Solo Exhibitions
In The Sea Around Us, Michele Lauriat presents large-scale, experimental drawings of real, fictional, and imagined landscapes that call attention to environmental concerns.
Nathan Bolton presents images of the Los Angeles Rebellion, one of the United States’ four original Queer/Inclusive rugby teams, as they return for their twentieth season amid increasingly anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric nationwide.
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The first-ever solo show by summer 2023 artist-in-residence Lilan Yang.
“Now Introducing Mr. Blank is a solo exhibit about the stripping of identity under capitalism—the removal of nuance from human existence. Griffin Fisher’s work forces us to ask: How do we view ourselves, as opposed to how an imperfect social order categorizes us?
Distant Early Warning Line, a solo exhibition of images made in Greenland by Victoria Crayhon, is an ongoing photographic study of the visible effects created by current international presence (including presence by the US and China) in Greenland and its multi-pronged attempt to benefit from climate change—specifically the ice melt.
The work on view in this exhibition was made by artist in residence Mike Howat. During his time as the 2022 Gallery 263 artist in residence over the course of six weeks this summer. During his residency, the artist created large-scale acrylic paintings, cardboard sculptures, and aerial drawings inspired by apartment buildings and other architecture in the neighborhoods…
With Rifts and Collapses is the first-ever solo exhibition in New England by photographer Hannah Altman. This show is part of Gallery 263’s Exhibition Proposal Series, a competitive program juried by the staff and board of the gallery. In With Rifts and Collapses, Hannah Altman displays small and medium-scale images that consider Jewish storytelling and…
In Listening Works, Chason-Sokol displays small and large-scale sculptures, or characters, made from the discarded materials of her life. At the gallery, the characters—each of which the artist considers an archive—are presented in a public environment where they can develop new conversations and relationships.
Cookout, a solo exhibition by Zach Horn contemplates the artist’s spiritual relationship with food. The multimedia pieces on view—which are made with acrylic paint, oil paint, plaster, and found objects, like spoons, mugs, forks, and cocktail umbrellas—function as a single installation. The artist began this body of work before the pandemic, back when terms like…