The New Social Environment#1098

Gaby Collins-Fernandez: Art in Love

Featuring Collins-Fernandez and Jarrett Earnest

 

1 p.m. Eastern / 10 a.m. Pacific

Artist Gaby Collins-Fernandez joins Rail contributor Jarrett Earnest for a conversation.

In this talk

Visit Art in Love, on view at Rachel Uffner Gallery through October 19, 2024 →

Gaby Collins-Fernandez

Photo of Gaby Collins-Fernandez
Photo by Michael Marcelle
Gaby Collins-Fernandez is an artist living and working in New York City. She holds degrees from Dartmouth College (BA) and the Yale School of Art (MFA, Painting/Printmaking). Her work has been shown in the US and internationally, including at Peter Freeman, Inc., the Birmingham Museum of Art, Alabama and El Museo del Barrio, NY. Her work has been discussed in publications such as the Brooklyn Rail and artcritical, and on the video interview series, Gorky’s Granddaughter. She is a recipient of residencies at Yaddo (Saratoga Springs, NY), The Marble House Project (Dorset, VT), and a 2013 Rema Hort Mann Foundation Emerging Art Award. She is a founder and publisher of the annual magazine Precog, and a co-director of the artist-run art and music initiative BombPop!Up.

Jarrett Earnest

Portrait of Jarrett Earnest by Phong H. Bui
Portrait by Phong H. Bui
Writer and curator Jarrett Earnest has contributed to publications including What it Means to Write About Art: Interviews with Art Critics (David Zwirner Books, 2018), the Brooklyn Rail, and Art in America, among many others. He has recently curated exhibitions including The Young and the Evil at David Zwirner and Closer as Love: Polaroids 1993–2007: Breyer P-Orridge at Nina Johnson. Earnest was also the editor of Hot, Cold, Heavy, Light: 100 Art Writings 1988–2017 by Peter Schjeldahl (Abrams, June 2019), TELL ME SOMETHING GOOD: Artist Interviews from the Brooklyn Rail (with Lucas Zwirner; David Zwirner Books, 2017), and FORBILL, ANYTHING: Words and Images for Bill Berkson (with Isabelle Sorrell; Pressed Wafer, 2015).

❤️ 🌈 We'd like to thank the The Terra Foundation for American Art for making these daily conversations possible, and for their support of our growing archive.