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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260401T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260401T210000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20240124T180146Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260121T152226Z
UID:10001242-1775070000-1775077200@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Jersey Art Meetup (JAM)
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/jam/2026-04-01/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Community,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/COMICMAKERS_JAMBANNER-e1718819987740-copy.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260331T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260331T200000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20260202T180729Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260202T180729Z
UID:10002504-1774981800-1774987200@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:PRINCETON CRIT | Artist Critique Group
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/princeton-crit-artist-critique-group-mar26/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Community,Events & Performances,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/https___cdn.evbuc_.com_images_1171433315_198273465393_1_original.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260329T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260329T170000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20260205T193817Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260206T194958Z
UID:10002513-1774796400-1774803600@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Pratima: Singularity and Beyond
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/pratima-singularity-and-beyond/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Events & Performances,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Nisha_Pradeep_new_ACP_resident.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260329
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260419
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20260310T204933Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260310T205034Z
UID:10002534-1774742400-1776556799@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:WILD CLAY
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/wild-clay2/
LOCATION:Taplin Gallery – Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions,Free or Low Cost,Taplin Gallery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wildclay.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260328T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260328T220000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20250528T203820Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250911T200912Z
UID:10002215-1774724400-1774735200@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Café Improv
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/monthly-cafe-improv-open-mic/2026-03-28/
LOCATION:Solley Theater – Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Events & Performances,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/9330769.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260328T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260328T170000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20260205T165556Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260205T194144Z
UID:10002507-1774699200-1774717200@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Art Pop-up: Recent Works by Joe Kossow
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/art-pop-up-recent-works-by-joe-kossow/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Free or Low Cost,Opening Receptions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/recentworks_joekossow_header.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260326T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260326T200000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20260310T145527Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260312T194430Z
UID:10002531-1774549800-1774555200@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:ACP BYOB: Make Your Own Lotion with Kaya Selfcare
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/acp-byob-make-your-own-lotion-with-kaya-selfcare/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/makeyourownlotion.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T210000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20240124T180146Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260121T152226Z
UID:10001241-1774465200-1774472400@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Jersey Art Meetup (JAM)
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/jam/2026-03-25/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Community,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/COMICMAKERS_JAMBANNER-e1718819987740-copy.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T200000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20260209T173640Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260209T173946Z
UID:10002516-1774463400-1774468800@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Craft Corner
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/acp-craft-corner-mar26/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Community,Free or Low Cost,Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/Web-banner-9-2.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260324
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260327
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20260310T203634Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260310T203634Z
UID:10002532-1774310400-1774569599@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Princeton Kiosk Design Competition Showcase
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/princeton-kiosk-design-competition/
LOCATION:Solley Theater – Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/kiosk.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260321T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260321T170000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20251208T205017Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251210T175740Z
UID:10002454-1774105200-1774112400@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Gallery Opening: The Ephemeral Waltz of the Butterfly
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/gallery-opening-the-ephemeral-waltz-of-the-butterfly/
LOCATION:Lower Level Gallery
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/EphemeralWaltzoftheButterfly.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260321T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260321T170000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20251208T202010Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251210T180136Z
UID:10002452-1774105200-1774112400@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Gallery Opening: The Traveling Waffle House Interviews
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/gallery-opening-the-traveling-waffle-house-interviews/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/waffle-house-interviews.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260321T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260321T170000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20251208T200118Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260310T205125Z
UID:10002450-1774105200-1774112400@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Gallery Opening: WILD CLAY
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/gallery-opening-wild-clay/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Free or Low Cost,Opening Receptions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wildclay.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260321
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260419
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20251208T204823Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251210T175731Z
UID:10002453-1774051200-1776556799@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:The Ephemeral Waltz of the Butterfly
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/the-ephemeral-waltz-of-the-butterfly/
LOCATION:Lower Level Gallery
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions,Free or Low Cost,Opening Receptions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/EphemeralWaltzoftheButterfly.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260321
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260419
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20251208T201543Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251210T180107Z
UID:10002451-1774051200-1776556799@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:The Traveling Waffle House Interviews
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/the-traveling-waffle-house-interviews/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/waffle-house-interviews.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260321
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260328
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20251208T194121Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260310T205155Z
UID:10002533-1774051200-1774655999@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:WILD CLAY
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/wild-clay-exhibition/
LOCATION:Taplin Gallery – Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions,Free or Low Cost,Taplin Gallery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wildclay.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260320T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260320T200000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20251205T195013Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251205T195034Z
UID:10002435-1774029600-1774036800@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:ACP BYOB: Wheel Ceramics
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/acp-byob-wheel-ceramics-mar26/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/wheelthrowing.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260319T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260319T210000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20251220T201112Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260319T145617Z
UID:10002471-1773946800-1773954000@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Story & Verse: A Storytelling and Poetic Open Mic
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/story-verse-a-storytelling-and-poetic-open-mic-mar26/
LOCATION:Solley Theater – Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Community,Events & Performances,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/story-and-verse-web-banner.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260318T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260318T210000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20240124T180146Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260121T152226Z
UID:10001240-1773860400-1773867600@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Jersey Art Meetup (JAM)
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/jam/2026-03-18/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Community,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/COMICMAKERS_JAMBANNER-e1718819987740-copy.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260318T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260318T193000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20260205T183451Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260205T183528Z
UID:10002509-1773858600-1773862200@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Pop-Up Choir Princeton
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/pop-up-choir-princeton-mar18-26/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Community,Events & Performances,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/princeton-pop-up-choir.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260315T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260315T160000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20260126T172622Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260315T221407Z
UID:10002498-1773583200-1773590400@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Open Mic Afternoon
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/open-mic-afternoon-celebrate-witherspoon-jackson-neighborhood-with-poetry-and-community-connection/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Community,Events & Performances,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/reflections-header.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260312T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260312T193000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20260116T212911Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260116T213227Z
UID:10002491-1773338400-1773343800@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:ACP DIY: Bouquets with That Girl With Flowers
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/acp-diy-bouquets-with-that-girl-with-flowers/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/DIYflowers.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260312T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260312T190000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20260116T152333Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260116T152423Z
UID:10002488-1773336600-1773342000@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:ART OF Making Matcha at Home with Ooika
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/art-of-making-matcha-at-home-with-ooika/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:ART OF
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Untitled-1.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260311T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260311T210000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20240124T180146Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260121T152226Z
UID:10001239-1773255600-1773262800@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Jersey Art Meetup (JAM)
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/jam/2026-03-11/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Community,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/COMICMAKERS_JAMBANNER-e1718819987740-copy.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260311T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260311T193000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20260116T154351Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260305T202809Z
UID:10002489-1773252000-1773257400@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:ART OF Slow Stitching
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/art-of-slow-stitching/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:ART OF
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/slowstitch_banner-1.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260308T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260308T120000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052820
CREATED:20260116T150856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260305T202929Z
UID:10002487-1772967600-1772971200@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:ART OF Yoga Nidra and Sound Healing
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/art-of-yoga-nidra-and-sound-healing/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:ART OF
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/soundhealing.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260305T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260305T200000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052821
CREATED:20260204T152457Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260204T152520Z
UID:10002505-1772735400-1772740800@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:ACP BYOB: "BYOC" Embroidered Monograms
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/acp-byob-byoc-embroidered-monograms/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/byob_embroidery_monogram.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260304T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260304T210000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052821
CREATED:20240124T180146Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260121T152226Z
UID:10001238-1772650800-1772658000@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Jersey Art Meetup (JAM)
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/jam/2026-03-04/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Community,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/COMICMAKERS_JAMBANNER-e1718819987740-copy.webp
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260303T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260303T193000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052821
CREATED:20260205T183044Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260205T183234Z
UID:10002508-1772562600-1772566200@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Pop-Up Choir Princeton
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/pop-up-choir-princeton-mar3-26/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Community,Events & Performances,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/princeton-pop-up-choir.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260302T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260302T190000
DTSTAMP:20260423T052821
CREATED:20260225T171519Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260225T190242Z
UID:10002523-1772474400-1772478000@artscouncilofprinceton.org
SUMMARY:Teen Film Club with the Princeton Garden Theatre
DESCRIPTION:Divergent FormsBy Artists: Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor & Ben PrangerOn view: Jan 10 – Feb 7Opening: Sat\, Jan 10 | 3-5pmExhibition statement:Divergent Forms brings together the work of Jennifer Martin\, George Taylor\, and Ben Pranger—three artists who approach material\, structure\, and identity from distinctly different directions. Their practices diverge\, yet each reveals a careful attention to how form can hold memory\, presence\, and the traces of thought. Jennifer Martin’s ceramic vessels are rooted in the physicality of the body and the histories it carries. She works within the traditions of pottery while allowing herself to move beyond their constraints\, shaping forms that echo human asymmetry and the subtle marks of lived experience. Lines and impressions accumulate on the surface like records of touch\, suggesting layers of memory\, identity\, and personal history. Through groupings\, pairings\, and human-scaled arrangements\, Martin shifts the vessel away from function and into a space of reflection. Her use of traditional glazes and exposed clay emphasizes the connection between surface and skin\, reinforcing the idea that the stories we carry are inseparable from the bodies we inhabit. George Taylor works with slab-built ceramic bottles and panels that serve as supports for images of the figure. His practice has evolved from direct self-portraiture toward more universal representations\, often showing the body from the back or side. These figures are rendered through line and color\, interacting with the flat geometry of his rectangular bottle forms. Taylor’s work reflects both a personal search for belonging and a response to feeling marginalized within the larger art world. Each piece becomes an assertion of visibility and presence\, transforming clay into a site of representation and resilience. Ben Pranger constructs wall-based works from carefully assembled wooden elements. His forms grow gradually\, piece by piece\, according to simple structural rules that allow for complex results. Some works stretch outward as airy\, linear pathways; others condense into stepped configurations that suggest small architectural systems. These constructions map a kind of evolving mental or spatial process—recursive\, layered\, and continually shifting. With the addition of color and pattern in recent years\, Pranger’s works operate at the intersection of sculpture and painting\, using repetition and rhythm to guide the viewer’s movement across the surface. Together\, the works in Divergent Forms demonstrate how three distinct approaches—vessel\, figure\, and constructed structure—can expand the possibilities of form. The exhibition highlights the ways material can record experience\, assert identity\, or generate new spatial ideas\, offering viewers multiple points of entry into the artists’ investigations of shape\, meaning\, and presence. Artist statement:  Jennifer MartinOur bodies remember for us. Scars\, small flaws\, and softened edges become quiet archivists\, holding the moments that have shaped who we are. My work begins in that place—where memory meets the physical world—and invites both the tenderness and the ache of lived experience to surface.I move within ceramic tradition but do not allow its lineage to bind me. Clay\, in its sensual responsiveness\, becomes a partner in dialogue. Using the tools of a traditional potter\, I lean away from symmetry and toward forms that echo the body’s own asymmetry—its gestures\, its vulnerabilities\, its truths. Each mark left on the surface records the rhythm of my hand\, yet these traces also stand in for the histories we each carry\, ring by ring\, layer by layer\, like a tree quietly growing its story. Through repeated lines and patterns\, I build a language that speaks of memory\, gender\, identity\, and the winding paths of personal journey.Scale and arrangement deepen this exploration. I seek to lift the vessel beyond function\, offering it instead as a site for contemplation—of relationships\, of lineage\, of the narratives that shape us. Whether in paired forms that echo one another\, grids of cups that reveal both unity and distinction\, or large works shaped from the measurements of the human body\, each composition becomes a constellation of possibilities. Viewers are invited to find themselves within these forms\, to trace their own stories through the spaces between them.As a final gesture of devotion to the human form\, I turn to traditional glazes or exposed clay\, allowing them to stand in as the skin of the piece—an echo of flesh\, a quiet reminder that our bodies and our histories are inseparable.WebsiteInstagram George TaylorI have focused on my own image intently for some time now\, most recently in the form of portraits\, either on slabs of clay or slab built bottles. More recently I have pulled away from the image of my face and am instead incorporating the entire figure. These images feel more universal to me\, especially ones viewed from the back and side.As my practice has evolved\, so too has my awareness of politics and representation. My portraits reflect both personal presence and a sense of exclusion—images that feel unwelcome within an art world where I often find myself marginalized. Making this work is both an act of acceptance and a battle: to claim space\, to challenge erasure\, and to transform clay into a record of persistence.Website Ben PrangerMy wall based constructions slowly grow into emergent forms. Small pieces of wood are stacked and glued\, drifting off course to traverse the space in front of the wall. The work follows simple rules that unfold organically to create entangled\, rhizomatic structures. Many of the constructions suggest futuristic cities rising out of the rubble of their own destruction. Fragments from previous work coalesce into stairways\, passages\, apertures\, enclosures and pyramids\, leading the viewer through labyrinthine architectures. These indwellings map a recursive mental space that morphs into evolving worlds.Website
URL:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/event/teen-film-club-with-the-princeton-garden-theatre-oscar-shorts/
LOCATION:Arts Council of Princeton\, Princeton\, NJ
CATEGORIES:Community,Free or Low Cost
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artscouncilofprinceton.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Teen-Film-Club-Princeton.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR