Saturday, June 13, 2026

Rochester Contemporary Art Center, 20266X6 Pics of the week.

We are tickled to introduce the Innerloop Blog and Podcast as this week's 6x6 Pics curators. Shane Allen and Mark Maira shared more about themselves and the curation:

"At The Innerloop Blog, we’d love to say we carefully crafted a mission statement about “enriching the cultural landscape of Rochester,” but honestly, we just started making fun of the city and don’t know how to stop. It’s like we rubbed a Genny Light bottle and got cursed. If you look at our comment sections on Facebook or Instagram @innerloopblog, it appears our goal is mostly to confuse the oldest people in Western New York.

Check out our award-winning podcast and info for our live comedy shows at www.innerloopblog.com.

We align with the Rochester Contemporary Art Center in the sense that we’ve both spent years creating work that sparks dialogue in the community, and we’re both nonprofit organizations. To clarify, The Innerloop Blog would absolutely love to make a profit... We just haven’t quite figured out how yet."

Be sure to check out the Innerloop Podcast (new episode every Tuesday) and stay up to date with Shane and Mark at https://innerloopblog.com/, on Instagram & Facebook @innerloopblog as they cover Rochester's latest news <3 Oh and support them on Patreon!

Artwork #11

"[SHANE ALLEN] At The Innerloop Blog’s Worst of Rochester Awards, ICE won “Worst Thing Happening in the City 2025.” We paired the frozen water and the federal agency together for the nomination since they both show up uninvited and make everything worse."

Artwork #21

"[SHANE ALLEN] This is what my GPS looks like tracking me at Wegmans." 

Artwork #36

"[SHANE ALLEN] This was what the meeting agenda looks like at a Police Accountability Board meeting."

Artwork #45

"[SHANE ALLEN] Really connecting with this one after seeing the prices of Buffalo Sabres playoff tickets and how much it would cost to see the Bills in their new stadium."

Artwork #51

"[SHANE ALLEN] This piece reminded me of that time Canada was on fire and it hurt to breathe in Rochester for a few days. I am sure that's not going to have any long term health effects right? RIGHT?"

Artwork #60

"[SHANE ALLEN] I have a recurring dream where the HORSES ON PARADE statues outside local businesses come to life, and the Frederick Douglass statues have to round them up. If someone could make a horse statue that looks like this piece, we'd love to put it out in front of The Innerloop Blog's office." 

Artwork #1711

"[MARK MAIRA] RTS buses are the - Shai-Hulud of Rochester. People randomly walking in the middle of the street in Downtown Rochester are the Fremen. The people of Pittsford are the Harkonnen. Need we say more?"

Artwork #2405

"[MARK MAIRA] This is the face I see directly after dreaming about the Wegmans hot bar coming back. It haunts me on a weekly basis."

Artwork #667

"[MARK MAIRA] This one had me torn… because I am looking for a reason to live… but I’m also still interested in the nudes. I guess it’s kind of a duality of man type of thing."

Artwork #178

"[MARK MAIRA] I just feel like this guy’s name would be Mr. Rochester. He’s everything this city could be. Strong, beautiful, perfectly symmetrical nipples. I love it."

Artwork #762

"I (Mark Maira) picked one of these and completely separate from me my wife Lily picked a piece by the same artist and in the same style. I think there is something beautiful there."

Artwork #763

Lily's aforementioned choice. 

IMPORTANT 6X6 DATES

Buy online and in gallery: June 5-July 25

View only unsold artworks:
July 3-25

Purchased Artwork Pick-Up:
July 22-25

#rochestercontemporaryart#fineartmagazineblog.blogspot.com

#sustormfineartmagazine.com#fineartfun#fineartpics

The Oklahoma Contemporary Arts Center Opening reception for Chad Mount:~Frequency and Perception~ June 25th, 2-26, 5-8 PM is immersive !!!

 

THe  artists noted for hs blending of multidisciplinary media, light, color and form offers this immersive exhibition. Looks like is your in the area it's worth while catching. 

Join us for an evening celebrating Frequency and Perspective  |  View in browser

Two people interact with light installation

You're invited to an opening reception for 

Chad Mount: Frequency and Perspective

Oklahoma Contemporary Arts Center warmly invites you to the opening reception of Frequency and Perspective, a new immersive installation by transdisciplinary artist Chad Mount.

Rooted in curiosity and guided by discovery, Mount’s work explores light, rhythm, and pattern as forces revealed through observation and repetition. Through projection mapping, laser light, generative visuals, and sound, Frequency and Perspective transforms the gallery into a dynamic environment that shifts with presence and perspective.

Blending analog and digital tools, the installation draws inspiration from moments of reflection, meditation, and time spent in nature—creating opportunities for what Mount describes as “micro-awe.”
Join us for a come-and-go evening of art, exploration, and community as we celebrate this exciting new exhibition.

Opening Reception
Thursday, June 25, 2026
5-8 p.m.
Mary LeFlore Clements Oklahoma Gallery
Oklahoma Contemporary Arts Center

This event is free and open to the public.

Please RSVP to reserve your complimentary tickets.

We look forward to welcoming you to Oklahoma Contemporary in celebration of the arts in our community.


Image: Concept image courtesy of Chad Mount


Oklahoma Contemporary logo (the words stacked and spelled out with vertical lines between each letter)

Learn more: okcontemp.org

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Oklahoma Contemporary Arts Center | 11 NW 11th St. | Oklahoma City, OK 73103

Friday, June 12, 2026

D Lan Galleries announces the final weeks of exhibiting ~Significant~ Australian Indigenous artists through June 27th.

D Lan Galleries Announces Final Weeks of Significant, the Landmark Exhibition Across Melbourne, Sydney, and New York

 Featuring nearly 60 works valued at AUD $7 million / USD $5 million, the exhibition spans early Papunya masterpieces through to major contemporary Australian Indigenous artists

Melbourne | Sydney | New York  
On view through June 27, 2026 

Image: Shorty Lungkata, Man Dreaming, 1972

Melbourne/Naarm, Sydney/Gadigal, New York/Lenapehoking (June 12, 2026) | D Lan Galleries announces the final weeks of Significant, the 2026 edition of its flagship exhibition of secondary-market Australian Indigenous First Nations art, presented concurrently across its galleries in Melbourne, Sydney and New York. On view through June 27, this offers a final opportunity to experience nearly 60 museum-quality works with a combined value of AUD $7 million / USD $5 million, underscoring continued international demand for historically significant First Nations art and the growing global market for Australian Indigenous works.

Now in its second decade, Significant has become the leading annual presentation of secondary-market Australian Indigenous First Nations art, offering collectors and institutions access to works of exceptional historical and cultural importance. At its core are rare Papunya masterpieces, widely regarded as foundational works in the history of contemporary Australian art. These early paintings anchor the exhibition alongside major works spanning multiple generations of Australian Indigenous First Nations artists, from the Western Desert movement through to leading contemporary practitioners.

This annual exhibition reflects both the cultural significance and the growing international recognition of Australian Indigenous First Nations art. D’Lan Davidson, Founder & Director of D Lan Galleries, and curator of the global exhibition, comments “these works represent some of the most important artistic achievements in contemporary Australian art history. Bringing them together within Significant allows us to present not only extraordinary individual works, but a broader narrative about the strength and growing influence of Indigenous art both in Australia and internationally.

A highlight of the 2026 edition is the Carey Lyon and Jo Crosby Collection, an important private collection of 13 early Papunya paintings assembled over 15 years. Created in 1971–72, these works date to the formative period of the Western Desert art movement; a pivotal moment in Australian art history, when senior Aboriginal artists in Papunya began translating ceremonial and ancestral designs into permanent works on board with the assistance of schoolteacher Geoffrey Bardon. This period led to the establishment of Papunya Tula Artists and the emergence of one of Australia’s most significant contemporary art movements.

Among the key works is Shorty Lungkata Tjungurrayi’s Man Dreaming (1972), an exceptionally rare early Papunya board appearing on the market for the first time since the late 1980s, having been held on long-term loan to the Art Gallery of South Australia. Also included is Kaapa Mbitjana Tjampitjinpa’s Honey Ant Travelling Dreaming (1971), which connects directly to the Honey Ant Dreaming of the Papunya region and relates to the historic Honey Ant mural created in 1971 by senior Papunya artists.

The exhibition also traces the evolution of Australian Indigenous First Nations art beyond the early Western Desert movement, and features major works by Emily Kam Kngwarray, Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda Sally Gabori, and Nyapanyapa YunupiÅ‹u. Highlights include Kngwarray’s Yam Story (1996), painted in the final months of her life and emblematic of her late practice; Gabori’s Dibirdibi Country (2012), a definitive example of the Kaiadilt artist’s chromatic abstraction; and YunupiÅ‹u’s Djorra (2014), a monumental installation of 45 works created on discarded print proofs from the Yirrkala Print Space, previously shown as the centrepiece of her survey exhibition the moment eternal at the Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory.

D Lan Galleries founder D’Lan Davidson said the annual Significant exhibition is guided by a commitment not only to showcasing important works but also to supporting artists and their communities, an ethos that defines the gallery’s overall approach. He says “a thriving secondary market must also deliver real benefits to artists and communities. Returning 30 per cent of our net profits to Australian Indigenous First Nations artists, artist-led initiatives and their communities is central to our responsibility in supporting the future of Indigenous cultural practice.

Significant will remain on view in Melbourne, Sydney and New York gallery locations through June 27, 2026.
NOTES TO EDITORS

International Media Inquiries, Image and Interview Requests:
Lydia Adam / FITZ & CO
Email: ladam@fitzandco.com

Mobile: +1 212 444-405

Exhibition Details
Significant 2026
Dates: 14 May – 27 June 2026

Locations
D Lan Galleries Melbourne/Naarm
40 Exhibition St, Melbourne,
VIC, 3000, Australia
T +61 3 9008 7212
Tuesday–Friday 10am–5pm
Saturday 11am–4pm

D Lan Galleries Sydney/Gadigal
97-99 Queen St, Sydney,
NSW, 2025, Australia
T +61 2 9199 9646
Tuesday–Friday 10am–5pm
Saturday 11am–4pm

D Lan Galleries New York/Lenapehoking
25 East 73rd St, New York,
10021, United States of America
T +1 917 405 7743
Tuesday by appointment
Wednesday-Saturday 11am–6pm

About D Lan Galleries
D LAN GALLERIES was founded in Melbourne, Australia in 2016 by leading art consultant, dealer and gallerist, D’Lan Davidson, who was previously Head of Indigenous Art at Sotheby’s Australia, and who has specialized in Australian First Nations art for over twenty years.

D LAN GALLERIES presents exceptional work of art by leading and emerging First Nations artists at its galleries in Melbourne, Sydney, and New York, at international art fairs and in partnership with other venues and galleries around the world.

Alongside an international exhibition program, the gallery also presents educational talks and events that celebrate and promote the rich art and culture of Australia’s first peoples.

D LAN GALLERIES maintains strict ethical practices and is committed to fostering a sustainable marketplace for this important segment of Australian art and culture. The gallery contributes 30% of its net profits back to First Nations artists, artist projects and their communities.

https://dlangalleries.com/

D Lan Galleries acknowledges the Traditional Owners and Custodians of the lands on which we work – the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung, Bunurong and Boonwurrung peoples of the Kulin Nations in Naarm/Melbourne, the Birrabirragal and Gadigal peoples of the Eora Nation in Gadigal/Sydney, and the Lenape people of Lenapehoking, the ancestral lands that now form New York City.

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