More than Two Hundred Artists Selected for The Brooklyn Artists Exhibition

The sweeping group show celebrates the diversity of Brooklyn’s creatives and the Brooklyn Museum’s rich history of championing the borough’s artists.

The Brooklyn Museum is proud to announce the selection of more than two hundred artists for The Brooklyn Artists Exhibition, which will open on the occasion of the Museum’s 200th anniversary. This extensive group show highlights the remarkable creativity and diversity of Brooklyn’s artistic communities. Reflecting on a rich history of fostering creativity and championing artists of all backgrounds, the Museum’s bicentennial is an opportunity to honor the borough’s artistic heritage while looking ahead to its bright and creative future. Artists were selected through a collaborative effort led by esteemed Artist Committee members Jeffrey Gibson, Vik Muniz, Mickalene Thomas, and Fred Tomaselli, all of whom are Brooklyn Museum Artist Trustees. The selection process consisted of two phases: invitations from the Artist Committee and a public Open Call that garnered nearly 4,000 applications.

“For years artists have been asking us to organize a big Brooklyn artists exhibition, and now we’ve done it!” says Anne Pasternak, Shelby White and Leon Levy Director, Brooklyn Museum. “Brooklyn has more artists than anywhere, and we are thrilled to expand the ways we support the excellence of our incredible borough.”

The artworks selected for the exhibition reflect Brooklyn’s vibrant and dynamic art scene, spanning a wide range of artistic disciplines including drawing, painting, collage and assemblage, video, multimedia, installation, and sculpture.

Throughout the exhibition’s run, a series of public programs will highlight selected artists whose practice involves performance.

Showcasing a snapshot of Brooklyn’s creative output over the past five years, the artists in this exhibition explore and challenge contemporary themes that resonate both locally and globally, such as migration, cross-cultural exchange, identity, history, and memory. The presentation also highlights collective care, healing, joy, solidarity, uncertainty, and turbulence, intertwined with material experimentation.

Together, these works paint a rich portrait of what makes Brooklyn uniquely “Brooklyn”: a borough teeming with a vast diversity of people, vibrant and pulsing with energy and activity. The exhibition celebrates the inventiveness and innovation of Brooklyn’s artists, connected by mutual love and respect as collaborators, neighbors, friends, and family.

The full list of selected artists are:

Evelyn Adams aka Nana Ama Nyinka, Destinie Adélakun, Seongmin Ahn, Scott Albrecht, Danielle Alhassid, Jonathan Allen, Kadine Anckle, Kate Bae, Felipe Baeza, Michael Ballou, Yevgeniya Baras, Sarah Bedford, Hannah Beerman, Aisha Tandiwe Bell, Jane Benson, Damien Olsen Berdichevsky, Magda Biernat, Samantha Bittman, Lucas Blalock, Sebastiaan Bremer, Johanna Burke, Stephen Burks, Kimberly Bush, Paul Campbell, Mary Carlson, Jazmine Catasús, Geoffrey Chadsey, Henry Hung Chang, Ruby Chishti, Jasmine Clarke, Jennifer Coates, Wendy Cohen, Karen Cunningham, Jennifer Dalton, Lisa Corinne Davis, Isis Davis-Marks, E. V. Day, Leah DeVun, Lisa di Donato, Rodney Ewing, Sean Fader, Mohammed Iman Fayaz, Keltie Ferris, Alanna Fields, Jane Fine, Leo Fine, Laurena Finéus, Avram Finkelstein, Tatiana Florival, Amaryllis R. Flowers, France François, Ronen Gamil, Teri Gandy-Richardson, Chitra Ganesh, Scherezade García, Prajwal Godse, Anthony Goicolea, Shosh Goller, Tamara Gonzales, Isamar Gonzalez, Garry Grant, Stanley Greenberg, Katya Grokhovsky, Nancy Grossman, Haoua Habré, George Hagen, Richard Haining, Susan Hamburger, Ilana Harris- Babou, Heather Hart, Elana Herzog, Eric Hibit, Honorroller, Jackie Hoving, Sumin Hwang, James Hyde, Sarra Hussein Idris, Michelle Im, Madjeen Isaac, Yoko Iwanaga, Katherine Jackson, Swati Jain, Lutfi Janania, Gaël Jean-Louis, Ruichao Jiang, Khari Johnson-Ricks, Bo Joseph, Melissa Joseph, Yaz Josiah, Brad Kahlhamer, Sophia Karwowski, Nina Katchadourian, Nathan Kensinger, Jon Kessler, Jarrett Key, Kyung Tae Kim, Yongjae Kim, Matthew Kirk, Sonomi Kobayashi, Tamara Kostianovsky, Fay Ku, Alison Kuo, Gabrielle Lansner, Athena LaTocha, An-My Lê, Emilie Lemakis, Sujin Lim, Lin Qiqing, Emily Loughlin, Lisa Ludwig, Sylvia Maier, Emily Manwaring, Guadalupe Maravilla, Karen Margolis, Chris Martin, Rachel Martin, Mario Martinez, Ingrid Mathurin, Esperanza Mayobre, Josiah McElheny, Frederick Mershimer, Sam Messer, Caleb Miller, Steven Montgomery, Jaye Moon, T. Dylan Moore, Livia Mourão, Donna Moylan, Cheryl Mukherji, Loren Munk, Timothy Paul Myers, Mayumi Nakao, Rita Nannini, Martha Naranjo Sandoval, Narcissister, Susan Newmark, Danielle Noel, Dynasty Ogun, Soull Ogun, Clayton Okaly, Ozodi Onyeabor, Allison Michael Orenstein, Laura Ortman, Yaw Owusu, Tinuade Oyelowo, Norm Paris, Quiana Parks, Cate Pasquarelli, Rhesa Paul, Lindsay Perryman, Jamaal Peterman, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya, Naudline Pierre, Samora Pinderhughes and Christian Padron, , Colin Radcliffe, Erika Ranee, Rob Raphael, Mark Reigelman, Naomi Reis, Resurrect Studio LLC, Vernando Reuben, Erin M. Riley, Pema Rinzin, Ilisa Katz Rissman, Matthew Ritchie, Leslie Roberts, Alex Dolores Salerno, Gwyneth Scally, Hiba Schahbaz, Rick Secen, Michelle Segre, Lauren Seiden, Jonathan Seliger, David Shaw, Bobby Silverman, Kuldeep Singh, Tuesday Smillie, Jane South, Susan Špiranović, Sharon Sprung, Monica Srivastava, Josh Sucher, Takura Suzuki, Assane Sy, Catherine Tafur, Hidemi Takagi, Alison Elizabeth Taylor, Leo Tecosky, Dannielle Tegeder, Mary Temple, Darryl DeAngelo Terrell, Jade Thacker, Zac Thompson, Jim Torok, A. R. Tran, Janaina Tschäpe, Juan Pablo Uribe, William Villalongo, Sophia Wallace, Cyle Warner, Kit Warren, Chris Weller, Michelle Wen, Tabitha Whitley, Tracie Dawn Williams, Oliver Wilson, Qualeasha Wood, Kenny Wu, Akiko Yamamoto, Jason Bard Yarmosky, Betty Yu, Halley Zien, Brenda Zlamany, Balint Zsako.

About the Brooklyn Museum

For 200 years, the Brooklyn Museum has been recognized as a trailblazer. Through a vast array of exhibitions, public programs, and community-centered initiatives, it continues to broaden the narratives of art, uplift a multitude of voices, and center creative expression within important dialogues of the day. Housed in a landmark building in the heart of Brooklyn, the Museum is home to an astounding encyclopedic collection. More than 140,000 objects represent cultures worldwide and over 5,500 years of history—from ancient Egyptian masterpieces to significant American works, to groundbreaking installations presented in the only feminist art center of its kind. One of the oldest and largest art museums in the country, the Brooklyn Museum remains committed to innovation, creating compelling experiences for its communities and celebrating the power of art to inspire awe, conversation, and joy.

Credits

The Brooklyn Artists Exhibition is organized by Jeffrey Gibson, Vik Muniz, Mickalene Thomas, and Fred Tomaselli and coordinated by Sharon Matt Atkins, Deputy Director for Art; Lauren Bierly, Senior Exhibition Project Manager; and Jennie Tang, Special Exhibition Administrator; with support from Kimberli Gant, Curator, Modern and Contemporary Art; Carmen Hermo, former Associate Curator, Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art; and Catherine Morris, Senior Curator, Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art, Brooklyn Museum.

With tremendous gratitude, we thank the Brooklyn Museum Board of Trustees for their visionary support and commitment to the breadth of Museum and citywide celebrations as we embark on our 200th year. It is with appreciation to them and to the supporters of The Brooklyn Artists Exhibition that we are honored to present the works of local artists who make our community what it is today.

Sponsored by UOVO

Leadership support for The Brooklyn Artists Exhibition is provided by Miyoung Lee and Neil Simpkins, the Joe and Clara Tsai Foundation’s Social Justice Fund, and Barbara and John Vogelstein.

Significant support is provided by the Brooklyn Museum’s Contemporary Art Committee, Rona and Jeffrey Citrin, and Stephanie and Tim Ingrassia.

Generous support is provided by Shelley Fox Aarons and Philip Aarons, Molly Gochman, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, and Scott Rofey and Olivia Song.

Additional support is provided by the Arts, Equity, and Education Fund, Hope Dana and John Perkins, Cary Davis and John McGinn, the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, Lisa Kim and Eunu Chun, Carol Sutton Lewis and William M. Lewis, Gregory R. Miller and Michael Wiener, Susan and Peter Restler, and the Roy and Niuta Titus Foundation.