Eclipse of Distance

Clement Oladipo, Debbi Kenote, Maria Stabio, Orli Swergold, Matt Logsdon

Curated by Art Hap's Morgan Everhart, Mel Reese, & Alex Feim

The Yard Greenpoint

33 Nassau Street, Floor 2 Brooklyn, NY 11222

August 7-October 13, 2023

Reception: Wednesday, September 20th 6pm-8:30pm

For information and appointments, contact mel@arthap.com

Art Hap and The Yard Greenpoint are pleased to present Eclipse of Distance, a group exhibition of works by Clement Oladipo, Debbi Kenote, Maria Stabio, Orli Swergold, and Matt Logsdon. This exhibition presents a selection of emerging tri-state area artists who create works with bold explorations of color and material through decentralizing and compressing their subject matter. 

There is a common throughline in the works in this exhibition that achieve immediacy, impact, and simultaneity through the elimination of aesthetic and psychic distance. With less distance implied in a work, the ‘primary process’ of instinct and impulse is emphasized. Most of these works have minimal foreground and background pictorially. They also do not have a distinction of sequence––beginning, middle, or end––and collapse the boundaries between mediums. 

Clement Oladipo’s sculptural works are an embodiment of nature’s materiality and environmental influence on human existance. Sourcing objects like wood, twine, and oxidized metals from the streets of Brooklyn, Oladipo is breathing reimagined importance back into the everyday by elevating and finding new life in seemingly mundane materials that surround us.

Orli Swergold’s paper pulp assemblages operate in a space between painting and sculpture, evoking the body to create structures that are both strange and familiar. By sourcing and reimagining organic materials, Swergold’s work considers the interplay of bodily existence in a realm of constant human interaction, both through intimacy and isolation. Bright, plastic-like colors cover textural surfaces, harking back to the colorfields of childhood and play.

In Debbi Kenote’s sculptural shaped canvas paintings, bright colors and fanciful shapes proliferate while dancing through space and form. With imagery that links to both the body and landscape, Kenote’s canvas shapes are derived from quilting patterns; a magical convergence of static mathematical repetition and whimsical bodily movement.

While Kenote considers how quilting and fabric patterns might be generative formal devices for painting, Matt Logsdon’s work more directly turns to fabric as one of the primary materials for his constructed works. Utilizing humble, everyday materials that obliquely reference physical labor and movement, his abstract, shaped compositions draw on the vocabulary of geometric abstract painting, yet retain a physicality and depth more native to sculpture. Introducing recognizable three-dimensional objects like sports balls, Logsdon repurposes and reimagines fields of play through the materiality of form and space.

Grounded more in the two-dimensional illusionary world, Maria Stabio’s brightly colored canvases marry techniques of painting, print-making, and cyanotype. Her luminous works embody multilayered narratives crafted out of recognizable shape and form that teeter on the symbolic, asking the viewer to float somewhere between a familiar and unfamiliar existence.

Though distinct in their approaches, the artists in the exhibition seem to be asking the same fundamental question about how material ingenuity in abstraction might be a means through which to explore personal histories and experiences, while also probing at something more universal about the human condition. 

Clement Oladipo is a first generation Nigerian American artist primarily working in sculpture who was born in Waco, Texas. In 2012, he received his Bachelor’s degree in Urban Planning and Policy from Virginia Commonwealth University. His work is influenced by the urban and natural world but also brings new life and acknowledgment to disregarded man made materials and objects. He lives and works in New York.

Debbi Kenote is a New York based artist who received her BFA from Western Washington University and her MFA from Brooklyn College. She has exhibited at galleries internationally, including shows at Kate Werble, Hollis Taggart, Duran|Mashaal Gallery, Cob Gallery, Fir Gallery and the Peekskill Project. Her work has been on display at several art fairs, including Art Toronto, Art Plural, Future Fair and SPRING/BREAK Art Show. Kenote’s work has been published through Maake Magazine, Elle Magazine, Innovate Grant, Suboart, The Hopper Prize, Art of Choice, and Rise Art. Her work is collected worldwide and has been placed in several collections, including the Capital One corporate collection. 

Kenote has been an artist in residence at the Saltonstall Foundation, Cob x PLOP Residency, Vermont Studio Center, DNA Residency, Nes Artist Residency, and CAI Projects. In 2022 she was a finalist for the Innovate Grant and in 2021 she was shortlisted for the Hopper Prize. She has curated exhibitions at SOIL Gallery, Open House and the 2018, 2019 and 2021 SPRING/BREAK Art Shows.

Maria Stabio is a Filipino-American painter. She graduated with a BFA in Painting from Boston University (2007) and an MFA in Visual Arts from Columbia University (2012). Her work has recently been shown at Future Fair (NY), Princeton University (NJ), Goggleworks Center for the Arts (PA), Fjord (PA), Pen and Brush (NY), Essex Flowers (NY), and Ely Center of Contemporary Art (CT). She has been awarded artist residencies at ChaNorth (NY), the Hinge Arts Program (MN), The Rensing Center (SC), and Vermont Studio Center (VT).

In 2012, she was a recipient of the Artist in Residence Fellowship at Virginia Commonwealth University in Qatar where she served as artist in residence and adjunct faculty for one academic year. She taught drawing, painting, and a special topics course called Contemporary Painting Practices to undergraduate students pursuing their BFA at VCUQ. During this period, her second one-person exhibition, Carthage Site, opened at Katara Art Center in Doha.

Orli Swergold is an artist from Westchester, N.Y. After graduating from Brandeis University (B.A., Studio Art and Art History, 2018), Swergold trained at Brandeis' Post-Baccalaureate program. In 2021, Swergold earned her M.F.A. in painting from the Rhode Island School of Design, where she exhibited in three juried group exhibitions and received the competitive Graduate Commons Grant. Her work is on permanent display in the Brandeis University Library Art Collection and she has exhibited with Asya Geisberg Gallery, 81 Leonard Gallery, Room 68 Wellfleet, Two Palms NY, Project Gallery V, and Site:Brooklyn. Swergold lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.

Matt Logsdon was born in Columbus, OH in 1982. In 2015 he earned an M.F.A. in Combined Media from Hunter College. Logsdon founded the artist-run gallery Field of Play in 2022 and curated its first two exhibitions. His work has been recently shown at Tappeto Volante Gallery and Below Grand in New York City. Logsdon lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.

Morgan Everhart  @morgan_everhart


Morgan Everhart works in painting, curation, and writing. Everhart’s practice challenges naturalism and ontology through reflection on personal experiences, identity, and art history. She received her BFA from the University of North Texas in 2013, and her MFA from the LeRoy E. Hoffberger School of Painting at the Maryland Institute College of Art in 2016. Recent exhibitions include: Flesh and Bloom at The David Owsley Museum of Art, Indiana (2021), Flowers for my Failures at the Longwood Museum, Virginia (2019).  She has multiple murals in New York City, one of which is featured in Neumeraki’s International exhibition Art Off-Screen.  Everhart currently lives and works in New York, where she is also a contributing writer to A Women’s Thing publication.

Mel Reese  @melaniereese

As part of the Art Hap Curatorial Team, Mel Reese is the Co-Curator in Residence at The Yard: Greenpoint in Brooklyn, NY alongside Brooklyn-based artist and curator, Morgan Everhart. For several years, Reese was the Head Curator for Art in Res (YC W20) where she developed and managed the curatorial program. In 2021, Reese curated the booth Fractured Truths in SPRING/BREAK.

As an artist, Reese is a Brooklyn-based observational painter inspired by formalism. She holds an MFA from SVA and a BS from Skidmore College and has completed residencies at Vermont Studio Center, Elsewhere Studios, and JX Farms. Reese has exhibited widely throughout the United States and has been featured in several publications including New American Paintings, New Visionary Magazine, Inside Artists, Studio Visit Magazine, and A Women’s Thing. Reese currently lives and works in the Greenpoint neighborhood of Brooklyn, NY.


Alex Feim   @afeim 

Alex Feim is an art researcher and writer based in Brooklyn.  Her research and writing focuses on intersections between art and architecture, exhibition context and phenomenology, and time based media. She received her BA in Art History and Comparative Literature and MA in Art History from Binghamton University. She is a co-founder of Art Hap, which is an evolution of her experimental cartographic and documentation based research practice. Her writing has been published in Art Spiel, Battery Journal, and Art Press.