Yale School of Architecture Gallery, New Haven, January 12 to May 22, 2023

Yale School of Architecture Gallery, New Haven, January 12 to May 22, 2023

C24 Gallery, New York, New York, January 11 – 8 March 2024







From C24’s Exhibition Description:
Rubin’s conical sculptures reference hoods, headdresses, and helmets, and manifest power, awe, anonymity, horror, and magical thinking. The sculptures have a wide range of references from Catholic capirote hats, Ku Klux Klan hoods, and West African & Aboriginal headdresses, to dunce caps and medieval helmets. Suspended somewhere between familiarity and uncertainty, these sculptures capture the duality that is at the heart of Black life in the United States.
-C24 Gallery
Shaker Museum, Kinderhook, New York opened May 31 2025
Shaker Design and the Art of Removal
Walking through the Shaker Museum’s pop-up exhibition in Kinderhook, A Time to Build, I kept returning to a sculptural idea that sits underneath the familiar story we tell about Shaker “minimalism.” We tend to describe Shaker design as spare, disciplined, and unornamented…a kind of pre-modern Minimalism. But the deeper common ground is actually its method. Shaker craft is, again and again, subtractive sculpture.
In subtractive sculpture, or generally subtractive fabrication, the object starts with a mass in excess of the final result. Whether the object is a block, a beam, a plank, a thick door stile, its first state contains more material than the finished thing requires. It’s an obvious fact, but important enough to be stated clearly. The work, then: ongoing decisions about what to remove, what to spare, and what must stay intact for the object to hold together. Subtractive sculpture is a very different logic than additive sculpture (clay, wax, assemblage, collage), where form accrues through buildup, revision, layering, and so forth. With subtractive fabrication, the object becomes what’s left. The object is a remainder.

In the exhibit’s tool case, the story is told bluntly. The curved-handled hewing tool and the broad hatchet aren’t “about” decoration; they’re about transforming raw stock into legible planes. The plumb bob, dangling with its string, is companion to the blade: the plumb bob makes sure the subtraction lines up with gravity. The bush hammer is a device for texturing or dressing a surface by controlled removal. Put together, these implements revolve around a vocabulary of subtracting. The tools here are designed to make material smaller, truer, flatter, tighter.
[…]Tucked away on the ground floor of the Walsh Family Library at Fordham’s Rose Hill campus, the Fordham Museum of Greek, Etruscan, and Roman Art is one of New York City’s best-kept secrets. For anyone in the Bronx, it offers a startlingly intimate encounter with the ancient world, particularly the enigmatic Etruscan civilization that predated and influenced the rise of Rome.




The museum’s location (literally inside a library) creates a quiet atmosphere. Unlike the sprawling halls of the Met, where you might feel like one of many thousands, here you are often the only person in the room with artifacts that are 2,500 years old. Windows look out onto the campus, grounding the ancient objects in a modern academic setting.
While the collection spans the Mediterranean, its Etruscan holdings are particularly evocative of a culture that blended elegance with a deep focus on the afterlife and ritual.