news, Upcoming Exhibitions & events

Two bodies of work are included in this solo exhibit at Cove Street Arts, the Coral Reef series and the Island Kelp series. Each series finds its immediacy in my direct experience in the environment: scuba diving in turquoise Caribbean waters; and collaborating with the sea and kelp on a Maine island. Water… it’s movement, transparency, light, and the life within it… bind these two series together.

Catalog available here and available to download here.


Curated by artist Elizabeth Awalt, this exhibition focuses on the effect of climate change on bodies of water. Working within a wide range of media—including video, sculpture, painting, drawing, photography, and installation—this diverse group shares the knowledge that we are at a critical moment in the health of our planet and a commitment to bringing this fact into the studio to visualize it and to share it. The artists include Anne Neely, Christopher Edwards, Elizabeth Awalt, Else Bostelmann, Evelyn Rydz, Heidi Whitman, Henry Horenstein, Ilana Manolson, Jackie Brown, Joan Hall, Mags Harries, Meghann Riepenhoff, and Youjin Moon.

Catalog available through Concord Center for the Arts or download here.


A virtual conversation and reflection on art, science, and loss
Co-Presented by Catalyst Conversations and Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
November 17, 1-2pm
Moderated by Deborah Davidson

Marking Lives COVID-19 founder and participating artist, Liz Awalt, and Broad infectious disease researcher, Roby Bhattacharyya, will discuss how they each continue to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic and the immense loss of lives in our nation and around the world. Their conversation will be an opportunity for the two of them to share and reflect from both a scientific and artistic point of view.  Underlying their respective practices is a spirit of generosity, a manifestation of our collective humanity, demonstrating how both contribute to that essential notion of who we are.

Liz Awalt says about her collective project: “when the numbers of COVID-19 deaths skyrocketed in December 2020, I was struggling to justify my painting practice amid the raging virus, divisive politics, and racial injustice in our country. I decided to respond by acting on an idea that broke through my sense of despair. This idea was clear and simple: make a painting with one thousand separate marks, where each mark represents and honors a life lost to COVID-19.” 

Roby Bhattacharyya’s “lab aspires to be a kind, collaborative, and inclusive environment in which to pursue rigorous science that addresses important questions in infectious diseases. We value diversity of thought, experience, and therefore identity, and we believe that this diversity enriches the science we do, the questions we choose to ask, and the people we become.”

This event is free and open to the public.
Registration required: broad.io/RememberingTogetherWebinar

Catalyst Conversations is grateful to the Cambridge Arts Council, our founding partner, as well as the Catalyst Conversations Governing and Advisory Boards for their advice, connections, funding and feedback. We thank our wonderful volunteers for their time and generosity both behind the scenes and at our events.


REMEMBERING TOGETHER: MARKING LIVES COVID-19

A virtual conversation and reflection on art, science, and loss
Co-Presented by Catalyst Conversations and Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
November 17, 1-2pm
Moderated by Deborah Davidson

Marking Lives COVID-19 founder and participating artist, Liz Awalt, Broad infectious disease researcher, Roby Bhattacharyya, and Broad visualization software engineer, Benjamin Cooley, discussed how they each continue to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic and the immense loss of lives in our nation and around the world. Their conversation was an opportunity for the three of them to share and reflect from both a scientific and artistic point of view.  Underlying their respective practices is a spirit of generosity, a manifestation of our collective humanity, demonstrating how they contribute to that essential notion of who we are.

Liz Awalt says about her collective project: “when the numbers of COVID-19 deaths skyrocketed in December 2020, I was struggling to justify my painting practice amid the raging virus, divisive politics, and racial injustice in our country. I decided to respond by acting on an idea that broke through my sense of despair. This idea was clear and simple: make a painting with one thousand separate marks, where each mark represents and honors a life lost to COVID-19.” 

Roby Bhattacharyya's lab aspires to be a kind, collaborative, and inclusive environment in which to pursue rigorous science that addresses important questions in infectious diseases. We value diversity of thought, experience, and therefore identity, and we believe that this diversity enriches the science we do, the questions we choose to ask, and the people we become.”

Benjamin Cooley wrote, early in the pandemic: “Data has been used as a means of warning, informing, and educating. To be sure, this is important work; but in reporting the pandemic data, we also need to reinforce the humanity of the data. These positive cases are entire lives uprooted. With rapidly evolving aggregated datasets such as case counts, deaths, hotspots, and hospitalizations, it can be easy to forget these stories and focus instead on precision.”