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DM Witman

DM Witman came from Maine to work in the WSW darkroom, extending the range of her photographic work by making paper and using direct emulsion to experiment with creating shaped photographic images. She holds an MFA from Maine Media College and teaches at Unity College, Maine Media Workshops, and the Farnsworth Art Museum.

Website

http://www.dmwitman.com

Residencies

  • Studio Workspace Residency (2012) , Darkroom

Images

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New Mural Alert! Symone Salib @symonesalibstudio j New Mural Alert! Symone Salib @symonesalibstudio joined us last month to teach a Summer Art Institute workshop about the power of public art AND create this beautiful new mural, “Nothing Grows Alone,” which reads “May we refuse to separate our gratitude for food from justice for those who grow it.” Below is a statement from Symone about her inspiration for the piece.

“This mural is both a prayer and a protest. A hand reaches into a tree to pick an apricot, an act that feels simple but is sacred. Although this mural intentionally draws you in with its bright and warm colors, beneath the imagery lies a deeper meaning to remember who feeds us and at what cost. 
I created this work in honor of the workers, workers who are Black and brown, workers who are immigrants. Whose hands grow, pick, and prepare the food that sustains us. Many of them live under constant threat as ICE continues to tear families apart and target the folks whose labor makes our lives easier. We cannot separate our gratitude for abundance from the ongoing violence waged against those who provide it.
This mural is a space to honor those who grow our food, not only for their physical labor but for how they feed us with knowledge, stories, and culture. Food is never just sustenance, it’s memory, tradition, resistance, and love. To be in community is to be fed in all of these ways.
The green border that frames the mural is a metaphor for growth and possibility. Symbolic of the dream for a better life that so many immigrants long for. It represents my hope for a world where the immigration system isn’t broken and all people have the right to seek asylum safely. It should not be radical to believe that all people deserve safety, dignity, and the right to a better life. That includes Black and brown families. That includes children, adults and the elders who make up the fabric of our communities.
“Nothing Grows Alone” is a reminder that our liberation is interconnected. That food, culture, and justice are intertwined. This mural holds space for gratitude, for those who feed us not just with food, but with culture, history, and care. Because nothing grows alone. Not fruit. Not people. Not justice.”
Join us Monday, August 18th for the last Slide Nig Join us Monday, August 18th for the last Slide Night of Summer Art Institute! At 6PM hear from instructor Maisie Broome @myfawnwy, administrative assistant Julia Maisel-Berick @julia.rmb, and chef and artist Lexa Walsh @lexawalshstudios about their artistic practices. See you then!
What an incredible weekend at the @cpw_kingston Ph What an incredible weekend at the @cpw_kingston Photobook + Zine Fair! We came across a WSW easter egg, “What’s Happening with Momma?” by Clarissa Sligh @clarissasligh (1988) in @10x10photobooks’s book “What They Saw: Historical Photobooks by Women, 1843-1999.” 

Thanks to everyone who stopped by to say hello, it’s always a treat connecting with new and familiar faces!
Another amazing week of workshops had come to an e Another amazing week of workshops had come to an end! Students spent the week week either experimenting with stenciling and pulp paint with Katharine DeLamater @katharinelark, discovering kitchen lithography and watercolor monotype with Rie Hasegawa @hariehanga, or entering the incredible world of halftones and CMYK with K Sarrantonio. Only 2 more weeks of SAI fun!

⭐️Windows, Wells, and Walls: Stencils and Masking in Handmade Paper with Katharine DeLamater
⭐️Non-Toxic Printmaking: Kitchen Lithography, Watercolor Monotype and More! with Rie Hasegawa
⭐️Photo-based Screenprinting: Light and Shadow with K Sarrantonio

#womensstudioworkshop #summerartinstitute #wswsummerartinstitute #wswsai
Another amazing week done! Students this week eith Another amazing week done! Students this week either experimented with stenciling and pulp paint with Katharine DeLamater @katharinelark, discovered kitchen lithography and watercolor monotype with Rie Hasegawa @hariehanga, or played with the magic of CMYK with K Sarrantonio!

⭐️Windows, Wells, and Walls: Stencils and Masking in Handmade Paper with Katharine DeLamater
⭐️Non-Toxic Printmaking: Kitchen Lithography, Watercolor Monotype and More! with Rie Hasegawa
⭐️Photo-based Screenprinting: Light and Shadow with K Sarrantonio

#womensstudioworkshop #summerartinstitute #wswsummerartinstitute #wswsai
Join us Monday, August 11th for the second to last Join us Monday, August 11th for the second to last Slide Night of Summer Art Institute! At 6PM, we’ll hear from SAI instructors Tyanna Buie @tyanna_buie, Katharine DeLamater @katharinelark, and Rie Hasegawa @hariehanga. See you there!
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New Mural Alert! Symone Salib @symonesalibstudio j New Mural Alert! Symone Salib @symonesalibstudio joined us last month to teach a Summer Art Institute workshop about the power of public art AND create this beautiful new mural, “Nothing Grows Alone,” which reads “May we refuse to separate our gratitude for food from justice for those who grow it.” Below is a statement from Symone about her inspiration for the piece.

“This mural is both a prayer and a protest. A hand reaches into a tree to pick an apricot, an act that feels simple but is sacred. Although this mural intentionally draws you in with its bright and warm colors, beneath the imagery lies a deeper meaning to remember who feeds us and at what cost. 
I created this work in honor of the workers, workers who are Black and brown, workers who are immigrants. Whose hands grow, pick, and prepare the food that sustains us. Many of them live under constant threat as ICE continues to tear families apart and target the folks whose labor makes our lives easier. We cannot separate our gratitude for abundance from the ongoing violence waged against those who provide it.
This mural is a space to honor those who grow our food, not only for their physical labor but for how they feed us with knowledge, stories, and culture. Food is never just sustenance, it’s memory, tradition, resistance, and love. To be in community is to be fed in all of these ways.
The green border that frames the mural is a metaphor for growth and possibility. Symbolic of the dream for a better life that so many immigrants long for. It represents my hope for a world where the immigration system isn’t broken and all people have the right to seek asylum safely. It should not be radical to believe that all people deserve safety, dignity, and the right to a better life. That includes Black and brown families. That includes children, adults and the elders who make up the fabric of our communities.
“Nothing Grows Alone” is a reminder that our liberation is interconnected. That food, culture, and justice are intertwined. This mural holds space for gratitude, for those who feed us not just with food, but with culture, history, and care. Because nothing grows alone. Not fruit. Not people. Not justice.”
Join us Monday, August 18th for the last Slide Nig Join us Monday, August 18th for the last Slide Night of Summer Art Institute! At 6PM hear from instructor Maisie Broome @myfawnwy, administrative assistant Julia Maisel-Berick @julia.rmb, and chef and artist Lexa Walsh @lexawalshstudios about their artistic practices. See you then!
What an incredible weekend at the @cpw_kingston Ph What an incredible weekend at the @cpw_kingston Photobook + Zine Fair! We came across a WSW easter egg, “What’s Happening with Momma?” by Clarissa Sligh @clarissasligh (1988) in @10x10photobooks’s book “What They Saw: Historical Photobooks by Women, 1843-1999.” 

Thanks to everyone who stopped by to say hello, it’s always a treat connecting with new and familiar faces!
Another amazing week of workshops had come to an e Another amazing week of workshops had come to an end! Students spent the week week either experimenting with stenciling and pulp paint with Katharine DeLamater @katharinelark, discovering kitchen lithography and watercolor monotype with Rie Hasegawa @hariehanga, or entering the incredible world of halftones and CMYK with K Sarrantonio. Only 2 more weeks of SAI fun!

⭐️Windows, Wells, and Walls: Stencils and Masking in Handmade Paper with Katharine DeLamater
⭐️Non-Toxic Printmaking: Kitchen Lithography, Watercolor Monotype and More! with Rie Hasegawa
⭐️Photo-based Screenprinting: Light and Shadow with K Sarrantonio

#womensstudioworkshop #summerartinstitute #wswsummerartinstitute #wswsai
Another amazing week done! Students this week eith Another amazing week done! Students this week either experimented with stenciling and pulp paint with Katharine DeLamater @katharinelark, discovered kitchen lithography and watercolor monotype with Rie Hasegawa @hariehanga, or played with the magic of CMYK with K Sarrantonio!

⭐️Windows, Wells, and Walls: Stencils and Masking in Handmade Paper with Katharine DeLamater
⭐️Non-Toxic Printmaking: Kitchen Lithography, Watercolor Monotype and More! with Rie Hasegawa
⭐️Photo-based Screenprinting: Light and Shadow with K Sarrantonio

#womensstudioworkshop #summerartinstitute #wswsummerartinstitute #wswsai
Join us Monday, August 11th for the second to last Join us Monday, August 11th for the second to last Slide Night of Summer Art Institute! At 6PM, we’ll hear from SAI instructors Tyanna Buie @tyanna_buie, Katharine DeLamater @katharinelark, and Rie Hasegawa @hariehanga. See you there!
UP FROM THE ARCHIVE: In 1993, WSW put out a xeroxe UP FROM THE ARCHIVE: In 1993, WSW put out a xeroxed pamphlet  ART CUT$ HERE’S HOW THEY AFFECT YOU to ask for community support and raise awareness about how federal and state funding cuts deeply impacted our programming during that period. Our founders stated that, “We have lost $35,000 in grants, and we anticipate losing another $10,000…WSW is alive. But each year is a challenge. We are the only women’s studio arts organization to survive the eighties, and we need your help to keep our programs vital and growing into the nineties.”

By reflecting on our organization’s history, we invite you to join us in our continued resilience, grounded in the same perseverance, being in service to women, trans, nonbinary, and genderfluid artists. Twenty years later, we are continuing to provide professional opportunities for artists at various stages of their careers and promote programs designed to stimulate public involvement, awareness, and support for the visual arts.

#upfromthearchives #WSWarchives #feministhistory #womensstutioworkshop #1990s
This Sunday, our beloved director Natalie Renganes This Sunday, our beloved director Natalie Renganeschi will be speaking on a panel hosted by Community Foundations of the Hudson Valley @cfhvny. This conversation will focus on "how artists, institutions, and supporters can deepen their impact—and why supporting the arts is an investment in a thriving society." You can RSVP for the panel, lunch, and an optional tour of the CCS Hessel Museum of Art using the link in our bio.

Sunday, August 10
11 AM: Panel discussion
12 PM: Lunch & conversation with local arts leaders
1 PM: Optional tour of the CCS Hessel Museum of Art

Blithewood at Bard College
175 Blithewood Avenue, Red Hook, NY
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