The DRAW Gallery early exhibits
The DRAW Gallery is our Midtown Kingston exhibition space located at 24 Iwo Jima Lane, Kingston, NY 1240.
Our exhibitions feature work by Kingston High School and Youth Workforce (fka PUGG) alumni, The DRAW teaching artists, community partners and student work from our classes.
Exhibits are illuminated at night and visible 24/7 from Cedar Street.
Exhibits
“Saturn Walk” by China Blue, Nov. 9- Dec. 2, 2023
Listen to the Cosmos with China Blue, combining art, sound, and science, this exhibit will find you following an interactive maze whilst listening to the continuous low pitch hum of the far-off planet Saturn
The Annual Teaching Artists Show, Sept. 16-Oct. 28, 2023
Artist including Wayne Montecalvo, Tatana Kellner, Natalie Renganeschi, Ana O’Keefe, Lara Giordano, Beth Humphrey, Chris O’Neal, Laura Moriarty, Carol Struve, Judith Hoyt, Josh Kramb and Maxine Leu.
“Pieces of B” by Ben Eichert, Feb. 2023
Pieces of B shows a selection of Ben Eichert’s photography from 2015 to 2019 and a handful of acrylic paintings from 2022 when he was going through a photographic drought and decided to try something new.
Material Heritage, Ben Wigfall project show, 2023
Over the course of 3 months PUGG has worked with numerous collaborators to explore the legacy of Benjamin Wigfall, a local artist/visionary whose life and work as a printmaker, educator, and community activist served as a model for bringing people together in a shared creative community.
PUGG presents Material Heritage; a multi-hyphenate exploration into community storytelling through material, layered processes, and collective record. Inspired by the abounding legacy of Communications Village, this group exhibition is a culmination of studio visits, workshops, and discussions on art as a tool for survival. In what ways may practice, process, and community care give way to sustenance? How can records of past and present lend themselves to nurtured futures? What is possible with the materials at hand? Perhaps we already have everything we need. Having seen through to survival, is there potential now to flourish?
For more info: https://www.pugg.space/ben-wigfall-project
“Todd Samara: A Lifetime of Art” Aug.15- Sept.17, 2022
Todd Samara (1944-2020) lived and painted in Kingston’s Rondout neighborhood for many years. He captured the life of the neighborhood in vividly colored landscapes, streetscapes, interior scenes and portraits of area residents. This exhibit consists of paintings, mostly landscapes of Rondout, with a few inventive studio views and figure studies and works on paper of various subjects. Several large panoramas of the creek are also on display. All works are for sale and the proceeds will go to the Todd Samara Art Fund in which an award is given out every year open to artists working in a variety of disciplines.
For more info: www.ToddSamara.com
“Kerry Madison: recent works” Jul. 2 – Aug. 15, 2022
Kerry Madison is an interdisciplinary artist living in making in upstate NY. Her work investigates ideas of time, intimacy, narrative, place, and identity. Hands-on processes including drawing, painting, printmaking, ceramics, and fibers are used to tell stories that move between specificity and ubiquity.
“RETHINKING” Interactive Exhibit, April 9 – 22, 2022
“Rethinking” is part of the Eco Arts Week hosted by D.R.A.W. from April 9 -16th, 2022. The community was invited to participate in this collaborative art installation made by Maxine Leu. Participants drew and wrote their own Do’s and Don’ts for a healthier environment on cardboard puzzle pieces. For example, “Do reuse a dedicated water bottle. This will reduce the amount of single-use plastics that are polluting our planet!” or “Don’t waste food. Save your leftovers for a second meal!”
Check out the full story: Eco Arts Week at D.R.A.W 2022
Listening With Pauline, Mar. 5 – 27, 2022
A Sampling of Text Scores & Deep Listening Prompts by composer, educator and humanitarian Pauline Oliveros, in honor of Women’s History Month.
Pauline Oliveros’ life as a composer, performer and humanitarian was about opening her own and others’ sensibilities to the universe and facets of sounds. Her career spanned fifty years of boundary dissolving music making. In the ’50s she was part of a circle of iconoclastic composers, artists and poets gathered together in San Francisco. In the 1960’s she influenced American music profoundly through her work with improvisation, meditation, electronic music, myth and ritual. She was the recipient of four Honorary Doctorates and among her many recent awards were the William Schuman Award for Lifetime Achievement, Columbia University, New York, NY, The Giga-Hertz-Award for Lifetime Achievement in Electronic Music from ZKM, Center for Art and Media, Karlsruhe, Germany and The John Cage award from the Foundation of Contemporary Arts.
STILL LISTENING IN KINGSTON PROJECT: An initiative to continue the work and teachings of composer and Kingston resident Pauline Oliveros. Deep Listening is a listening practice that heightens awareness of sound and sounding, distinguishing the difference between listening and hearing. ‘Deep Listening is my life practice,” Oliveros explained, simply. Her creative work is currently disseminated through The Pauline Oliveros Trust and the Ministry of Maåt, Inc. of Kingston, NY.
For More Info: www.ministryofmaat.org











