Hartford MFA Group Photography Exhibition
Vernissage: 21 May 2026 6:30 PM – 9:30 PM
Location: Villa Heike, Freienwalder Str. 17, 13055 Berlin
Exhibition Dates : 21- 27 May 2026
Location: Villa Heike, Freienwalder Str. 17, 13055 Berlin
Exhibition Dates : 21- 27 May 2026
Participating Artists:
Ruben Alvarado, Sabrina Giacomaggio, Rafael Gonzalez, Brandon Lavoie,
Dominic Leon, Jonah Markowitz, Sylvie Redmond, Charlotte Straus, John Tait, Jersey
Walz, Kevin Williamson.
Ruben Alvarado, Sabrina Giacomaggio, Rafael Gonzalez, Brandon Lavoie,
Dominic Leon, Jonah Markowitz, Sylvie Redmond, Charlotte Straus, John Tait, Jersey
Walz, Kevin Williamson.
BERLIN — Hosted by Villa Heike, the International Limited-Residency MFA in
Photography program at the Hartford Art School / University of Hartford (US) is
pleased to present LONG ENOUGH TO TIE MY SHOE an exhibition featuring
the work of eleven master students from the class of 2027. Their photographic works
reflect a range of approaches and styles, yet all engage photography’s enduring
relationship to time — its ability to hold, mark and measure a moment. Each artist
uses the camera as a starting point for reflection on growth, memory, distance, and
family.
Through gesture, landscape, body, and trace, these artists consider duration as both
threshold and transformation. Working with distinct practices, they meet at long
enough to tie my shoe — not a place, but a measure of time that allows for pause,
awareness, and the possibility of becoming.
Curated by Robert Lyons, this exhibition features in-progress work by first-year MFA
students in the program. We appreciate the other faculty, Michael Vahrenwald
(Director) and Chikara Umihara, for their valuable insight and assistance in making
this exhibition possible.
Photography program at the Hartford Art School / University of Hartford (US) is
pleased to present LONG ENOUGH TO TIE MY SHOE an exhibition featuring
the work of eleven master students from the class of 2027. Their photographic works
reflect a range of approaches and styles, yet all engage photography’s enduring
relationship to time — its ability to hold, mark and measure a moment. Each artist
uses the camera as a starting point for reflection on growth, memory, distance, and
family.
Through gesture, landscape, body, and trace, these artists consider duration as both
threshold and transformation. Working with distinct practices, they meet at long
enough to tie my shoe — not a place, but a measure of time that allows for pause,
awareness, and the possibility of becoming.
Curated by Robert Lyons, this exhibition features in-progress work by first-year MFA
students in the program. We appreciate the other faculty, Michael Vahrenwald
(Director) and Chikara Umihara, for their valuable insight and assistance in making
this exhibition possible.