Museum & Box Office Hours
Tuesday-Sunday, 10am-4pm (Dec-May)
Tuesday-Saturday, 10am-4pm (Jun-Nov)
Visitors can find us, tour our galleries and studios, and visit the rooftop at 533 Eaton Street.
Tuesday-Sunday, 10am-4pm (Dec-May)
Tuesday-Saturday, 10am-4pm (Jun-Nov)
Visitors can find us, tour our galleries and studios, and visit the rooftop at 533 Eaton Street.
Admission to our galleries and campus is always free of charge. As a non-profit, community organization, we offer discounted fees for classes, performances and events to members of The Studios. If you are interested in the benefits of membership learn more here!
From rooftop parties to business gatherings, The Studios offers a host of unique spaces to make your event one for the ages! Learn more here.

The innovative dance program combining the talents of Dance Key West, Blue’s Clues’ Steve Burns, and everyone’s favorite “remarcable” citizens returns to The Studios. Benefiting the MARC House, which serves adults with developmental disabilities, the program gives a voice, and an opportunity for movement and expression to every participant.
sponsored by Moondog Café, photo by Mark Hedden

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Rezendes was one of the Boston Globe‘s “Spotlight” team which exposed the Roman Catholic clergy sexual abuse scandal. Now a member of the Global Investigative Team at the Associated Press, he comes to Key West to talk to Stephen Kitsakos, Artistic Advisor, about his work as an investigative journalist, screenwriter and Jimmy Breslin’s biographer.
sponsored by Berkshire Hathaway

Joy’s latest work tells a tale of self acceptance through the lens of Native American culture. Joy will present the work and then lead a conversation about finding your voice through arts, and turning marginalization into power.
presented in conjunction with Queer Keys Community Center, sponsored by Team Kaufelt



$125 front row, $75, $65 mbrs.
$125 front row, $75, $65 mbrs.
Adapted from the international bestselling novel by Tomasz Jedrowski, and named a top 20 LGBTQ book for 2020 by NPR, The Guardian, O Magazine, Publishers Weekly & the New York Review of Books, Swimming in the Dark is an opera about choice and political freedom. Set in Poland in 1980, it is an opera about a consuming love affair engulfed by a political thriller in a country being torn apart. At its center is a story of two young men, Ludwik and Janusz, who meet one summer after graduating from college and bond over their discovery of the American novelist James Baldwin’s seminal work of gay & bisexual literature, Giovanni’s Room. A tale of subversion, entrapment and identity set against the beauty and rapture of the Polish countryside at the rise of the Solidarity movement. With soaring melodies and a moving libretto (sung in English) the opera is sure to resonate with American audiences.
in partnership with IU Jacobs School of Music


Martin Hennessy, Composer, is a prolific composer of opera and art song. With librettist Stephen Kitsakos, he composed An Incident in Sutton Square (finalist for the 2023 Dominic Argento Chamber Opera Prize), The Woman in Penthouse A, and The Pleasing Recollection: A Cabaret Opera. His opera A Letter to East 11th Street, with a libretto by Mark Campbell, was the first winner of the Domenic J. Pellicciotti Opera Composition Prize in 2014. Other chamber works include The Young King, with a libretto by Tom Rowan, commissioned by the University of Maryland; and The Good Friar, with a libretto by Mark Campbell, for the Center for Contemporary Opera and Urban Arias. His Ben Jonson Songs won grand prize at the San Francisco Song Festival, and he has been honored with Copland House and Millay Colony residencies as well as commissions from the Estate Project for Artists with AIDS and the Sorel Foundation. Recent commissions include Nous Deux, a setting of Paul Eluard’s incantatory love poem, for mezzo-soprano and string quintet, commissioned by mezzo-soprano Blythe Gaissert. He is currently commissioned by Madrid’s Teatro Real’s La Joven to write a new Maria Estuardo, with a libretto by Irma Correa.

Stephen Kitsakos, Libretto, is an opera librettist, theatre director and educator. Writing commissions include the National Endowment on the Arts, the American Opera Project, NYSCA, Catskill Watershed Corporation, ASCAP Foundation and The Woodstock Cycle for the Episcopal Diocese of NY. With Martin Hennessy he wrote the libretti for An Incident in Sutton Square (finalist for the 2023 Dominic Argento Chamber Opera Prize), The Woman in Penthouse A, and The Pleasing Recollection: A Cabaret Opera. With composer Sheila Silver he wrote the libretto for A Thousand Splendid Suns, commissioned by Seattle Opera, based on the bestselling book by Khaled Hosseini, nominated for “Best New Opera 2023” at the International Opera Awards in Warsaw, Poland. Other libretti for Silver include the chamber opera The Wooden Sword, and the Tibetan-themed operatic cantata The White Rooster, commissioned by the Smithsonian Institution. A member of the Theatre Arts Faculty at SUNY New Paltz for fifteen years, Kitsakos was a contributing writer at The Sondheim Review as well as Music in American Life for ABC-CLIO.

Michael Shell, Stage Director, is an Associate Professor of Music in Voice at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music and Resident Stage director for the Jacobs School of Music Opera and Ballet Theater. His “visionary” and “masterful storytelling” (Opera News) is steadily leading him to be one of the most sought after directors in the United States. His “thoughtful and detailed score study” (Opera Today) is shown in character development and relationships onstage as well as the complete visual world he creates. Shell has directed productions for Atlanta Opera, Pittsburgh Opera, Michigan Opera Theater, Opera Omaha, Opera San Jose, Opera Tampa, Opera North, Virginia Opera, Santa Fe Opera, Wexford Festival Opera, and Opera Theatre of Saint Louis. He holds a B.M. and M.M. in Music/Vocal Performance from the University of North Carolina School of the Arts and was a Corbett Scholar at The University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music.

Tyler Readinger, Conductor has served as cover conductor for the New York Philharmonic and Allentown Symphony Orchestra, assistant conductor of the Reading Philharmonic Orchestra, and guest conductor for the Reading Pops Orchestra. As a student of Arthur Fagen and Thomas Wilkins, he was assistant conductor for the Indiana University Opera and Ballet Theater. Tyler was named semifinalist in the 2022 V Nino Rota International Conducting Competition. He has participated in numerous other conducting programs, most recently being the VIII Atlantic Coast Conducting Competition and Masterclass. He is also an avid conductor of film music both in live-to-picture performances and recording sessions.

Rosi Ware, Narrator, is an inspirational speaker and ambassador of Arts & Culture in Key West. Formerly the CEO of Millward Brown, the world’s largest advertising research agency, and a consultant for Kantar & WPP, the world’s largest marketing services group, she was honored by Queen Elizabeth II in 1997 as one of 75 women in business who had made a difference to the UK. A Founding Board Member, and past President/Board Chair of The Studios of Key West, she was awarded “Humanitarian of the Year” in 2016 by the Red Cross for her work with disabled adults at MARC House. A Board Member and Past President of the Key West Garden Club, and Board Member of Art In Public Places, her hobbies include gardening, theater, literature, music, movies and travel. Rosi narrated the first NEA-funded workshop of A Thousand Splendid Suns which saw its world premiere at Seattle Opera in 2023.

Tomasz Jedrowski, author, is a graduate of Cambridge University and Université de Paris. Swimming in the Dark is his debut novel and was the subject of a hotly contested six-way publishing auction. Bloomsbury gained the rights. It was one of the most popular LGBTQ books of 2020, and was selected as a Book of the Year by The Guardian, NPR, Attitude Magazine, O Magazine and others. It has now been translated into 18 languages. Tomasz was born in Germany to Polish parents. He speaks English, French, German & Polish. He is currently writing his second novel.
photo by Kuba Dabrowski

Mezzo-soprano, Deanne Meek has had an active international career since the mid-1990’s appearing in major opera houses including La Scala, the Metropolitan Opera, Teatro Real (Madrid), Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie, Opéra de Lyon, Teatro Colón, Théâtre du Châtelet, Gran Teatre del Liceu & the English National Opera. In the US she has sung roles at the LA Opera, Dallas Opera, Washington Opera, Seattle Opera among others. She made her European debut as Donna Elvira in Mozart’s Don Giovanni in Dublin, followed by performances throughout the UK in roles such as Rosina in The Barber of Seville, Meg Page in Falstaff, Ruggiero in Alcina, and the title role in La Cenerentola. She champions contemporary works, creating the role of Ma Joad in Ricky Ian Gordon’s The Grapes of Wrath with Minnesota Opera and performing roles such as Jo March in Little Women & Mrs. DeRocher in Dead Man Walking. Meek appeared at The Studios of Key West as Fariba in the first opera workshop of A Thousand Splendid Suns in 2016.

Praised as “expressive, dynamic & vocally splendid,” baritone Michael Kelly is sought-after for his riveting interpretations of recital, concert and operatic repertoire. Mr. Kelly has recently performed at Santa Fe Opera, Carnegie Hall, with New York City Opera, the New World Symphony, Seattle Symphony and the Cincinnati May Festival. He performed Bernstein’s Mass with the Mostly Mozart Festival, and gave the World Premiere of a new chamber work by David Del Treidici at NYC’s Symphony Space. In recent seasons he has been heard in Schubert’s Die Schöne Müllerin, as Hannah Before in Kaminsky’s As One, Figaro in The Barber of Seville, Papageno in Mozart’s Magic Flute, Brahms’ Ein Deutsches Requiem, and the title role in the NY premier of Carlyle Floyd’s newest opera Prince of Players. In May, 2025, he will originate the role of Harvey Milk in the World Premiere of Harvey Milk by composer Stewart Wallace and librettist Michael Korie at Opera Parallèle. Kelly is known to Key West audiences for his solo performance at The Studios of Key West in The Pleasing Recollection, a Cabaret Opera, by Hennessy and Kitsakos.

$275 VIP table for four, $50 general admission
La Cucaracha Chronicles presents A Reincarnation of Anne Bonny, Mary Read and Grace O’Malley, a new installment of the popular Smugglers’ Tales series, this time featuring the stories of female smugglers. Tony Yaniz moderates a freeform conversation between three female smugglers and a law enforcement official. As with previous Tales, their stories are completely uncensored – what’s told in the theater doesn’t leave the room!
Please note: When purchasing a VIP table it is reserved under your name for you and up to 3 guests.

PEAR Brittany Reeber presents a survey of Sunshine State cinema that spans 70 years of filmmaking and ranges from Hollywood studio classics to oddball documentary and contemporary independent stunners. We’ll explore how the Florida landscape is portrayed. What are the clichés and how are they occasionally subverted? How can a place be a character and how can a setting serve to underscore themes such as escapism, desire, consumption or impermanence?

PEAR John Graham has been the writer, producer, director and editor of 9 short art films that have been screened at over 200 film festivals, gallery venues and awards ceremonies in over 40 countries. Many of these film projects have won Best Film and Best Experimental Film and nominations for awards. His tenth art film, STILL HERE / IMMERDAR was shot in Berlin in 2023 and released in early 2024. This poetic and philosophical film explores the theme of dying beautifully.

$45, $35 mbrs.
Attendees are encouraged to bring a canned good for SOS food bank. A portion of the ticket proceeds will also be donated to the SOS Foundation.
Celebrate the season of gratitude and generosity with a jazz concert featuring celebrated vocalist Libby York, with Tom Vaitsas, piano and Jeff Dalton, bass. Welcome the holiday season with a show that entertains while giving back. Attendees are encouraged to bring a canned good for SOS Food Bank. A portion of the ticket proceeds will also be donated.
A regular at the top venues in New York, Chicago and Paris, celebrated vocalist Libby York has been called “a jazz singer of cool composure and artful subtlety” by The New York Times. Her critically acclaimed album “DreamLand” (Origin Records) was among DownBeat Magazine’s Best of the Year. “..spotlights her membership in a generation of jazz singers—including Sandy Stewart, Mary Stallings and the late Carol Sloane–who could wrap themselves around a lyric and, with a deep dive, tell a powerful story.” NYC Jazz Record. Libby has recently been welcomed as a voting member of The Recording Academy (Grammys).
Chicago-based jazz pianist Tom Vaitsas started playing professionally in 1992, pulling inspiration from Chicago’s south side scene and from legendary jazz saxophonist Von Freeman.He has performed concerts with jazz greats Von Freeman and Dee Dee Bridgewater and continues to perform at concerts and clubs in and out of Chicago with various groups.
Bassist Jeff Dalton has performed thousands of shows and sessions and recorded with artists from the US, Italy, Spain, Honduras, the Netherlands and Mexico. Dalton makes his home in Key West, but also continues to perform and record with the Lunar Octet and Aron Kaufman’s Dream Ensemble out of Ann Arbor, MI.

$100 front row, $50, $40 mbrs.
$100 front row, $60, $50 mbrs.
When you listen to Over the Rhine, the supremely talented musical couple comprised of Karin Bergquist and Linford Detweiler, you quickly fall under the spell of Karin’s timeless voice “which has the power to stop the world in its tracks” (Performing Songwriter). But then the songs start hitting you. Paste magazine writes, “Over the Rhine creates true confessional masterpieces that know neither border nor boundary” and included Bergquist and Detweiler in their list of 100 Best Living Songwriters. Rolling Stone recently wrote, Over the Rhine is a band “with no sign of fatigue, whose moment has finally arrived.” That’s quite a sentiment for a band celebrating 30 years of writing, recording, and life on the road. But as Karin Bergquist states, “There is still so much music left to be made.” Love & Revelation, the new album from Over the Rhine, is a record for right now. The songs have been rigorously road tested and burst at the seams with loss, lament, and resilient hope. The LA Times writes, “The Ohio based husband and wife duo has long been making soul-nourishing music, and the richness only deepens.”
Old Town New Folk is underwritten by Nick and Lorie Howley, with additional support from Doug and Sherri Montgomery, John and Marilyn Rintamaki, Nell Smets, and Michael Blades and Kathy Kilroy. Series sponsored by Blue Heaven

$75 front row, $50, $40 mbrs.
$100 front row, $60, $50 mbrs.
Ellis Paul doesn’t just write songs; he’s a guitar-carrying reporter who covers the human condition and details the hopes, loves, losses of those he observes, turning their stories into luminous pieces of music that get under your skin and into your bloodstream. And much like the artists who have influenced him, everyone from Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan and Paul Simon to the singer-songwriter who is undoubtedly his greatest inspiration, Woody Guthrie, Paul weaves deeply personal experiences with social issues and renders them as provocative works that are as timely as they are timeless. Born and raised in Maine, Paul attended Boston College on a track scholarship and in the evenings became a fixture on the city’s open mic circuit. After winning a Boston Acoustic Underground songwriter competition, he caught the ear of folk luminary Bill Morrissey, who produced his indie album Say Something in 1993. This led to a seven-album contract with Rounder Records and the 1994 album, Stories. His songs have appeared in several blockbuster films (Me, Myself, and Irene; Shallow Hal, Hall Pass) and have been covered by award winning country artists (Sugarland, Kristian Bush, Jack Ingram). Through a steady succession of albums of his own – a remarkable 23 releases so far – and a constant touring presence around the world, Paul’s audience has grown into a loyal legion of fans. Along the way, he has picked up an impressive number of awards including the prestigious Kerrville New Folk Award, 15 Boston Music Awards, An Honorary Doctorate from the University of Maine, the 2019 International Acoustic Music Awards Artist of the Year and most recently his album, The Storyteller’s Suitcase, was named the 2019 NERFA Album of the Year.
Drawing from a multitude of influences ranging from elegant classical and jazz styles to the rawest, most basic blues, country and soul, Radoslav Lorković has taken on an unusually broad musical spectrum and refined it into his distinctive piano style. His tenure on the R&B and folk circuits has culminated in five critically acclaimed solo recordings and numerous appearances on the recordings of and performances with artists including Odetta, Jimmy LaFave, Ribbon of Highway Woody Guthrie Tribute, Greg Brown, Richard Shindell, Ellis Paul, Ronny Cox, Dave Moore, Andy White, and Bo Ramsey. His thirty year touring career has led him from the taverns of the upper Mississippi River to the castles of Italy, The Canary Islands, The Yup’ik villages of Alaska, The Kennedy Center and Carnegie Hall. Influenced by his grandmothers, Antonija and Melita, who introduced him to Croatian folk songs and classical music, Lorković showed musical talent from a young age. Moving to the U.S. at six, he was poised for a classical music career until a friend taught him the blues scale at fourteen, igniting his passion for blues. By twenty, Lorković was touring with Bo Ramsey and the Sliders, mastering boogie-woogie and delving deeper into blues. He fused his classical heritage with blues and expanded his repertoire to include Tex-Mex and Zydeco accordion.
Old Town New Folk is underwritten by Nick and Lorie Howley, with additional support from Doug and Sherri Montgomery, John and Marilyn Rintamaki, Nell Smets, and Michael Blades and Kathy Kilroy. Series sponsored by Blue Heaven