrations and comics have been featured in exhibitions and publications across the country, from The Women’s Review of Books to The New York Times.