(FRENCHTOWN, NJ) ArtYard presents Invisible, an exhibition featuring the work of twelve artists whose practices examine omitted histories, imperceptible forces, and unspoken narratives which render that which is apparent, misleading, or incomplete. In illuminating invisible forms of labor, unspoken emotional states, and unnoticed effects of human presence, the exhibition examines what the author Svetlana Alexievich calls “the missing history the invisible imprint of our stay on Earth and in time.” Invisible will be on view at ArtYard from January 16 to April 10.
Artist Cheryl Humphreys. Photography by Stephen Archer.
To mark Maestro Dobel Tequila’s sustained support of the arts and cultures of Mexico, Artnet is teaming up with the brand to support the Pocoapoco artists’ residency in the south of the country. In celebration of the residency’s ethos of intelligent innovation, and its drive to uphold and transform tradition, the spirit-maker will make a donation to assist its operations. This interview is part of a series of three with artists who have passed through the program.
Cheryl Humphreys, the Los Angeles-based printmaker whose work focuses on healing and meditation, came to the Pocoapoco residency in Mexico without expectations.