Unreal City

Diane Bronstein

Mixed-media artwork combining lush textured trees with black-and-white images of grand neoclassical buildings, set against a stark black background.

Opens Thu Mar 5, 6-8pm

On view March 5-26, 2026

XOJ Gallery

sponsored by Assortment, Inc.

Diane Bronstein merges vintage and original photography with vibrant, hand-stitched embroidery to confront humanity’s blind spots—most urgently, our reluctance to face climate change. Familiar black-and-white images are interrupted by creeping vines, erupting lava, and rising floodwaters, each colorful thread a quiet but urgent reminder of nature reclaiming space. What appears nostalgic at first glance becomes something more unsettling: a vision of what happens when we ignore what’s coming until it’s already here.

With subtle humor and haunting detail, Bronstein manipulates time and place—collaging cities together, bending perspective, and placing past and present figures side by side in surreal, imagined landscapes. Unreal City invites viewers to look more closely and ask: what will our nostalgia look like when the world has changed beyond recognition?

Twist

Mimi Hein

Minimalist artwork featuring circular black patterns resembling tree rings, with a horizontal yellow and black stripe cutting across the center.

Opens Thu Feb 5, 6-8pm

On view February 5-26, 2026

Zabar Project Gallery

sponsored by Archeo Gallery

Artist Mimi Hein presents two graphic series linked by bold design and subtle surprise. At first glance, the works appear as vibrant abstractions—geometric patterns in ink, paint, and collage. But closer inspection reveals unexpected details: whimsical doorways, ladders, and windows tucked inside bright compositions, or a sudden pop of neon yellow hidden within earthy tones. These visual “twists” invite the viewer to pause, look again, and engage with the quiet humor and precision embedded in each piece.

From meditative ink drawings inspired by Zen practices to bold, collage-like prints crafted on everything from imported papers to grocery bags, Hein’s process is rooted in curiosity, play, and reinvention. Twist marks a departure from her 2023 installation Pearl and Hazel, showing yet another side of a deeply imaginative artist unafraid to follow where the work leads.

Fragmentary Blue

Jennifer Printz

Contemporary textile artwork of gathered blue and purple fabric stretched over a circular frame, resembling ocean waves.

Opens Thu Oct 2, 6-8pm

On view October 2-30, 2025

XOJ Gallery

Jennifer Printz merges photography and textiles into sculptural meditations on the unseen forces that shape our world. Printed images of the sky are transferred onto silk and cotton, then folded, twisted, and sewn into soft, bulging forms that seem to hover in space. These intimate works capture the weightlessness of air and the quiet pull of gravity, inviting viewers to consider the ephemeral nature of time, perception, and presence.

Drawing from a background in contemplative practice, scientific curiosity, and personal memory, Printz’s work explores how fabric can embody both cosmic connection and domestic history. This exhibit offers a subtle yet powerful invitation: to look again, to see more deeply, and to notice the delicate threads that connect us to each other and to the skies above.

sponsored by DG Interiors

Beyond Paradise

Etheard Joseph

Bright, textured abstract painting with dripping streaks of yellow, red, purple, blue, and green, with circular and rectangular shapes layered throughout.

Opens Thu Apr 2, 6-8pm

On view April 2-30, 2026

XOJ Gallery

sponsored by The Gallery on Greene

Etheard Joseph’s large-scale abstract paintings transform the gallery into an enveloping field of color, texture, and emotion. These works explore the inner landscape—drawing from memory, introspection, and the subconscious to create environments that invite stillness, reflection, and personal interpretation.

Working at scale allows Joseph to go beyond the surface; each canvas is a portal, a place to linger, layered with gesture and energy. With titles like Reflections, Paradise, and Infinite Dreams, the paintings become starting points for individual journeys, offering a powerful and contemplative experience that lingers long after you leave the room.

Reclaiming Florida’s Crown Jewel

Gunnar Baldwin

Vibrant school of fish swimming over a coral reef, depicted in bold oranges, blues, and purples with stylized details.

Opens Thu Feb 5, 6-8pm

On view February 5-26, 2026

XOJ Gallery

sponsored by The Angling Company

In Reclaiming Florida’s Crown Jewel, Gunnar Baldwin captures the fragile beauty of Florida’s coral reef tract—the third largest barrier reef system in the world, and one in grave ecological decline. Through a series of vivid oil paintings, Baldwin channels his lifelong connection to marine environments and sheds light—both literal and metaphorical—on the heroic efforts to restore the reefs. These works are alive with the flickering motion of shallow waters, where sunlight breaks into patterns and color pulses through coral forms like breath.

A trained painter, environmental advocate, and lifelong diver, Baldwin brings together his artistic and ecological passions to raise awareness of what’s at stake just beneath the surface. This exhibition is both a tribute to the reefs’ splendor and a call to protect what remains before it disappears.

Under the Skin – Soulful Silhouettes

Meggi Siegert

Soft oil painting of a young woman in a white dress, adjusting a patterned shawl draped over her shoulders.

Opens Thu Nov 6, 6-8pm

On view November 6-27, 2025

Zabar Lobby Gallery

sponsored by Luna

Painter Meggi Siegert turns her focus from faces to forms, using the female figure as both outer contour and inner landscape. These quiet, contemplative works explore sensitivity, vulnerability, and emotional depth—not through facial expression, but through the intimacy of pose, the stillness of gesture, and the power of presence. Each silhouette becomes a vessel for introspection, capturing a sense of mystery that lingers beyond the canvas.

A self-taught artist with a background in psychology and art therapy, Siegert brings a tender understanding of the human spirit to her work. Living and painting in a pink house on a tropical island, she continues to uncover what lies beneath the surface—inviting viewers to slow down, look closer, and feel what remains unspoken.

Moving Box Art

Alexis Lyons

Colorful still life painting of a floral bouquet in a blue-and-white patterned vase with lemons scattered on a white table.

Opens Thu Nov 6, 6-8pm

On view November 6-27, 2025

Zabar Project Gallery

sponsored by Manley deBoer

Moving Box Art is a collection of painted works created on recycled cardboard boxes—everyday remnants of a life in motion. After relocating to Key West, artist and military spouse Alexis Lyons found herself surrounded by the tools of yet another move and decided to transform them into something joyful and lasting. The result is a series of vibrant, nature-inspired pieces that honor both personal resilience and the creative spark that survives—even thrives—through transition.

Made over the course of three years in Key West, these works speak to the emotional rhythm of starting over, adapting, and finding moments of beauty in unfamiliar places. For Lyons, and for so many military families, moving is more than logistics—it’s a lifestyle that demands flexibility, courage, and care. This exhibition invites viewers to look closer at the quiet strength in their own communities and the art that can bloom from even the most ordinary materials.

Oceans Not Mars

Discovering Rebirth and Regeneration in the Florida Keys

Barbara Boissevain

Overhead view of geometric salt ponds in orange, white, and brown tones divided by roads, with cracked textures across the surfaces.

Opens Thu Jan 8, 6-8pm

On view January 8-29, 2026

XOJ Gallery

sponsored by DG Interiors

Photographer and environmental artist Barbara Boissevain turns her lens toward the coral reefs of the Florida Keys, capturing both the fragility and resilience of one of the most biodiverse marine ecosystems in the world. Worked on during her 2025 residency at The Studios of Key West’s PEAR House, this new body of work uses photography and mixed media to illuminate the quiet yet urgent efforts of coral restoration and marine research taking place just offshore.

Building on her long-standing exploration of environmental transformation, Boissevain documents not only the visible beauty of the reef but the often-invisible systems of regeneration at work beneath the surface. The series invites reflection on time, scale, and care—suggesting that before we search for life on distant planets, we might first attend to the wonders, and the responsibilities, of the living world around us.

Giants Among Us

Tim Marshall Curtis

Polished metal abstract sculpture with curved, tripod-like legs and a crescent-shaped form on top, displayed in front of a tall window with natural light.

Opens Thu May 7, 6-8pm

On view May 7-28, 2026

Sanger Gallery

Tim Marshall Curtis presents seven monumental sculptures—totems, sentinels, and story-holders that reflect a lifetime of creative exploration. Forged from materials including aluminum, bronze, stainless steel, mahogany, and acrylic, each piece embodies a bold idea: from the vanishing presence of whales in Wail Tale, to the metaphysical inquiry of Ascension/Resurrection, to the raw, expressive form of Viking.

Curtis approaches sculpture not just as a craft, but as a means of translating the intangible—space, dimension, time, culture—into something physically present. Drawing inspiration from theoretical physics, archaeology, music, and theology, his practice is rooted in improvisation, risk, and curiosity. These large-scale works don’t just occupy space; they engage it, reflect it, and challenge us to see what lies beyond the surface.

Floridian Fabrique

Emma Mykowski

Realistic painting of a pile of green oranges with a wooden sign reading “100% Natural Oranges” and sliced fruit in the foreground.

On view October 2-30, 2025

Zabar Lobby Gallery

Floridian Fabrique is a vibrant, maximalist celebration of Florida’s textile traditions—past and present. Through richly detailed paintings and ceramic sculptures, artist Emma Mykowski elevates the patterns, textures, and stories woven into the state’s cultural fabric. From the intricate patchwork of Seminole and Miccosukee quilting to the bold prints of Key West Hand Print Fabrics and Miami designers like Julian Chang, this exhibition honors the artistry and history embedded in cloth.

By reversing the traditional dynamic—using painting and sculpture to immortalize textiles rather than merely adorn them—Mykowski challenges long-held art hierarchies. The exhibition pays tribute to Florida’s tropical aesthetic while acknowledging the complexities of its textile legacy, including the impact of the cotton trade and the influence of African and Caribbean traditions.

sponsored by Key West Collective