May Openings
Field Notes: an art survey
May 3–11, 2025
browngrotta Arts, Wilton, Connecticut
The latest survey by browngrotta gallery will show what the artists they represent are up to—what’s “on their minds, on their looms and in their studios,” the organizers write. Also included will be work by invited guests, and selected pieces by Kay Sekimachi, Mariette Rousseau-Vermette, and other textile art pioneers.
Superfine: Tailoring Black Style
May 10–October 26, 2025
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York
Garments, accessories, drawings, prints, paintings, photographs, film excerpts, and other resources will tell the story of Black dandyism: men, and sometimes women, of African heritage dressing in high style. What began as a requirement of servitude—enslaved servants’ fancy dress reflected the wealth of their enslavers—evolved into an assertion of the wearers’ irony, wit, and pride.
Brilliant Color
May 10, 2025–January 11, 2026
Corning Museum of Glass, Corning, New York
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, glass underwent what the organizers of this exhibition call a “chromatic revolution” as designers, many trained as chemists, experimented with new color techniques. Vibrantly hued everyday items and art glass alike will be on display, including products from Lalique and Tiffany and contemporary works by artists who innovate in color.
Familiar Texture: The Fibers of Childhood and Home
May 10, 2025–April 5, 2026
John Michael Kohler Arts Center, Sheboygan, Wisconsin
The textiles and fiber works on display here, by Farah Al Qasimi, Hangama Amiri, Keith Jackson, Yvette Mayorga, Tressa Prisbrey, and Dalila Sanabria, will present childhood memories of home. Each work depicts an evocative interior space: living rooms, bedrooms, storage spaces. “Each of these sites,” write the organizers, “memorialize social and environmental influences that shaped the future of an individual.
Night Circus
May 15–August 8, 2025
Presented by the Guild of Bookworkers
Cary Graphic Arts Collection, RIT Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, New York
The 30-some artists in the Guild of Book Workers’ biennial juried exhibition were all tasked with interpreting the theme “Night Circus,” guided by a set of phrases including “curiosity of the Spectacle,” “investigating Clandestine action and Secret knowledge,” and “embracing Chaos and Otherness.” The resulting works will show fine and design bindings, printing, book arts, and calligraphy with more than a touch of mystery.

Ensemble by Marvin Desroc, 2019. Appears in Superfine: Tailoring Black Style at The Met.