Headstone Gallery

Headstone Gallery Contemporary art gallery located in Kingston NY

Join us this weekend, Friday - Sunday, 12 - 5pm, for our current exhibition, Eye Message by Tim Wehrle.TIM WEHRLE Born i...
06/11/2026

Join us this weekend, Friday - Sunday, 12 - 5pm, for our current exhibition, Eye Message by Tim Wehrle.

TIM WEHRLE

Born in Burlington, Iowa in 1978, Tim Wehrle is a Iowa/New York based artist that earned his B.A. degree at Bard College and is currently an upcoming MFA student at The University Of
Iowa. Wehrle has shown work at Cavin-Morris Gallery, NY, NY, Shrine Gallery, NY, NY, PPOW Gallery, NY, NY Ronald Feldman Gallery, NY, NY Adam Baumgold Gallery, NY, NY and Stellar Highway Gallery, BKLYN, NY. Notable Collections are: American Folk Art Museum NY, NY, Audrey B. Heckler Collection, NY, NY, Des Moines Contemporary Art Center, IA, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth, Hanover, NH, John Micheal Kohler Arts Center, Sheboygan, WI, and FRAC Picardie, Amiens, France.

In Eye Message, Wehrle focuses on communication and connectivity to the self and the unconscious path to decision making in a world gone wrong. Communication from the physical to the technological, Wehrle explores the tribulations of naked honesty coming into contact with the creation of the masked diabolical character persona often used in messaging and online activities. Eye Message also touches on childhood trauma, desire and underlying paranoia living in the current America.

For full press release, visit our website via link in bio. DM for inquiries or email us at [email protected]

Image by Radiant Gradient Photography

Tim Wehrle Fideliocolored pencil, walnut ink, red ink, Iowa turkey feathers, buttons26.80H x 19.75W x 2.625D2026 Tim Weh...
06/09/2026

Tim Wehrle
Fidelio
colored pencil, walnut ink, red ink,
Iowa turkey feathers, buttons
26.80H x 19.75W x 2.625D
2026



Tim Wehrle’s solo exhibition, Eye Message, is on view here at Headstone until June 28th.

Join us for Upstate Art Weekend beginning Thursday, June 25th - Sunday, June 28th, 12pm - 5pm.

Wehrle’s investigative aesthetic isn’t made for art at a trot. Time is used as subject material, creating an imperative component for the maker and the viewer. Nature and socially constructed cycles are illustrated throughout - an unbearable commitment to the dollar and the fabricated power rewarded in material identity - credit card, driver’s license, social security number. With strife and hovering uncertainty, the feeling of arrested helplessness has become part of Western society. Meanwhile, the sun sets, and the leaves on a tree begin to fall; Wehrle touches ground again to start anew.

And underneath all that, he grapples with our evolving personas - being one thing, while becoming another, and like a boomerang, back again, just slightly different. This new body of work is cerebral, as it is provocative. Wehrle’s work keeps us alert and engaged without tension, but first you must look.

For full press release, visit our website via link in bio. DM for inquiries or email us at [email protected]

THANK YOU to everyone who made it out to the spectacular opening of Tim Wehrle’s solo exhibition, Eye Message. The exhib...
06/07/2026

THANK YOU to everyone who made it out to the spectacular opening of Tim Wehrle’s solo exhibition, Eye Message.

The exhibition runs through the end of June. Join us for Upstate Art Weekend, June 25th - 28th.



Jenny Holzer, a text-based icon in contemporary art, best known for her “truisms”, wrote, “Repetition is the best way to learn things.” In cognitive therapy, there are patterns that we look for to find entrances into our inescapable past - a litany of tangential circumstances, through the ancestral depths - some more palatable than others. Wehrle, hyperaware of his own psychological dismay, places his own learnings and ‘truisms’ on paper, documenting celebration and unrest in the day-to-day and the unavoidable - our current global political crisis.

Wehrle’s investigative aesthetic isn’t made for art at a trot. Time is used as subject material, creating an imperative component for the maker and the viewer. Nature and socially constructed cycles are illustrated throughout - an unbearable commitment to the dollar and the fabricated power rewarded in material identity - credit card, driver’s license, social security number. With strife and hovering uncertainty, the feeling of arrested helplessness has become part of Western society. Meanwhile, the sun sets, and the leaves on a tree begin to fall; Wehrle touches ground again to start anew.

And underneath all that, he grapples with our evolving personas - being one thing, while becoming another, and like a boomerang, back again, just slightly different. This new body of work is cerebral, as it is provocative. Wehrle’s work keeps us alert and engaged without tension, but first you must look.

For full press release, visit our website via link in bio. DM for inquiries or email us at [email protected]

Image:
Tim Wehrle
My Adolescent Nose Job
24 x 30 x 1.5
collaged prints, colored pencil, bandaids, acrylic paint, wood on panel
2026

Tim Wehrle’s solo exhibition, Eye Message, OPENS this SATURDAY, June 6th, 5-8pm. For full press release, visit our websi...
06/02/2026

Tim Wehrle’s solo exhibition, Eye Message, OPENS this SATURDAY, June 6th, 5-8pm.



For full press release, visit our website via link in bio. DM for inquiries or email us at [email protected]

Born in Burlington, Iowa in 1978, Tim Wehrle is a Iowa/New York based artist that earned his B.A. degree at Bard College and is currently an upcoming MFA student at The University Of
Iowa. Wehrle has shown work at Cavin-Morris Gallery, NY, NY, Shrine Gallery, NY, NY, PPOW Gallery, NY, NY Ronald Feldman Gallery, NY, NY Adam Baumgold Gallery, NY, NY and Stellar Highway Gallery, BKLYN, NY. Notable Collections are: American Folk Art Museum NY, NY, Audrey B. Heckler Collection, NY, NY, Des Moines Contemporary Art Center, IA, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth, Hanover, NH, John Micheal Kohler Arts Center, Sheboygan, WI, and FRAC Picardie, Amiens, France.

In Eye Message, Wehrle focuses on communication and connectivity to the self and the unconscious path to decision making in a world gone wrong. Communication from the physical to the technological, Wehrle explores the tribulations of naked honesty coming into contact with the creation of the masked diabolical character persona often used in messaging and online activities. Eye Message also touches on childhood trauma, desire and underlying paranoia living in the current America.

Image:
Tim Wehrle
Out To Lunch 9 Times in October
24x30x1.5
paper mounted on panel, colored pencil
2026

Headstone is proud to announce the solo exhibition, Eye Message, by Tim Wehrle. This is Tim’s ninth solo exhibition and ...
05/29/2026

Headstone is proud to announce the solo exhibition, Eye Message, by Tim Wehrle. This is Tim’s ninth solo exhibition and his first show with the gallery. He presents 16 works on both paper and fabric - combinations of his infamous, detailed colored pencil drawings and a few collage works built upon Hane’s undershirts, with whittled, painted sticks and watercolor applique. Wehrle’s World is expansive as it is devastatingly hilarious, full of cheeky innuendos coupled with heartfelt revelations; it is as if we are on the subliminal receiving end of his life learnings - echoes that are as gentle as they are sharp.

Join us for the Opening Reception NEXT Saturday, June 6th, 5-8pm. Tim will be there indeed ❤️



Born in Burlington, Iowa in 1978, Tim Wehrle is a Iowa/New York based artist that earned his B.A. degree at Bard College and is currently an upcoming MFA student at The University Of
Iowa. Wehrle has shown work at Cavin-Morris Gallery, NY, NY, Shrine Gallery, NY, NY, PPOW Gallery, NY, NY Ronald Feldman Gallery, NY, NY Adam Baumgold Gallery, NY, NY and Stellar Highway Gallery, BKLYN, NY. Notable Collections are: American Folk Art Museum NY, NY, Audrey B. Heckler Collection, NY, NY, Des Moines Contemporary Art Center, IA, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth, Hanover, NH, John Micheal Kohler Arts Center, Sheboygan, WI, and FRAC Picardie, Amiens, France.

In Eye Message, Wehrle focuses on communication and connectivity to the self and the unconscious path to decision making in a world gone wrong. Communication from the physical to the technological, Wehrle explores the tribulations of naked honesty coming into contact with the creation of the masked diabolical character persona often used in messaging and online activities. Eye Message also touches on childhood trauma, desire and underlying paranoia living in the current America.

For full press release, visit our website via link in bio. DM for inquiries or email us at [email protected]

Image:
Tim Wehrle
Safe House
24”x30”x1.5”
wood, sandpaper, acrylic, gold leaf, colored pencils
2026

It is the very last week to catch our current exhibition, If and When Creatures Appear, a two-person show with Alex Cohe...
05/26/2026

It is the very last week to catch our current exhibition, If and When Creatures Appear, a two-person show with Alex Cohen and Claudia Renfro. Exhibition closes this Sunday, May 31st.

We are here all weekend, Friday - Sunday, 12 - 5pm or by appointment.




For full press release, visit our website via link in bio. DM for inquiries or email us at [email protected]

Image:
Claudia Renfro
Jester
bronze
4” x 5” x 2.5”
2025
Image by

If you are in Denver, you must go check out Gallery Artist, Judd Schiffman’s solo exhibition, Ask the Dust,  at David B....
05/23/2026

If you are in Denver, you must go check out Gallery Artist, Judd Schiffman’s solo exhibition, Ask the Dust, at David B. Smith Gallery on view until June 27th.




Throughout Ask the Dust, complex concepts are communicated through unassuming imagery, often with a nod to the domestic.
Sun in My Heart depicts a vase brimming with colorful flowers in full bloom and teeming with critters, including a happy snail and a mini Mothman (a stand-in for the artist). Between vibrant, rippled petals and glinting gold accents, life is captured at its peak; decay is imminent and, indeed, implied by its apex. For Schiffman, this work references the complexities of masculinity and the heart of the self as evolving and necessitating care.

The primary inspiration for Schiffman’s unconventional ceramic compositions stems from life, including his experiences with
fatherhood, spiritual practice, relationship to nature, and a deep intimacy with the people in his life. Acutely personal and rife
with big questions, Schiffman’s own narrative becomes a space for viewer and artist to exchange, resulting in simultaneously
bold and heartfelt works. The personal reverberates outward, as Schiffman’s artistic conversations join into a larger cultural
narrative focusing on healing our inner worlds as a means to individual and societal growth. Through his sculpture, Schiffman
has developed both a visual language and material landscape to explore, connect, and seek. In Judd Schiffman’s Ask the
Dust, the personal is teased out in dreamlike sequences, fluid in content and solidly grounded in materiality.

Full press release and info for David B. Smith available using link in bio.

Image:
Judd Schiffman
Cup of Longing
stoneware, glaze, gold luster
18” x 6” x 1”
2023

Claudia Renfro, (Left to Right) I Ain’t No Chickenbronze14.5” x 8.5” x 6.5”2025Lone Birdbronze16 x 7.5 x 5 in2024Runner ...
05/22/2026

Claudia Renfro, (Left to Right)
I Ain’t No Chicken
bronze
14.5” x 8.5” x 6.5”
2025

Lone Bird
bronze
16 x 7.5 x 5 in
2024

Runner Up
bronze
16” x 7.5” x 4.5”
2025




We are OPEN for Memorial Day WEEKEND. Join us Friday - Sunday, 12pm - 5pm.

If and When Creatures Appear, a two-person exhibition with Claudia Renfro and Alex Cohen is up through Sunday, May 31st.

For full press release, visit our website via link in bio. DM for inquiries or email us at [email protected]

Image by

Alex CohenChrysalisoil on board13 x 12 ¼  in2026  If and When Creatures Appear is on view until Sunday, May 31st.Alex Co...
05/19/2026

Alex Cohen
Chrysalis
oil on board
13 x 12 ¼ in
2026




If and When Creatures Appear is on view until Sunday, May 31st.

Alex Cohen is a Bucks County native who lives in Newtown, Pennsylvania. He studied painting at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia. Alex has exhibited in galleries across the U.S. and internationally, most recently participating in solo exhibitions at Pamela Salisbury Gallery in Hudson, New York, and at Vardan Gallery in Los Angeles. He is a teacher and a frame-maker.

With his wife, Clara Weishahn, Alex co-directs Kings Oaks projects, which bridge the familiar with the unknown in spaces where art, craft, and design are celebrated. Their events often take place at Kings Oaks, an historic farm near Newtown, Pennsylvania. In 2012 Cohen initiated Art at Kings Oaks, a recurring group art exhibition which features work by international artists in an historic barn and chapel. Cohen and Weishahn also host intimate performances, video projects, and classes. Their latest exhibition, In the Company of Still Life, is on view at ArtYard in Frenchtown, New Jersey through May 31, 2026.

Claudia Renfro grew up in NJ and NYC. She attended Skowhegan right before entering Cooper Union where she received a BFA. She has shown in numerous exhibitions in NY and CT. Most recently she has participated for her second year in The Outsider Art Fair, NYC ,The Eric Firestone Gallery NYC, Art Cake (with Michael David &Co), Brooklyn, The Wassaic Project, Wassaic, NY, as well as September Gallery in Kinderhook NY. She lives and works in New York.

For full press release, visit our website via link in bio. DM for inquiries or email us at [email protected]

Gallery Artist, Judd Schiffman, opens his solo exhibition, Ask the Dust,  in Denver TONIGHT, 6-8pm MST, at David B. Smit...
05/16/2026

Gallery Artist, Judd Schiffman, opens his solo exhibition, Ask the Dust, in Denver TONIGHT, 6-8pm MST, at David B. Smith Gallery. Congratulations to you, Judd!!




David B. Smith Gallery is proud to present Ask The Dust, a solo exhibition by Providence, RI-based artist Judd Schiffman. Featuring a series of Schiffman’s “outlines”—his distinctive wallmounted ceramic sculpture with ceramic borders enclosing rich low-relief imagery—Ask The Dust populates the Main Gallery with
ruminations on the nature of the self. In Ask the Dust, Schiffman blends fantastical imagery inspired by literature and geography with that of nature. The exhibition borrows its title from a 1939 novel of the same name by Colorado-based author John Fante (1909–1983), which describes a young male protagonist struggling with his masculinity and delusions
of grandeur, avoiding his underlying cowardice. By referencing this novel, Schiffman considers his own relationship to spiritual practice and his personal journey of self-discovery, aging, and acceptance. Connection to nature, a throughline in the exhibition, traces its origin to a decade of Schiffman’s life spent in the
Southwest. Now exhibiting in Denver, Colorado, back in a biome that holds special meaning, the significance of place moves to the
forefront. A distinct approach to material and method are among the standout elements of Schiffman’s work. Truly unique in form,
Schiffman’s ornately glazed stoneware wall tile arrangements are heavily informed by his drawing practice. Through layers of
colored glaze, low-relief ceramic tiles depict figures, flora and fauna, and objects, carrying narratives that speak to the artist’s lived experience and ongoing inquiries. Disarmingly loose in his renderings yet intricately designed and executed, works possess a stylized, illustrative quality met with a mastery of ceramic craftsmanship.

Full press release and info for David B. Smith Gallery use link in bio.

Address

28 Hurley Avenue
Kingston, NY
12401

Opening Hours

Friday 12pm - 5pm
Saturday 12pm - 5pm
Sunday 12pm - 5pm

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