Feb 15 Sunday
The Julian Scott Memorial Gallery is pleased to present an MFA student exhibit featuring Jay Haywood. Born and raised in NYC, Jay is a fashion photographer and designer.
The exhibit runs from January 20 to February 20, 2026, with a closing reception and artist talk on February 19th from 12-2 pm.
The gallery is located on the Vermont State University Johnson campus. For more information, follow us on social media at: VTSU-Johnson Campus Art Department or call. (802) 635-1469.
Feb 16 Monday
Feb 17 Tuesday
Feb 18 Wednesday
Feb 19 Thursday
Feb 20 Friday
Mar 26 Thursday
Join Sculptural Ideas artist Lee Williams for a discussion of intuition, creativity, and the influence of geography and color on his artistic practice.
A native of Wales, Williams shares insights into how living in Vermont influences his approach to creating sculpture and why color is a key element in his work.
Lee Williams is an arts educator at the Southern Vermont Art Center and the River Arts School.
Mar 28 Saturday
Please join us for an evening with Nick Meyer, as he discusses Good Bones, a newly released body of work and book that reflects on parenthood, history, anxiety, and the uneasy rhythms of contemporary life.
Good Bones emerges from Meyer’s experience of raising a young family amid overlapping crises. Moving fluidly between the intimate and the societal, the work grapples with questions of legacy, responsibility, and how to remain attentive to moments of care and joy in an era shaped by uncertainty and relentless news cycles. Drawing a parallel to Gary Winogrand’s restless mid-career doubts, Meyer positions this project as both a self-portrait and a document of its time: an attempt to look clearly at the present while acknowledging the ways history repeats, erodes, and persists.
In this talk, Meyer will speak about the making of the book, the ideas that shaped the work, and how photography functions for him as a way to sit with ambiguity rather than resolve it. The evening will include a presentation followed by conversation and audience questions. Copies of the book, along with Archive, another release from Meyer’s imprint Nowhere Books, will be available for purchase.
This event is open to all and especially suited for anyone interested in contemporary documentary practice, photobooks, and work that bridges personal experience with broader cultural reflection.
Apr 21 Tuesday
January 8-April 23rd, 2026Reception: January 17, 5:30-7pm
ZERO CELSIUS unfolds at Mad Arts and Sugarbush Resort, bringing together artwork that explores the textures, tensions, and transformations of winter. From the hush of frozen landscapes to the volatility of a warming climate, the exhibition reflects on how the cold season shapes—and is reshaped by—human and environmental relationships.Featuring sculpture, installation, sound, photography, and digital media, ZERO CELSIUS examines winter as material, concept, and metaphor: crystalline, fleeting, and ecologically vital. Visitors are invited to consider the fragility of snow in a changing world, reconnect with winter’s wonder and silence, and share their own stories of a season both timeless and increasingly imperiled.
Apr 22 Wednesday
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Apr 24 Friday
Apr 25 Saturday
Apr 28 Tuesday
Apr 29 Wednesday
Apr 30 Thursday
May 01 Friday
May 02 Saturday
May 05 Tuesday
May 06 Wednesday