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.

Shelter

Will Jacks

Moody monochrome mixed media work of a glowing white house inside a large dark circular form, with radiating lines suggesting light or energy.

Opens Thu Nov 6, 6-8pm

On view November 6-27, 2025

Sanger Gallery

sponsored by Island City Tile

Shelter explores the shifting terrain of photography, memory, and truth through a series of camera-less images created using chemigrams and lumen prints. Drawing from personal experience and vernacular Southern architecture, Jacks invites viewers to reconsider what defines a photograph—not by surface appearance, but by the materials, time, and light that shape it. These striking, often large-scale works blur the boundaries between photography, painting, and sculpture, offering a tactile and deeply contemplative encounter with the medium.

Raised in Mississippi and trained in both journalism and fine art, Jacks turned to experimental darkroom techniques as a way to break free from the limitations of traditional lens-based work. Influenced by artists like Alison Rossiter, Pierre Cordier, and Annette Lemieux, his process embraces chance, labor, and physicality—from walking across photo paper soaked in developer to constructing grid-based collages from hand-treated silver gelatin prints. Shelter is as much about place and memory as it is about process, rooted in the Delta’s cultural landscape and in the artist’s desire to see anew.

WORM: A Cuban American Odyssey

Edel Rodriguez

Illustration of a young boy in red suspenders standing on a bright red street lined with houses, chickens, and people on bicycles.

Worm: A Cuban American Odyssey explores themes of migration, displacement, and identity through original drawings from Rodriguez’s acclaimed graphic memoir Worm, bold new paintings, silkscreened posters, and the political art from the covers of TIME and Der Spiegel that made him an international voice. Also on view are personal artifacts, family photos, and visual source material that shaped the book, offering a rich and layered look at a life lived between two worlds.

The exhibition traces Rodriguez’s extraordinary journey—from a boyhood in Cold War Cuba to his family’s escape during the Mariel boatlift, when they were branded gusanos (“worms”) by Castro. Arriving in Key West by shrimping boat in 1980, Rodriguez would go on to become one of the most prominent political artists of our time, known for provocative magazine covers, and artwork that champions truth, freedom, and the immigrant experience.

Q-Rated

Qmitch

Portrait of a flamboyant performer in a colorful costume, pearl necklaces, and an oversized decorative headpiece, surrounded by feathers.

Opens Thu Oct 2, 6-8pm

On view October 2-30, 2025

Sanger Gallery

Mitchell “Qmitch” Jones presents a dynamic exhibition honoring twenty years of bold fashion, costume, and design. By blending unique textiles, sketches, and playful creations, the exhibition showcases his influence as a drag icon, designer, and community supporter. With a mix of fun, texture, and storytelling, this show offers an intimate glimpse into his impact and influence in the world of art and festivities in Key West.

Ghost in Bahama Village

ransome

Painting titled “Garden of Love” by ransome. Two figures stand waist-deep in water, one facing forward and the other looking back over their shoulder. Between them, a lush cluster of vividly patterned flowers and foliage bursts in the foreground, contrasting with the dark blues and greens of the surrounding water and landscape.

Opens Thu Feb 5, 6-8pm

On view February 5-26, 2026

Sanger Gallery

underwritten by Roger and Marny Heinen, sponsored by Team Kaufelt, and supported in part by the Community Foundation of the Florida Keys

Inspired by his Key West residency in 2023, ransome explores the layered history of Bahama Village, a neighborhood originally shaped by Black Bahamians, Cubans, Chinese immigrants, and other people of color. A painter and collage artist known for transforming historical narratives into vivid visual stories, ransome honors the community’s resilience during segregation and celebrates the creativity, craftsmanship, and cultural traditions that continue to enliven its streets, reflecting both the legacy of its past and the enduring spirit of Key West today.

ransome was born in North Carolina and moved to a New Jersey suburb as a teenager. He graduated from Pratt Institute and was a tenured professor in the School of Visual Performing Arts at Syracuse University before retiring to pursue his dreams of being a studio artist.  He received his MFA in Studio Arts from Lesley University.

A Fifty Year Retrospective

David Wegman

Opens Thu Apr 3, 6-8pm

On view April 3-24, 2025

Sanger Gallery

Long-time resident and self-described pirate David Wegman epitomizes Key West’s bohemian spirit. His artwork vividly portrays his seafaring life, bringing to life the vibrant places he has explored and the colorful characters he has encountered along the way.

David Wegman’s art elicits images of an exotic oceanic world of mystery shrouded in romance. “A sailor at sea thinks about land, and a sailor on land remembers the sea.” David was born in 1944, in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and one of five brothers. He is referred to as the “mystic Wegman,” a compliment from many who know him in the communities of Key West, St. Barths and Maine (just a few places he calls home!).

Educated in oils, pastels, pen and ink, David was also drawn to carve wax and cast sculpture into gold, silver, and bronze during the 1970’s.

Read the Keys Weekly story

Interested in learning more? Watch Inside the Real Key West – With a Local Legend

Key West isn’t just a tourist destination—it’s a way of life. In his latest documentary, YouTuber Peter Santenello (3.7M subscribers!) takes you deep into the heart of the island, meeting the locals who keep old-school Key West alive. One of those legends? David Wegman, of course!

Mermaids by David Wegman
Wegman Paintings, Key West Wanderings, Photos by Bill Klipp

All photos © Bill Klipp, not for Commercial Use of any type, for personal use only.
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Interior

Wendell Smith

Opens Thu Apr 3, 6-8pm

On view April 3-24, 2025

XOJ Gallery

Using alternative materials and rooted in folk traditions, Smith’s works explore vulnerability and the resiliency of the human spirit through the lens of Caribbean society and culture.

Beach Blues

Lucy Paige

Opens Thu Apr 3, 6-8pm

On view April 3-24, 2025

Zabar Project Gallery

Paige’s distinctive artistic styles, united by shades of blue. Her paint and pen series depicts semi-abstract beachgoers, complemented by her light abstract works inspired by ocean landscapes, blending figurative and abstract art to celebrate coastal life.

sponsored by Key West Local Luxe

This is Key West

Nataliia Nosyk

Opens Thu Apr 3, 6-8pm

On view April 3-24, 2025

Zabar Lobby Gallery

Celebrate Key West’s beauty, architecture, and vibrant spirit through oil paintings inspired by Nosyk’s time spent in residency at The Studios. This exhibition captures both her plein air studies and expansive studio works, reflecting her deep connection to this unique island.

sponsored by Eaton Bikes