ALL ITEMS
131

Jack & Jackie
$1500Jack & Jackie, 2019
Mixed media collage on paper
30 x 22"
Value: $3,000.00
Artist bio:
Cey Adams, a New York City native, emerged from the downtown graffiti movement to exhibit alongside fellow artists Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring. He appeared in the historic 1982 PBS documentary Style Wars which tracks subway graffiti in New York. As the Creative Director of hip hop mogul Russell Simmons' Def Jam Recordings, he co-founded the Drawing Board, the label's in-house visual design firm, where he created visual identities, album covers, logos, and advertising campaigns for Run DMC, Beastie Boys, LL Cool J, Public Enemy, Notorious B.I.G., Maroon 5, and Jay-Z. He exhibits, lectures and teaches art workshops at institutions including: MoMA, Brooklyn Museum, Museum of the City of New York, New York University, Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, Walker Art Center, MoCA Los Angeles, Pratt Institute, Stamford University, Howard University, Atlanta Contemporary Art Center, High Museum, Brooklyn Academy of Music, and Mount Royal University and The University of Winnipeg in Canada. He co-authored DEFinition: The Art and Design of Hip-Hop, published by Harper-Collins; and designed Def Jam Recordings: The First 25 Years of the Last Great Record Label, published by Rizzoli. Cey's work explores the relationship between transformation and discovery. His practice involves dismantling various imagery and paper elements to build multiple layers of color, texture, shadow, and light. Cey draws inspiration from 60's pop art, sign painting, comic books, and popular culture. His work focuses on themes including pop culture, race and gender relations, cultural and community issues.
206

The Voice is Almost Human
$2500The Voice is Almost Human, 1991
High fired glazed stoneware
16"h x 11"d
Value: $2,500
Rowland drew inspiration from cities with ancient histories of handmade stoneware including calligraphic Islamic pottery. She collaborated with Frederick Seidel on vases with his poetry.
*Buyer will be responsible for shipping costs, which will be determined after the sale and arranged with the buyer upon purchase. Estimated shipping within NYC is approximately $150, depending on the item and destination.
Artist bio:
Susan Scott Rowland
1940 - 2019
The estate of Susan Rowland has released 5 iconic pieces of her artwork for sale to benefit the Brooklyn Arts Council.
Susan was a trustee of the Brooklyn Arts Council and was an avid supporter of Brooklyn Arts Council's mission to promote art in Brooklyn.
Her work is in major public and private collections, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York Historical Society, Santa Fe's Fine Arts Museum, and New Mexico's Roswell Museum and Art Center.
Rowland channeled an irrepressible exuberance through her work as a painter, printmaker and ceramicist. Rowland worked in New York for most of four decades, creating large, abstract expressionist canvasses and, later, pottery and sculpture with rough edges and whimsical animal forms. She graduated from Vassar College. In 1961 she married Dr. George B. "Robin'' Rowland. Her husband became a public health doctor when they moved to the Navajo reservation in Arizona with their two young children. Her restless personality and creative drive did not allow her to settle for long in one place. In 1967 she moved to New York City with her children. There, she studied at the Arts Students League. In 1974 she moved west again to a rural community north of Santa Fe, NM. She had space of her own in which to paint, and a rugged landscape to serve for inspiration. She was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship in 1976. Three years later, she returned to New York where she met and married her second husband, Charles P. "Tony'' Sifton, a judge in the US District Court in Brooklyn. After the terrorist attacks of 2001, Rowland pulled the first new weeds growing near Ground Zero the next spring to make monoprints. "I wanted to print the first plants that showed up, the weeds, the volunteers,'' Rowland said in a column by Times garden writer Anne Raver. She was a trustee of the non-profit Brooklyn Arts Council, where donations in Susan's name may be directed.
207

Horse
$2400Horse, 1999
High fired glazed stoneware
14"h x 16"l x 8"w
Value: $2,400
Rowland's animal figures reflect the spirited, playful side of her artwork. They operate as potent metaphors of the tensions between the visceral and the visionary.
*Buyer will be responsible for shipping costs, which will be determined after the sale and arranged with the buyer upon purchase. Estimated shipping within NYC is approximately $150, depending on the item and destination.
Artist bio:
Susan Scott Rowland
1940 - 2019
The estate of Susan Rowland has released 5 iconic pieces of her artwork for sale to benefit the Brooklyn Arts Council.
Susan was a trustee of the Brooklyn Arts Council and was an avid supporter of Brooklyn Arts Council's mission to promote art in Brooklyn.
Her work is in major public and private collections, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York Historical Society, Santa Fe's Fine Arts Museum, and New Mexico's Roswell Museum and Art Center.
Rowland channeled an irrepressible exuberance through her work as a painter, printmaker and ceramicist. Rowland worked in New York for most of four decades, creating large, abstract expressionist canvasses and, later, pottery and sculpture with rough edges and whimsical animal forms. She graduated from Vassar College. In 1961 she married Dr. George B. "Robin'' Rowland. Her husband became a public health doctor when they moved to the Navajo reservation in Arizona with their two young children. Her restless personality and creative drive did not allow her to settle for long in one place. In 1967 she moved to New York City with her children. There, she studied at the Arts Students League. In 1974 she moved west again to a rural community north of Santa Fe, NM. She had space of her own in which to paint, and a rugged landscape to serve for inspiration. She was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship in 1976. Three years later, she returned to New York where she met and married her second husband, Charles P. "Tony'' Sifton, a judge in the US District Court in Brooklyn. After the terrorist attacks of 2001, Rowland pulled the first new weeds growing near Ground Zero the next spring to make monoprints. "I wanted to print the first plants that showed up, the weeds, the volunteers,'' Rowland said in a column by Times garden writer Anne Raver. She was a trustee of the non-profit Brooklyn Arts Council, where donations in Susan's name may be directed.
209

9/11 Weed Monoprint
$70009/11 Weed Monoprint, 2002
Monoprint
29.75"h x 22.5"w
Value: $7,000
After the 2001 terrorist attacks, Rowland pulled the first weeds growing near Ground Zero to make monoprints. In the collection of the Whitney Museum.
*Buyer will be responsible for shipping costs, which will be determined after the sale and arranged with the buyer upon purchase. Estimated shipping within NYC is approximately $150, depending on the item and destination.
Artist bio:
Susan Scott Rowland
1940 - 2019
The estate of Susan Rowland has released 5 iconic pieces of her artwork for sale to benefit the Brooklyn Arts Council.
Susan was a trustee of the Brooklyn Arts Council and was an avid supporter of Brooklyn Arts Council's mission to promote art in Brooklyn.
Her work is in major public and private collections, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York Historical Society, Santa Fe's Fine Arts Museum, and New Mexico's Roswell Museum and Art Center.
Rowland channeled an irrepressible exuberance through her work as a painter, printmaker and ceramicist. Rowland worked in New York for most of four decades, creating large, abstract expressionist canvasses and, later, pottery and sculpture with rough edges and whimsical animal forms. She graduated from Vassar College. In 1961 she married Dr. George B. "Robin'' Rowland. Her husband became a public health doctor when they moved to the Navajo reservation in Arizona with their two young children. Her restless personality and creative drive did not allow her to settle for long in one place. In 1967 she moved to New York City with her children. There, she studied at the Arts Students League. In 1974 she moved west again to a rural community north of Santa Fe, NM. She had space of her own in which to paint, and a rugged landscape to serve for inspiration. She was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship in 1976. Three years later, she returned to New York where she met and married her second husband, Charles P. "Tony'' Sifton, a judge in the US District Court in Brooklyn. After the terrorist attacks of 2001, Rowland pulled the first new weeds growing near Ground Zero the next spring to make monoprints. "I wanted to print the first plants that showed up, the weeds, the volunteers,'' Rowland said in a column by Times garden writer Anne Raver. She was a trustee of the non-profit Brooklyn Arts Council, where donations in Susan's name may be directed.
210

Vessel
$2400Vessel, 2000
High fired glazed stoneware
18.5"h x 11"w
Value: $2,400
Created from the artist's formal vocabularies of gestural abstraction, drawing, and collage, Rowland's vessels operate as both functional objects and potent metaphors.
*Buyer will be responsible for shipping costs, which will be determined after the sale and arranged with the buyer upon purchase. Estimated shipping within NYC is approximately $150, depending on the item and destination.
Artist bio:
Susan Scott Rowland
1940 - 2019
The estate of Susan Rowland has released 5 iconic pieces of her artwork for sale to benefit the Brooklyn Arts Council.
Susan was a trustee of the Brooklyn Arts Council and was an avid supporter of Brooklyn Arts Council's mission to promote art in Brooklyn.
Her work is in major public and private collections, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York Historical Society, Santa Fe's Fine Arts Museum, and New Mexico's Roswell Museum and Art Center.
Rowland channeled an irrepressible exuberance through her work as a painter, printmaker and ceramicist. Rowland worked in New York for most of four decades, creating large, abstract expressionist canvasses and, later, pottery and sculpture with rough edges and whimsical animal forms. She graduated from Vassar College. In 1961 she married Dr. George B. "Robin'' Rowland. Her husband became a public health doctor when they moved to the Navajo reservation in Arizona with their two young children. Her restless personality and creative drive did not allow her to settle for long in one place. In 1967 she moved to New York City with her children. There, she studied at the Arts Students League. In 1974 she moved west again to a rural community north of Santa Fe, NM. She had space of her own in which to paint, and a rugged landscape to serve for inspiration. She was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship in 1976. Three years later, she returned to New York where she met and married her second husband, Charles P. "Tony'' Sifton, a judge in the US District Court in Brooklyn. After the terrorist attacks of 2001, Rowland pulled the first new weeds growing near Ground Zero the next spring to make monoprints. "I wanted to print the first plants that showed up, the weeds, the volunteers,'' Rowland said in a column by Times garden writer Anne Raver. She was a trustee of the non-profit Brooklyn Arts Council, where donations in Susan's name may be directed.
230

BoX 1: 5 original works
$1000Brooklyn Arts Council is pleased to partner with artists-X-change, a collective of artists who have joined forces to provide mutual aid and allies to those artists in need and most impacted, both by COVID-19 and other current events.
Artists-X-change's first initiative is the BoX Project, which provides art lovers with a way to donate to a vetted partner and receive a unique BoX of art in return. As their first partner, Brooklyn Arts Council will be the recipient of all funds raised through the first edition of the BoX Project.
Each BoX contains five original small artworks (with a maximum size of 5"x7") from artists in the artists-X-change collective plus an invited artist chosen by Brooklyn Arts Council. Featured artists include Ellen Blum, Michael Davis, Jada Fabrizio, Abby Goldstein, Nicole Laemmle, Christina Massey, Nina Meledandri, Jack Robinson, Margot Spindelman, and Randall Stoltzfus. Each BoX is hand-created and hand-curated by artists-X-change and is unique in composition. Every BoX is one of a limited edition of twenty.
Every aspect of the BoX Project is being donated, from the artwork to the production. We are thrilled to be recognized for the work we do and to be able to offer you a chance to support us while receiving this extraordinary collection of artworks in return.
Learn more about the project and artists involved here.
(Please note: each BoX is unique. Each BoX contains a different combination of artists and artworks.)
241

Cotton Candy
$100Cotton Candy, 2018
Year completed: 2018
Acrylic paint
12 x 24"
Value: $100.00
Shipping: $45.00
Inspired by classic cotton candy signage
Acrylic paint on masonite
Artist bio:
In 2013 Liam started painting signs and murals for local businesses in his Brooklyn neighborhood. This endeavor started with him going door to door with a hand full of fliers? but eventually his craft garnered more interest and attention. Select clients include: The Guggenheim Museum, The Brooklyn Museum, Sweetgreen, and the David Zwirner Gallery.
O'Brien currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY with his wife and young daughter. He enjoys going to the movies, fixing things, painting, and drawing.
242

Eat It
$100Eat It, 2019
Year completed: 2019
Enamel paint
10.5 x 23"
Value: $100.00
Shipping: $55.00
Inspired by the Robert Crumb cookbook, 'Eat It.'
Artist bio:
In 2013 Liam started painting signs and murals for local businesses in his Brooklyn neighborhood. This endeavor started with him going door to door with a hand full of fliers? but eventually his craft garnered more interest and attention. Select clients include: The Guggenheim Museum, The Brooklyn Museum, Sweetgreen, and the David Zwirner Gallery.
O'Brien currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY with his wife and young daughter. He enjoys going to the movies, fixing things, painting, and drawing.
243

World's Finest
$100World's Finest, 2020
Year completed: 2020
Enamel paint
12 x 16"
Value: $100.00
Shipping: $55.00
Inspired by DC Comics 'World's Finest" comic book logo.
Artist bio:
In 2013 Liam started painting signs and murals for local businesses in his Brooklyn neighborhood. This endeavor started with him going door to door with a hand full of fliers? but eventually his craft garnered more interest and attention. Select clients include: The Guggenheim Museum, The Brooklyn Museum, Sweetgreen, and the David Zwirner Gallery.
O'Brien currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY with his wife and young daughter. He enjoys going to the movies, fixing things, painting, and drawing.
251

Between Earth & Sky
$1000Between Earth & Sky (Los Angeles) #001
Year completed: 2016
Archival digital print
16 x 20"
Edition: 2 of 6, plus AP's
Value: $1000.00
Shipping: $50.00
Description: A Polish folk song translates: "Somewhere far from here, was left our family home, wildflowers continue to grow, though we are far away from there."
Artist bio:
Beatrice Wolert is a first generation Polish American visual artist raised in Greenpoint, Brooklyn where she continues to live and maintain her studio practice. Wolert works between genres to explore concepts of impermanence, essentiality and serendipity through the transformation of everyday materials and found objects. Wolert holds a BA in Design from Adelphi University and an MFA in Painting from Pratt Institute. She has exhibited her work at venues such as Underdonk, Trestle Contemporary Art Gallery, NURTUREart, Feature, Inc., Denise Bibro, HQ, A.I.R. Gallery, Artists Space, D.U.M.B.O. Art Center and Exit Art in New York, Woman Made Gallery in Chicago, BLAM Projects in Los Angeles, and internationally at the Aratoi Wairarapa Museum of Art and History in New Zealand.
252

The Flowers Still Take Seed
$750The Flowers Still Take Seed #001
Year completed: 2016
Archival digital print
10 x 20"
Edition: Edition 1 of 6, plus 2 AP's
Value: $750.00
Shipping: $50.00
Description: A Polish folk song translates: "Somewhere far from here, was left our family home, wildflowers continue to grow, though we are far away from there."
Artist bio:
Beatrice Wolert is a first generation Polish American visual artist raised in Greenpoint, Brooklyn where she continues to live and maintain her studio practice. Wolert works between genres to explore concepts of impermanence, essentiality and serendipity through the transformation of everyday materials and found objects. Wolert holds a BA in Design from Adelphi University and an MFA in Painting from Pratt Institute. She has exhibited her work at venues such as Underdonk, Trestle Contemporary Art Gallery, NURTUREart, Feature, Inc., Denise Bibro, HQ, A.I.R. Gallery, Artists Space, D.U.M.B.O. Art Center and Exit Art in New York, Woman Made Gallery in Chicago, BLAM Projects in Los Angeles, and internationally at the Aratoi Wairarapa Museum of Art and History in New Zealand.
253

Between Earth & Sky (Brooklyn)
$750Between Earth & Sky (Brooklyn)
Year completed: 2019
Archival digital print
20 x 10"
Edition: Edition 1 of 6, plus 2 AP's
Value: $750.00
Shipping: $50.00
Description: A Polish folk song translates: "Somewhere far from here, was left our family home, wildflowers continue to grow, though we are far away from there."
Artist bio:
Beatrice Wolert is a first generation Polish American visual artist raised in Greenpoint, Brooklyn where she continues to live and maintain her studio practice. Wolert works between genres to explore concepts of impermanence, essentiality and serendipity through the transformation of everyday materials and found objects. Wolert holds a BA in Design from Adelphi University and an MFA in Painting from Pratt Institute. She has exhibited her work at venues such as Underdonk, Trestle Contemporary Art Gallery, NURTUREart, Feature, Inc., Denise Bibro, HQ, A.I.R. Gallery, Artists Space, D.U.M.B.O. Art Center and Exit Art in New York, Woman Made Gallery in Chicago, BLAM Projects in Los Angeles, and internationally at the Aratoi Wairarapa Museum of Art and History in New Zealand.
254

BoX 2: 5 original works
$1000Brooklyn Arts Council is pleased to partner with artists-X-change, a collective of artists who have joined forces to provide mutual aid and allies to those artists in need and most impacted, both by COVID-19 and other current events.
Artists-X-change's first initiative is the BoX Project, which provides art lovers with a way to donate to a vetted partner and receive a unique BoX of art in return. As their first partner, Brooklyn Arts Council will be the recipient of all funds raised through the first edition of the BoX Project.
Each BoX contains five original small artworks (with a maximum size of 5"x7") from artists in the artists-X-change collective plus an invited artist chosen by Brooklyn Arts Council. Featured artists include Ellen Blum, Michael Davis, Jada Fabrizio, Abby Goldstein, Nicole Laemmle, Christina Massey, Nina Meledandri, Jack Robinson, Margot Spindelman, and Randall Stoltzfus. Each BoX is hand-created and hand-curated by artists-X-change and is unique in composition. Every BoX is one of a limited edition of twenty.
Every aspect of the BoX Project is being donated, from the artwork to the production. We are thrilled to be recognized for the work we do and to be able to offer you a chance to support us while receiving this extraordinary collection of artworks in return.
Learn more about the project and artists involved here.
(Please note: each BoX is unique. Each BoX contains a different combination of artists and artworks.)
255

BoX 3: 5 original works
$1000Brooklyn Arts Council is pleased to partner with artists-X-change, a collective of artists who have joined forces to provide mutual aid and allies to those artists in need and most impacted, both by COVID-19 and other current events.
Artists-X-change's first initiative is the BoX Project, which provides art lovers with a way to donate to a vetted partner and receive a unique BoX of art in return. As their first partner, Brooklyn Arts Council will be the recipient of all funds raised through the first edition of the BoX Project.
Each BoX contains five original small artworks (with a maximum size of 5"x7") from artists in the artists-X-change collective plus an invited artist chosen by Brooklyn Arts Council. Featured artists include Ellen Blum, Michael Davis, Jada Fabrizio, Abby Goldstein, Nicole Laemmle, Christina Massey, Nina Meledandri, Jack Robinson, Margot Spindelman, and Randall Stoltzfus. Each BoX is hand-created and hand-curated by artists-X-change and is unique in composition. Every BoX is one of a limited edition of twenty.
Every aspect of the BoX Project is being donated, from the artwork to the production. We are thrilled to be recognized for the work we do and to be able to offer you a chance to support us while receiving this extraordinary collection of artworks in return.
Learn more about the project and artists involved here.
(Please note: each BoX is unique. Each BoX contains a different combination of artists and artworks.)
256

BoX 4: 5 original works
$1000Brooklyn Arts Council is pleased to partner with artists-X-change, a collective of artists who have joined forces to provide mutual aid and allies to those artists in need and most impacted, both by COVID-19 and other current events.
Artists-X-change's first initiative is the BoX Project, which provides art lovers with a way to donate to a vetted partner and receive a unique BoX of art in return. As their first partner, Brooklyn Arts Council will be the recipient of all funds raised through the first edition of the BoX Project.
Each BoX contains five original small artworks (with a maximum size of 5"x7") from artists in the artists-X-change collective plus an invited artist chosen by Brooklyn Arts Council. Featured artists include Ellen Blum, Michael Davis, Jada Fabrizio, Abby Goldstein, Nicole Laemmle, Christina Massey, Nina Meledandri, Jack Robinson, Margot Spindelman, and Randall Stoltzfus. Each BoX is hand-created and hand-curated by artists-X-change and is unique in composition. Every BoX is one of a limited edition of twenty.
Every aspect of the BoX Project is being donated, from the artwork to the production. We are thrilled to be recognized for the work we do and to be able to offer you a chance to support us while receiving this extraordinary collection of artworks in return.
Learn more about the project and artists involved here.
(Please note: each BoX is unique. Each BoX contains a different combination of artists and artworks.)
257

BoX 5: 5 original works
$1000Brooklyn Arts Council is pleased to partner with artists-X-change, a collective of artists who have joined forces to provide mutual aid and allies to those artists in need and most impacted, both by COVID-19 and other current events.
Artists-X-change's first initiative is the BoX Project, which provides art lovers with a way to donate to a vetted partner and receive a unique BoX of art in return. As their first partner, Brooklyn Arts Council will be the recipient of all funds raised through the first edition of the BoX Project.
Each BoX contains five original small artworks (with a maximum size of 5"x7") from artists in the artists-X-change collective plus an invited artist chosen by Brooklyn Arts Council. Featured artists include Ellen Blum, Michael Davis, Jada Fabrizio, Abby Goldstein, Nicole Laemmle, Christina Massey, Nina Meledandri, Jack Robinson, Margot Spindelman, and Randall Stoltzfus. Each BoX is hand-created and hand-curated by artists-X-change and is unique in composition. Every BoX is one of a limited edition of twenty.
Every aspect of the BoX Project is being donated, from the artwork to the production. We are thrilled to be recognized for the work we do and to be able to offer you a chance to support us while receiving this extraordinary collection of artworks in return.
Learn more about the project and artists involved here.
(Please note: each BoX is unique. Each BoX contains a different combination of artists and artworks.)
258

BoX 6: 5 original works
$1000Brooklyn Arts Council is pleased to partner with artists-X-change, a collective of artists who have joined forces to provide mutual aid and allies to those artists in need and most impacted, both by COVID-19 and other current events.
Artists-X-change's first initiative is the BoX Project, which provides art lovers with a way to donate to a vetted partner and receive a unique BoX of art in return. As their first partner, Brooklyn Arts Council will be the recipient of all funds raised through the first edition of the BoX Project.
Each BoX contains five original small artworks (with a maximum size of 5"x7") from artists in the artists-X-change collective plus an invited artist chosen by Brooklyn Arts Council. Featured artists include Ellen Blum, Michael Davis, Jada Fabrizio, Abby Goldstein, Nicole Laemmle, Christina Massey, Nina Meledandri, Jack Robinson, Margot Spindelman, and Randall Stoltzfus. Each BoX is hand-created and hand-curated by artists-X-change and is unique in composition. Every BoX is one of a limited edition of twenty.
Every aspect of the BoX Project is being donated, from the artwork to the production. We are thrilled to be recognized for the work we do and to be able to offer you a chance to support us while receiving this extraordinary collection of artworks in return.
Learn more about the project and artists involved here.
(Please note: each BoX is unique. Each BoX contains a different combination of artists and artworks.)
(Price includes $20 to cover shipping costs)
259

BoX 7: 5 original works
$1000Brooklyn Arts Council is pleased to partner with artists-X-change, a collective of artists who have joined forces to provide mutual aid and allies to those artists in need and most impacted, both by COVID-19 and other current events.
Artists-X-change's first initiative is the BoX Project, which provides art lovers with a way to donate to a vetted partner and receive a unique BoX of art in return. As their first partner, Brooklyn Arts Council will be the recipient of all funds raised through the first edition of the BoX Project.
Each BoX contains five original small artworks (with a maximum size of 5"x7") from artists in the artists-X-change collective plus an invited artist chosen by Brooklyn Arts Council. Featured artists include Ellen Blum, Michael Davis, Jada Fabrizio, Abby Goldstein, Nicole Laemmle, Christina Massey, Nina Meledandri, Jack Robinson, Margot Spindelman, and Randall Stoltzfus. Each BoX is hand-created and hand-curated by artists-X-change and is unique in composition. Every BoX is one of a limited edition of twenty.
Every aspect of the BoX Project is being donated, from the artwork to the production. We are thrilled to be recognized for the work we do and to be able to offer you a chance to support us while receiving this extraordinary collection of artworks in return.
Learn more about the project and artists involved here.
(Please note: each BoX is unique. Each BoX contains a different combination of artists and artworks.)
260

BoX 8: 5 original works
$1000Brooklyn Arts Council is pleased to partner with artists-X-change, a collective of artists who have joined forces to provide mutual aid and allies to those artists in need and most impacted, both by COVID-19 and other current events.
Artists-X-change's first initiative is the BoX Project, which provides art lovers with a way to donate to a vetted partner and receive a unique BoX of art in return. As their first partner, Brooklyn Arts Council will be the recipient of all funds raised through the first edition of the BoX Project.
Each BoX contains five original small artworks (with a maximum size of 5"x7") from artists in the artists-X-change collective plus an invited artist chosen by Brooklyn Arts Council. Featured artists include Ellen Blum, Michael Davis, Jada Fabrizio, Abby Goldstein, Nicole Laemmle, Christina Massey, Nina Meledandri, Jack Robinson, Margot Spindelman, and Randall Stoltzfus. Each BoX is hand-created and hand-curated by artists-X-change and is unique in composition. Every BoX is one of a limited edition of twenty.
Every aspect of the BoX Project is being donated, from the artwork to the production. We are thrilled to be recognized for the work we do and to be able to offer you a chance to support us while receiving this extraordinary collection of artworks in return.
Learn more about the project and artists involved here.
(Please note: each BoX is unique. Each BoX contains a different combination of artists and artworks.)
261

BoX 9: 5 original works
$1000Brooklyn Arts Council is pleased to partner with artists-X-change, a collective of artists who have joined forces to provide mutual aid and allies to those artists in need and most impacted, both by COVID-19 and other current events.
Artists-X-change's first initiative is the BoX Project, which provides art lovers with a way to donate to a vetted partner and receive a unique BoX of art in return. As their first partner, Brooklyn Arts Council will be the recipient of all funds raised through the first edition of the BoX Project.
Each BoX contains five original small artworks (with a maximum size of 5"x7") from artists in the artists-X-change collective plus an invited artist chosen by Brooklyn Arts Council. Featured artists include Ellen Blum, Michael Davis, Jada Fabrizio, Abby Goldstein, Nicole Laemmle, Christina Massey, Nina Meledandri, Jack Robinson, Margot Spindelman, and Randall Stoltzfus. Each BoX is hand-created and hand-curated by artists-X-change and is unique in composition. Every BoX is one of a limited edition of twenty.
Every aspect of the BoX Project is being donated, from the artwork to the production. We are thrilled to be recognized for the work we do and to be able to offer you a chance to support us while receiving this extraordinary collection of artworks in return.
Learn more about the project and artists involved here.
(Please note: each BoX is unique. Each BoX contains a different combination of artists and artworks.)
262

BoX 10: 5 original works
$1000Brooklyn Arts Council is pleased to partner with artists-X-change, a collective of artists who have joined forces to provide mutual aid and allies to those artists in need and most impacted, both by COVID-19 and other current events.
Artists-X-change's first initiative is the BoX Project, which provides art lovers with a way to donate to a vetted partner and receive a unique BoX of art in return. As their first partner, Brooklyn Arts Council will be the recipient of all funds raised through the first edition of the BoX Project.
Each BoX contains five original small artworks (with a maximum size of 5"x7") from artists in the artists-X-change collective plus an invited artist chosen by Brooklyn Arts Council. Featured artists include Ellen Blum, Michael Davis, Jada Fabrizio, Abby Goldstein, Nicole Laemmle, Christina Massey, Nina Meledandri, Jack Robinson, Margot Spindelman, and Randall Stoltzfus. Each BoX is hand-created and hand-curated by artists-X-change and is unique in composition. Every BoX is one of a limited edition of twenty.
Every aspect of the BoX Project is being donated, from the artwork to the production. We are thrilled to be recognized for the work we do and to be able to offer you a chance to support us while receiving this extraordinary collection of artworks in return.
Learn more about the project and artists involved here.
(Please note: each BoX is unique. Each BoX contains a different combination of artists and artworks.)
263

BoX 11: 5 original works
$1000Brooklyn Arts Council is pleased to partner with artists-X-change, a collective of artists who have joined forces to provide mutual aid and allies to those artists in need and most impacted, both by COVID-19 and other current events.
Artists-X-change's first initiative is the BoX Project, which provides art lovers with a way to donate to a vetted partner and receive a unique BoX of art in return. As their first partner, Brooklyn Arts Council will be the recipient of all funds raised through the first edition of the BoX Project.
Each BoX contains five original small artworks (with a maximum size of 5"x7") from artists in the artists-X-change collective plus an invited artist chosen by Brooklyn Arts Council. Featured artists include Ellen Blum, Michael Davis, Jada Fabrizio, Abby Goldstein, Nicole Laemmle, Christina Massey, Nina Meledandri, Jack Robinson, Margot Spindelman, and Randall Stoltzfus. Each BoX is hand-created and hand-curated by artists-X-change and is unique in composition. Every BoX is one of a limited edition of twenty.
Every aspect of the BoX Project is being donated, from the artwork to the production. We are thrilled to be recognized for the work we do and to be able to offer you a chance to support us while receiving this extraordinary collection of artworks in return.
Learn more about the project and artists involved here.
(Please note: each BoX is unique. Each BoX contains a different combination of artists and artworks.)