SPQ News

We’re proud to share recent recognition and activity of members of the SPQ community! Below are some highlights.

In the Press

Current student, Cody Herrmann and her project “How do you get to Flushing Creek,” was featured in Hyperallergic last November:

Flushing Creek is so hidden by industrial sites and highways, it’s almost invisible to those passing through the Flushing neighborhood of Queens. “I lived in Flushing my whole life and didn’t know that I lived near waterways until I was 20 years old,” Cody Ann Herrmann told Hyperallergic. Now the artist and community organizer is advocating for its visibility through the “How do you get to Flushing Creek?” project, a multiyear initiative involving conversations on the street, a zine with maps, and guerrilla signage.

The How do you get to Flushing Creek? sign installation for City of Water Day (photo by Jonathan Baron)

“If you’re not seeing the problem, you don’t really take ownership or stewardship over it,” said Herrmann, who is currently in the Social Practice Queens MFA program at Queens College. For the July 14 City of Water Day, organized by the Waterfront Alliance, several aluminum signs were covertly installed in Flushing and Willets Point. Each pointed the way to Flushing Creek.

Continue reading here.

 

Chloë Bass was also featured recently in Hyperallergic. Her work, “The Book of Everyday Instruction,” exhibited at the Knockdown Center, was included in their list of “Best of 2018: Our Top 20 NYC Art Shows.” You’ll also find her in discussion with museum veteran Lowery Stokes Sims about imagined publics of contemporary art, public and private education, and the challenges of empathy and identity in art. Listen here.

 

Alumni Activity

Julian Phillips (SPQ ’18) has been accepted into the Artists Residency &Training Workshop Series (ARTWorks, Inc.) Program at the Jamaica Center for Arts & Learning, supported by the Jerome Foundation. He is one of two in the program to receive the Workspace Fellowship. Check out his profile here! 

Julian Phillips.jpg

 

Congratulations to students, faculty and alumni whose works are gaining media and organizational support!