‘Clearing The Air’ At Southampton Arts Center

Southampton Arts Center’s new exhibition, “Clearing The Air,” examines the healing and transformative power of the arts. The show opens on Friday, September 17, at noon.

The exhibition aims to offer a much needed sense of community and strength in the time of a global pandemic, political divide, and racial and social injustice. Curated by Jay Davis, artist and curator of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center’s Ambulatory Care Arts Program, the exhibition is presented by Primary Care and Reproductive Medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine and New York-Presbyterian.

Amelia Carley, “Empurpled Ridge Glow” (Glass Bottle Beach), 2021

“Art is a powerful tool in the healing process – for both the artist and the observer,” shared SAC Executive Director Tom Dunn. “The need to create can be extremely compelling for those navigating health or personal challenges, resulting in meaningful work that offers more than meets the eye. Southampton Arts Center has long endeavored to install exhibitions that are thought-provoking, meaningful, and inclusive. Complementing and surrounding ‘Clearing The Air’ will be films, talks, workshops, and events across all disciplines highlighting art as a means for therapy, escape, distraction, elevation, and reflection. I feel this is the right show for right now.”

The work ranges from site-specific installations to audio and video work, ephemeral and occasionally humorous to meditative, introspective to scientific, and over the top. A quarter of the “Clearing The Air” artists are or have been patients at MSK or other hospitals, with almost all having some experience in exhibiting within Davis’ installations at MSK.

Robert Moore, “Dig #9.”

“’Clearing The Air’ presents a new interpretation of how art can aim to be transformative,” Davis explained. “Never simply a cure, but something that can help strengthen, sustain, provide introspection and growth, this exhibition looks to break the status quo of how art can participate in healing. The work presented in this exhibit explores the different ways art can be a transformative, healing tool, coming from a diverse group of artists — some with experience as patients themselves, and art as a personal tool to recovery, while others have used their art to nurture, elevate and expand what it means to function as ‘healing art.’”

Ilana Harris-Babou, “Library 4,” 2019.

Artists include Hisham Akira Bharoocha, Matteah Baim, Tyler Beard, Sarah Bednarek, Patrick Berran, Robin Cameron, Amelia Carley, Joseph Cohen, Andy Cross, Jay Davis, Jeremy Dennis, Bill Donovan, Magali Duzant, Kimia Ferdowsi Kline, Karen Flatow, Peter Fox, Chie Fueki, Andrew Guenther, Ilana Harris-Babou, Jonah King, Ryan Kitson, Cara Lynch, Pooneh Maghazehe, Oliver Michaels, Alice Momm, Robert Moore, Kiyoshi Otsuka, Glorimer Ovalle (Gloflo), Emilio Perez, Matthew Raynor, Will Ryan, Hope Sandrow, Mark Sengbusch, Jef Sharf, Adam Sultan, Molly Surno, Carmen Teixidor, Alina Tenser, and Mitchell Wright.

Learn more at southamptonartscenter.org/clearing-the-air.

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