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Event Calendar

Stay up to date on upcoming gallery exhibitions, projects, and collaborations in St. Louis.

 

Check our collection of arts related events happening around St. Louis.

WE’RE BAAAAACK!!!

Much like the poltergeist from the feature film Poltergeist 2, in person events are back! Because scheduling is scary enough, Silver Space is here to help. Behold, our virtual baby - The Events Calendar - revived by popular demand. Here you can find out when the next gallery opening is, where you can hear free artist talks, and even what you missed out on because you didn’t check the calendar like you should have in the first place. Shame!

If you have an exhibition, event, artist talk, opening, or something tangentially associated, email marinam@silverspacestl.com and we’ll do our best to get you on!

ALINGERING NOTE: in-person gatherings during covid

During these Quarantimes, we wish everyone the best health and happiness. We are proud to support local galleries, museums, and businesses who are working tirelessly to provide you enjoyable experiences and services. With that being said, we encourage everyone to take proper precautions and mindfulness when spending time in public spaces.

Be sure to visit each venue’s website for information on their COVID-19
business hours, guidelines, and mask policies.


If you are still unsure how to protect yourself and others, please visit the World Health Organization's website for more advice and updates on the COVID-19 outbreak.


 

 
Back to All Events

Take Receipts and Put it on Blast! Pop-up

Join the artists of Cute Rage Press for a pop-up installation of banners from the Protest Banner Lending Library and public workshops at The Luminary on Friday, May 18, 7–10pm. We recommend visitors to arrive at 7pm to be able to complete banners.

Aram Han Sifuentes, Ishita Dharap, and Tabitha Anne Kunkes will lead simultaneous workshops where people can create protest banners, fill out pages of Taking Receipts: A Log of Aggression for People of Color, and make their own Put It On Blast: Call It Out and Label It! stickers. Banners created at the pop-up event can be for personal use or added to the Protest Banner Lending Library, an ongoing project on view through August 11, 2018 at the Pulitzer Arts Foundation. The sticker creation coincides with Put It On Blast: Call It Out and Label It!, a project that invites people to label discriminatory behavior with unique stickers. Put It On Blast is part of Taking Receipts: A Log of Aggression for People of Color, a book aimed to empower people of color to take detailed logs of their daily encounters of aggression and discrimination.

This event is presented in partnership with the Pulitzer Arts Foundation. 

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Aram Han Sifuentes is the Pulitzer Arts Foundation's artist-in-residence through August 2018. Sifuentes is a fiber, social practice, and performance artist who works to claim spaces for immigrant and disenfranchised communities. Her work often revolves around skill sharing, specifically sewing techniques, to create multiethnic and intergenerational sewing circles, which become a place for empowerment, subversion, and protest. Her work has been exhibited and performed at the Jane Addams Hull-House Museum (Chicago, IL), Chicago Cultural Center (Chicago, IL), Whitney Museum of American Art (New York City, NY), Asian Arts Initiative (Philadelphia, PA), Chung Young Yang Embroidery Museum (Seoul, South Korea), Centro de Textiles del Mundo Maya (Chiapas, Mexico), and the Design Museum (London, UK). She is a 2016 Smithsonian Artist Research Fellow, a 2016 3Arts Awardee, and a 2017 Sustainable Arts Foundation Awardee. She earned her BA in Art and Latin American Studies from the University of California, Berkeley, and her MFA in Fiber and Material Studies from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She is currently an Adjunct Assistant Professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Ishita Dharap is a visual artist, designer, and art educator. She studied interdisciplinary design at the Srishti Institute of Art, Design and Technology (Bangalore, India) and experiential education at the Kaveri College of Arts, Science and Commerce (Pune, India). Dharap’s art practice spans drawing, installations, and objects through which she engages with themes of play and meaning-making, which she views as a link to explore how learning occurs in formal and informal environments. She lives and works in Chicago, Illinois.

Tabitha Anne Kunkes is a Chicago based visual artist who focused on the process of art making, seeing it as a catalyst for conversations with family and community. Kunkes views her art as an evolving exploration into discovering how processes become, change, and grow. She earned her BFA in Studio Art, and is currently a MA candidate in Art Therapy and Counseling at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Cute Rage Press is a collaborative project by Aram Han Sifuentes and Ishita Dharap, who are dedicated to empower femmes of color to call out racism and discrimination experienced in everyday life.