Posts tagged 2026
Ivelisse Jimenez:Campo de Resonancia

Ivelisse Jiménez’s practice presents visual propositions concerning the construction of meaning in dialogue with the inhabited space. Her work has been exhibited in the United States, Europe, Latin America, and Puerto Rico, including Prague Art Biennale, Ecuador’s Cuenca Biennale, and  Special Project Rooms at ARCO Madrid. She is the recipient of a Joan Mitchell Painters and Sculptors grant, Adolph and Esther Gottlieb Foundation grant, and Venice Italy Arte Laguna 1st Prize in Painting. Her work is part of collections at Museo del Barrio NY, Bronx Museum NY, Museo de Arte de PR, Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de PR, CAB de Burgos, Spain, among others. Jiménez holds a BA in Humanities from the University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras and an MFA from New York University. After living and working in New York for twenty years, she now has her residency and studio in Puerto Rico.

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Cory Robinson- Kept Secrets : Open Code

Indianapolis-based Cory Robinson builds on his CODEX series that employs a system of form typologies in varying combinations to generate unique compositions in both two- and three-dimensional works. Kept Secrets: Open Code uses this preordained design language to explore layered personal histories through recontextualized objects. The gallery is organized around three distinct spatial environments: the Church, the Court, and the Garten.

Made possible by the Efroymson Family Fund

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Tony Cokes: Untitled (m.j. the symptom)

Borrowing its text from assorted excerpts from the Mark Fisher-edited essay collection The Resistible Demise of Michael Jackson (2009), Untitled (m.j. the symptom) examines the King of Pop as a complex set of contradictory signifiers, a funhouse reflection that is as distinct, spectacular, and compromised as the culture that produced him. So say Kraftwerk in their haunting 1977 song “Hall of Mirrors”: “Even the greatest stars / find themselves in the looking glass.”

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You’re Standing Inside the Instrument: A Score for 19 Buildings

A collaborative sound-and-video installation that invites visitors to experience architecture in a new way — as an instrument. For the exhibition, 19 Indianapolis-based artists are each creating a short sound work using a single Indianapolis building as the sole sound source. A panel of locally based architects and built-environment experts selected the buildings, grounding the project in sites of architectural, cultural, and material significance across the city.

Presented across multiple listening and viewing stations, the works create an evolving installation in which sound and image intersect and overlap. Each composition is accompanied by a silent, static video portrait of the building that generated it.

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Will Higgins: The Speedway's Attic

Every city has an official version of itself. Indianapolis has the Indianapolis Motor Speedway — monument, mythology, Greatest Spectacle in Racing.

This is not that. The Speedway’s Attic is unofficial. It is unsanctioned. The stories here are hard to believe. But believe them. They are true, all of them.

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Jess Dunn & Sylvia Thomas: Drafts

For their first collaboration, Jess Dunn and Sylvia Thomas were prompted to create a piece focusing on the new renovation for the Contemporary Art Museum of Indianapolis (CAMi) campus. In an attempt to interpret history and the building itself, the artists combined their backgrounds in animation and music composition to create an experimental documentary. Through exploring archives, primary source documents, and artifacts found inside the building, the artists learned this site took on many forms: from the land of the indigenous peoples who first inhabited it, to farmland, to various industrial developments, and now its current state as a premier contemporary arts complex.

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Chicken Chapel of Love

An act of devotion to the divine feminine — not in opposition to the world’s great religious traditions, but as a counterbalance to them. Where many of those traditions center the divine masculine and place humanity in dominion over the natural world, the Chapel asks a different question: what would it mean to be accountable to it instead? To tend to it, to listen to it, to recognize the sacred in the creature we have used, overlooked, and eaten for three thousand years? The Chapel offers a space — gilded and feathered and candlelit — for that older, quieter form of reverence.

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Mae Alice Engron

Born in Indianapolis, Mae Alice Engron (1942–2007) was a pioneering Black abstract expressionist. A Herron School of Art alumna, she turned to painting at age 40 after a workplace injury. Known for her "controlled drip" technique using poured ink and oil, she blended organic forms with vibrant Neo-Expressionism.

Engron broke barriers for Black women in pure abstraction, exhibiting alongside icons like Robert Indiana and Alma Thomas. Her work was featured in groundbreaking shows from Indianapolis to Los Angeles, cementing her legacy as a seminal visionary. Today, her paintings are held by the Smithsonian and the Indiana State Museum.

This exhibit features lesser known works purchased in the last two years at auction and is in partnership with Engron’s daughter, Michelle Daniels.

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exhibitionShauta Marsh2026
Crossroads

Eighteen artists whose work explores Indianapolis and Indiana as intersections of place, culture, and identity. Through their work curator India Hines highlights the complex dimensions of life here through artists’ relations to local histories, community spaces, inner landscapes, and the city’s influence on their lived experiences.

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exhibitionShauta Marsh2026