Back Again

Hunter O’Hanian

Opens Thu Mar 6, 6-8pm

On view March 6-27, 2025

Zabar Project Gallery

Explore the intersection of history and art with digital collages inspired by LGBTQ publications of the 1940s and 1950s. This exhibition sheds light on the fight against oppression and its parallels with today’s socio-political climate, reflecting the enduring struggle for equality.

An independent consultant and artist working on a variety of art projects, Hunter O’Hanian was the Executive Director of the Stonewall National Museum and Archive in Fort Lauderdale, FL. Previously, he was the head of the College Art Association, the largest professional association supporting art historians and visual artists in the world. Prior to that, he was the founding Director of the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art, the only art museum devoted exclusively to artwork that speaks to the LGBTQ experience.

Prior to joining Leslie-Lohman, Hunter was the Director of the Foundation for Massachusetts College of Art and Design in Boston. Prior to that, he led two renowned artists’ residencies programs, having served as the President of Anderson Ranch Arts Center outside of Aspen, CO, and Director of the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, MA, the largest residency program for emerging artists and writers in the United States. The Fine Arts Work Center permanently endowed a Fellowship in his name.

Hunter has a long career of non-profit board and community involvement. He is the past board chair of the Alliance of Artists Communities, the national membership organization for artists’ residency programs. Hunter graduated from Boston College and received his law degree from Suffolk University. He is presently working on a book of images and writings by Baltimore artist Amos Badertscher and a touring exhibition of works by Robert Giard called Queer Pioneers.

sponsored by Luna

Island Traditions

David Berg & William Rhodes

On view August 1-September 26, 2024

Sanger Gallery

Beginning September 10th, we will be open by appointment only.

“Island Traditions” revisits the work of two previously exhibited artists at The Studios – David Berg and William Rhodes. Their visits to Key West in 2021 and 2023 impacted the island through community events in Bahama Village as well as stunning contemporary exhibitions.

In 2023, Caribbean native David Berg visited Key West to teach stilt walking to children in Bahama Village and present a series of photographs documenting the carnival traditions of his island home of St. Croix. Berg has been surrounded by carnival traditions his entire life: first as child soaking up the annual Christmas-season festival, then training to be a Moko Jumbie – one of the carnival’s dramatic, athletic high-stilt walkers – and finally as a photographer and historian, documenting festival traditions. A series of these photographs are on view.

William Rhodes visited Key West in the Fall of 2021 to work with the Bahama Village community to create a pair of fiber works – a museum-quality quilt commissioned by The Studios, and a community-based collaborative quilt that has since become a Goombay tradition, with community members adding new colorful squares of fabric each year during the festival. San Francisco-based artist Rhodes trained as a furniture maker with master craftsmen and as a folk quilter from his grandmother and other artists. He uses his talents and empathy to give voice to African American histories and communities before they are lost to time.

images: “Guardians of Culture” by David Berg; “Goombay Quilt” by William Rhodes & the Bahama Village community