Jip Gallery

Jip Gallery Curating art exhibitions and supporting artists! Team: Michelle Ralph Fortón and Sophia Park
Contact: [email protected]

What piece stopped you in your tracks lately? when no softness came, 2019 by  did it for me . The thick weft yarn, dangl...
07/21/2021

What piece stopped you in your tracks lately? when no softness came, 2019 by did it for me . The thick weft yarn, dangling loose ends, contrasting colors, and motion of the figures makes the narrative storytelling that much more tender. Such skill!

05/05/2021

"Do You See It?" is on view until May 9 online featuring work by Camille Seaman, Kiliii Yüyan, Josué Rivas, Melody Charlie, and Paul Wilson - Curated by Greer Hobbs .re.er , the exhibition presents the documentation of the climate change crisis from the eyes of Indigenous photographers who are showing the story of the changing land at the front of all of the changes. Make sure to follow along all of the artists' work! —







Link in bio for the show 🌱

Paul Robert Wolf Wilson is a photographer based in his ancestral territories of Southern Oregon and Northern California....
04/19/2021

Paul Robert Wolf Wilson is a photographer based in his ancestral territories of Southern Oregon and Northern California. A member of the Klamath and Modoc tribes, Paul’s works focus primarily on visual sovereignty and land practice, the intersections of peoples and place.

On view now at Do You See It?, link in bio - what is our relationship with water? And the lands that we interact with? What can you see when you expand the scope in which you are examining the world around you?

First Nation Photographer also known as Melody Charlie, born and raised in Ahousat and proudly calls Nuu-chah-nulth home...
04/16/2021

First Nation Photographer also known as Melody Charlie, born and raised in Ahousat and proudly calls Nuu-chah-nulth home. She's been capturing light beams and beings since the days of film and remembers often spending her last $10 on rolls of film. Ten years ago, after enough requests, First Nation Photographer was born and most definitely was not part of any birth plan. Having worked most of her life in healing and helping, then suddenly losing her children’s father she found herself in need of a lot of healing. Surrounding herself in culture, songs & ceremony offered some much needed medicine that wasn’t found in office spaces with therapists. Losing him, became a journey of finding herself. Documenting the journey along the way in hopes that it might be helpful for others who be searching for themselves too.

It’s through the lens where the lights are, everyone goes through darkness but sometimes we forget it’s in those shadows where we’re forced to go and grow.

On view now at Do You See It?, come see Melody Charlie's work, which captures the fluid nature of the relationship between humans and water in an intimate manner, link in bio.

Josué Rivas (Mexica and Otomi) is an Indigenous Futurist, creative director, visual storyteller and educator working at ...
04/13/2021

Josué Rivas (Mexica and Otomi) is an Indigenous Futurist, creative director, visual storyteller and educator working at the intersection of art, technology, journalism, and decolonization. His work aims to challenge the mainstream narrative about Indigenous peoples, co-create with the community, and serve as a vehicle for collective healing.

Come visit to see Josué Rivas' captivating black and white photography at Do You See It? on view now until May 9, link in bio.

Camille Seaman was born in 1969 to a Native American (Shinnecock tribe) father and African American mother. She graduate...
04/12/2021

Camille Seaman was born in 1969 to a Native American (Shinnecock tribe) father and African American mother. She graduated in 1992 from the State University of New York at Purchase, where she studied photography with Jan Groover and John Cohen. Her photographs have been published in National Geographic Magazine, Italian Geo, German GEO, TIME, The New York Times Sunday magazine, Newsweek, Outside, Zeit Wissen, Men's Journal, Seed, Camera Arts, Issues, PDN, and American Photo among many others. She frequently leads photographic workshops.

Camille Seaman strongly believes in capturing photographs that articulate that humans are not separate from nature.

Come see more works by Camille Seaman in Do You See It? on view now, link in bio.

04/09/2021

Do You See It? is now live! Visit www.artwithjip.com to see the virtual exhibition of Indigenous photographers documenting the climate crisis.





04/09/2021

Tomorrow is the last day to visit us at A Place to Visit, V.3! See you all soon ✨Link in bio

Photographer Kiliii Yuyan illuminates the stories of the Arctic and human communities connected to the land. Informed by...
04/07/2021

Photographer Kiliii Yuyan illuminates the stories of the Arctic and human communities connected to the land. Informed by ancestry that is both Nanai/Hèzhé (East Asian Indigenous) and Chinese-American, he explores the human relationship to the natural world from different cultural perspectives.

This image is from his series “Rumors of Arctic Belonging”, which along with more of Kiliii’s work is included in Do You See It? on view starting this Friday 4/9 at 12pm EST!

Interview with  on .dmv by the wonderful  🌱 An excerpt:SP: For us, people come first. We put the artists at the forefron...
04/06/2021

Interview with on .dmv by the wonderful 🌱 An excerpt:

SP: For us, people come first. We put the artists at the forefront of what we try to do, and the decisions we have made so far are reflections of how we are trying to live these values. For example, we know that application fees to open calls can be a barrier to some, so we are committed to making open call submissions free. Another thing we try to do at Jip is provide promotional support for all of the artists we work with whether they are in a show currently or not. I remember at a studio visit, an artist told me that one of the things that helps them is knowing that there is someone always on their side as they grow in their careers and lives. So if an artist is part of a show we organize, we try our best to keep up with them and cheer them along as they continue on in their practices. We ask the artist, what help do you need from us? And then we see what we can do and go from there. We’re still learning and sometimes make mistakes but we are always driven by this idea of putting artists first.

Link in bio & make sure to visit us at A Place to Visit before April 9!

‘Do You See It?’ is a virtual group exhibition of Inidgenous photographers documenting the climate crisis, on view from ...
04/01/2021

‘Do You See It?’ is a virtual group exhibition of Inidgenous photographers documenting the climate crisis, on view from April 9 to May 9 2021 at www.artwithjip.com. Participating artists include:

Camille Seaman
Josué Rivas
Kiliii Yüyan
Melody Charlie
Paul Wilson

The work in ‘Do You See It?’ explores the universality of climate change and aims to open a dialogue between Native and non-Native communities on decolonizing climate justice, and poses the question: do you see it?

Flyer photograph: Camille Seaman

Hi everyone, Sophia from team Jip here. Jip is home. It literally means home in Korean. Home is a difficult word for man...
03/19/2021

Hi everyone, Sophia from team Jip here. Jip is home. It literally means home in Korean. Home is a difficult word for many of us who are immigrants. What does it mean to have a home when you are constantly being othered?

Jip stands in solidarity with the AAPI community. Our heart goes out to those listed here who lost their lives and their loved ones. We are a small team, but we are dedicated to using our resources and knowledge to uplift, support, and highlight artists who, in our view, are critical to shifting the lens of the arts world from a white, cis-male centric view. We hope you will all join us in this journey. Arts orgs, collectives, if you are not shifting your work to an anti-racist, anti-oppressive lens you are harmful. We know we cannot be perfect, yet it is important that we act because that is better than sitting comfortably under the illusion that this does not affect you. No community is safe until all communities are, and the arts sector can play a role ensuring that we dream and build spaces of safety for all. Stay safe and take care.

Images reposted from .nyc / follow .nyc & please support orgs & donate to the gofundme of Hyun Jeong Grant’s sons so that they can support themselves as they have lost their biggest support system. Link in bio.

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200 Eastern Pkwy
Brooklyn, NY
11238

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