
Image credit: Ify Chiejina
Here We Are: Young, Black, and Indigenous Women in the Art World is a showcase of five New York-based woman artists who share their art as an extension of themselves. Featuring work by Jaclyn Burke, Ify Chiejina, Jodi Dareal, Debbie Roxx, and Arrianna Santiago, Here We Are explores aspects of culture and identity, while centering the experiences of young, Black, and Indigenous artists working in a field where they rarely see themselves reflected.
On view: August 20 – December 31, 2022
Friday – Saturday: 12:00 PM – 7:00 PM | Sunday: 11:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Newhouse Center for Contemporary Art – Gallery G, Galleries 3 & 4
Opening Day Party: August 20, 12:00 PM – 5:00 PM | Tickets here
Here We Are: Young Black and Indigenous Women in the Art World is made possible through generous support from the Samuel I. Newhouse Foundation, the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.
Using film photography and no digital manipulation, Julia Forrest poses nymph-like women in landscapes. Through mirrors, reflections, and forced perspective, Forrest creates an illusion in front of the lens. In Transcendence, a solo exhibition featuring new work by Forrest, seemingly docile subjects possess a mysterious power to move the landscape at will. Changing shape and scale, they pick up parts of the landscape while transforming it completely.
On view: August 20 – December 31, 2022
Friday – Saturday: 12:00 PM – 7:00 PM | Sunday: 11:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Newhouse Center for Contemporary Art – Gallery G, Galleries 1&2
Opening Day Party: August 20, 12:00 PM – 5:00 PM | Tickets here
Julia Forrest is a Brooklyn based artist. She works strictly in film and prints in a darkroom she built within her apartment. Her own art has always been her top priority in life and in this digital world, she will continue to work with old processing. Anything can simply be done in photoshop, she prefers to take the camera, a tool of showing reality, and experiment with what she can do in front of the lens. Julia is currently working as a teaching artist at the Brooklyn Museum, Abrons Art Center, and USDAN Center. As an instructor, she thinks it is important to understand that a person can constantly stretch and push the boundaries of their ideas with whatever medium of art s/he chooses. Her goal is for her audience to not only enjoy learning about photography, but to see the world in an entirely new way and continue to develop a future interest in the arts.
Julia Forrest: Transcendence is made possible through generous support from the Samuel I. Newhouse Foundation, the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.

Image credit: Marina Zamalin
With PARK Ephemera, choreographer Kathy Westwater presents a collection of work emerging from PARK, her nearly fifteen-year choreographic inquiry into the site of the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island, New York. Once the largest landfill in the world, the site is currently being transformed into a public park, a transition that Westwater has closely witnessed through her dance, somatic, and material practice.
On view: August 20 – December 31, 2022
Friday – Saturday: 12:00 PM – 7:00 PM | Sunday: 11:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Newhouse Center for Contemporary Art – Main Hall Gallery in Building C
Opening Day Party: August 20, 12:00 PM – 5:00 PM | Tickets here
August 20, 2:00 PM, Main Hall Gallery: Opening day performance of The Collapsing Duets by Kathy Westwater
With dancers Ilona Bito, Marisa Clementi, Thomas F. DeFrantz, Glenn Potter-Takata, Rakia Seaborn, Nathalia Trogdon, Alexander Romania, and Lu Yim
With live music by Sean Meehan
Mining her current and previous years of accumulated research at the site, PARK Ephemera is a time-capsule of past performances and an earlier era of environmental remediation, presented as the first portion of parkland opens to the public in Spring 2023. The work explores how environmental trauma, grief, and complicity can be collectively processed through the physical body and through dance. As a living archive, the exhibition brings together material spanning installation, sculpture, photography, video, poetry, and performance. With an eye to Fresh Kills’ hybrid composition of discarded, engineered, and natural materials, the exhibition engages embodied forms of making, unmaking, and making again.
As we continue to create landfills and sites like them, overwhelming the earth, Westwater probes the capacity of art to interrupt the individual and shared everyday rituals of throwing things away, to consider their destination. PARK Ephemera brings audiences into an intimate dialogue with waste matter, to imagine collective futures of regeneration.
In addition to her exhibition at the Newhouse Center, this Fall Westwater will present new performance research at Fresh Kills and Gibney Center in Manhattan.
Collaborating artists who have contributed to this work include: architect/visual artist Seung Jae Lee, photographers Anja Hitzenberger and Marina Zamalin, poet Jennifer Scappettone, videographers Mark Robison and Alexander Romania, musicians Sean Meehan and Tamio Shiraishi, and performers Ilona Bito, Marisa Clementi, Thomas F. DeFrantz, Alexander Romania, Rakia Seaborn, Stacy Lynn Smith, Glenn Potter-Takata, Nathalia Trogden, and Lu Yim, among others.
Kathy Westwater, described by the New Yorker as “an unconventional choreographer experiencing a surge of recognition” has choreographically pursued radical dance forms since 1996. Her work responds to the social landscape in which it manifests, often by taking up our most challenging experiences such as pain, as in her Bessie-nominated work Rambler, Worlds A Part (2019). With other major works she has explored the built environments of monuments (Anywhere, 2016) and landfills and parks (PARK, 2009-present); war and pain (Macho, 2008); intersections of human and animal culture (twisted, tack, broken, 2005); psycho-physical states of fear (Dark Matter, 2002); and interactive virtual environments (The Fortune Cookie Dance, 1999). Westwater is the recipient of the 2017 Solange MacArthur Award for New Choreography, the first woman to receive the prize. She was born in Virginia, grew up in Kentucky, and lives in the Bronx, NYC.
PARK Ephemera is made possible through generous support from the Samuel I. Newhouse Foundation, the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.
PARK is created with the support of a 2020-21 PASS/CUNY Dance Initiative residency at Snug Harbor Cultural Center and Botanical Garden and the College of Staten Island made possible through generous lead support from the Howard Gilman Foundation, with additional support from the Samuel I. Newhouse Foundation, and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council. Snug Harbor is a proud partner with the CUNY Dance Initiative.
PARK is supported by Dance/NYC’s Coronavirus Dance Relief Fund in 2020 & 2022; and, in part, by a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Emergency Grant and the FCA Emergency Grants COVID-19 Fund.
It is developed as part of Lower Manhattan Cultural Council’s Arts Center Residency program.
This project is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts, and by The Freshkills Park Alliance.
Theatrical performances of PARK are commissioned by Gibney and curated by Eva Yaa Asantewaa as part of the organization’s Gibney Presents series for the 2022-23 Season. This commission includes financial, residency, administrative, and production support.
Explore the fresh produce harvested from the Heritage Farm each week from June 2 to October 13. If you’re a CSA member, this is your pickup day!
WHEN: Thursdays June 2 – October 13, 2022 | June-September: 3:00 PM – 7:00 PM | October 3: 00 PM – 6:00 PM
WHERE: Compost Demonstration Site (See our campus map for directions)
Check out our Heritage Farm Stand Saturdays for more locally-grown goodness!
Learn about this week’s new crops and how to prepare them from our friendly and knowledgeable staff! Grown using organic techniques, this is the freshest produce you can find in Staten Island! Don’t forget to drop off your Food Scraps for the NYC Compost Project Hosted by Snug Harbor. Heritage Farm Stands are rain or shine.
Snug Harbor is one of Staten Island’s most beautiful historic destinations. And, if the legends are true, one of its most haunted…
This fall, join us for “Spooky Snug Harbor,” a series of nighttime walking tours aimed at shedding light on Snug Harbor’s darkest history.
WHEN: October 7, 14, 21, 28 | 8:00 PM, 9:00 PM, and 10:00 PM slots on each date. Each tour lasts one hour.
WHERE: Visitor Info Booth at Snug Harbor, at the intersection of Chapel Rd and Gazebo Rd
ADMISSION:
General admission: $25
Student/Senior: $25
Snug Harbor Member: $20
Halloween Special: Extended Tour
October 31, 8:00 PM – 9:30 PM
General admission: $30
Snug Harbor Member: $25
Guided by local history enthusiast Michael Pelczar, founder of Spooky Staten Island, you’ll hear never-before-published information on a flashlight tour of Snug Harbor:
Journey back in time to learn about murder, mayhem, and hauntings at Snug Harbor. Visit the final resting place of Captain Robert Randall, whose wealth willed Snug Harbor into existence, and ponder the mystery of Chaplain Quinn’s murder, a crime that gripped the nation. Learn about the 19th century disaster that rattled the harbor’s buildings and the unlikely reason its sole survivor escaped, and discover a disappearance that sent the institution into a frenzy.
Celebrate the Halloween season at one of Staten Island’s most iconic locations!
Explore the fresh produce harvested from the Heritage Farm each Saturday from May to November at the Heritage Farm Stand!
WHEN: Saturdays from May 7 – November 19 | 9:00 AM – 3:30 PM
***Note: The Heritage Farm Stand on Saturday, October 1 will be cancelled due to a heavy rain forecast. We apologize for the inconvenience.***
WHERE: Gazebo Road (See our campus map for directions)
Check out our Heritage Farm Stand Thursdays and Sundays for more locally-grown goodness!
We accept SNAP/EBT and P-EBT. Learn about this week’s new crops and how to prepare them from our friendly and knowledgeable farm staff! Grown using organic techniques, this is the freshest produce you can find in Staten Island. Don’t forget to drop off your food scraps for the NYC Compost Project Hosted by Snug Harbor. Heritage Farm Stands are rain or shine.
Help collect leaves this fall around Snug Harbor! Volunteer with our team to rake and pile leaves, which are an essential part of our compost processing. Stick around for a tour of our compost demonstration site to see how we turn all that precious organic waste into finished compost!
WHEN: October 8 | 10:30 AM – 12:30 PM
WHERE: Meet at Compost Demo Site at Snug Harbor
ADMISSION: Free | Registration requested
The NYC Compost Project, created by the NYC Department of Sanitation (DSNY) in 1993, works to reduce waste in NYC and rebuild NYC’s soil by providing New Yorkers with the knowledge, skills, and opportunities they need to produce and use compost locally. NYC Compost Project programs and staff are funded and managed through the DSNY Bureau of Recycling and Sustainability (BRS) in partnership with host institutions.
See the past and the future at Snug Harbor! Learn the history of our 19th century campus and the architecture that put Snug Harbor on the map of irreplaceable architectural collections, featuring six of the first 40 New York City landmarks. Explore Snug Harbor’s master plan for the future and share your vision for the future of Snug Harbor. Wear comfortable walking shoes and dress for the weather.
WHEN: June 18 and October 8 | 1:00 PM – 2:30 PM
WHERE: Meet at Visitor Info Booth on Chapel Road at Snug Harbor
ADMISSION: $10 | Students/Seniors/Snug Harbor Members: $8

Photo credit: Ian Douglas
Through dance, movement, voice, and touch, we will map a creative response to everyday found and discarded objects. As we explore in solo and ensemble guided improvisations, moving at times with eyes closed, distinctions between the real and imaginary will shift. Our responses within this creative matrix can range from relaxing to energizing, and from disorienting to freeing; and can seed personal and collective world making and re-making.
This workshop is a public program of the exhibition Kathy Westwater: PARK Ephemera. It is open to movers of all backgrounds and experiences. Observers also welcome.
WHEN: October 8 | 2:00 PM – 4:00 PM
WHERE: Dance Center, Building G, 2nd floor, Studio G201 at Snug Harbor
ADMISSION: Pay what you wish ($5 – $15 suggested) | TICKETS HERE
PARK Ephemera features a collection of work emerging from PARK, Westwater’s nearly fifteen-year choreographic inquiry into the site of the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island, New York. Once the largest landfill in the world, the site is currently being transformed into a public park, a transition that Westwater has closely witnessed through her dance, somatic, and material practice.
Please note: masks are required to attend this workshop.
PARK Ephemera is made possible through generous support from the Samuel I. Newhouse Foundation, the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.
PARK is created with the support of a 2020-21 PASS/CUNY Dance Initiative residency at Snug Harbor Cultural Center and Botanical Garden and the College of Staten Island made possible through generous lead support from the Howard Gilman Foundation, with additional support from the Samuel I. Newhouse Foundation, and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council. Snug Harbor is a proud partner with the CUNY Dance Initiative.
PARK is supported by Dance/NYC’s Coronavirus Dance Relief Fund in 2020 & 2022; and, in part, by a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Emergency Grant and the FCA Emergency Grants COVID-19 Fund.
It is developed as part of Lower Manhattan Cultural Council’s Arts Center Residency program.
This project is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts, and by The Freshkills Park Alliance.
Theatrical performances of PARK are commissioned by Gibney and curated by Eva Yaa Asantewaa as part of the organization’s Gibney Presents series for the 2022-23 Season. This commission includes financial, residency, administrative, and production support.
Explore the fresh produce harvested from the Heritage Farm each week from June 2 to October 13. If you’re a CSA member, this is your pickup day!
WHEN: Thursdays June 2 – October 13, 2022 | June-September: 3:00 PM – 7:00 PM | October 3: 00 PM – 6:00 PM
WHERE: Compost Demonstration Site (See our campus map for directions)
Check out our Heritage Farm Stand Saturdays for more locally-grown goodness!
Learn about this week’s new crops and how to prepare them from our friendly and knowledgeable staff! Grown using organic techniques, this is the freshest produce you can find in Staten Island! Don’t forget to drop off your Food Scraps for the NYC Compost Project Hosted by Snug Harbor. Heritage Farm Stands are rain or shine.