Mayโs exhibitions share a preoccupation with what holdsโand what doesnโt. Across the region, artists test the limits of structure, whether in textile and thread, systems of authorship, or the fragile architectures of memory and identity. Materials carry meaning: hair that catches light, fabric that encodes contradiction, photographs that fix fleeting moments, paintings that refuse resolution. Even the act of looking gets unsettled, slipping into touch, taste, and immersion. If thereโs a throughline, itโs a resistance to singular narrativesโtoward something more distributed, more unstable, and closer to lived experience, where meaning is layered, negotiated, and always in flux.
โSurface, Structure, Stringโ at Hudson Hall in Hudson
May 8-June 12

โSurface, Structure, Stringโ surveys the regionโs thriving textile scene, from intricate embroidery to large-scale fiber installations. Curated by Richard Saja, the group show with notable regional artists like Portia Munson and Laleh Khoramian treats textiles as both material and languageโexploring tension, repetition, and memoryโwhile highlighting artists who are pushing the medium into conceptual, socially engaged terrain.
โJose Picayo: 35 Years in Photographsโ at Robin Rice Gallery in Hudson
Through June 15

โ35 Years in Photographsโ marks Jose Picayoโs 10th solo show at the Robin Rice Gallery, surveying work from 1991 to 2025. Known for fashion and still life, Picayo pairs formal rigor with a sly, offbeat sensibility. Working exclusively in filmโoften large-format and Polaroidโhis images feel timeless, tactile, and slightly uncanny, resisting easy categorization while maintaining meticulous craft.
โThe Linda McCartney Retrospective: From the Lightโ at the Fenimore Art Museum in Cooperstown
May 23-September 7

“From the Light” at Fenimore Art Museum reframes a figure too often reduced to proximityโwife, bandmate, icon-adjacentโand restores Linda McCartney as a photographer of instinctive clarity. The exhibition gathers decades of work that move fluidly between the rarefied and the domestic: portraits of The Beatles and Jimi Hendrix alongside images of family life, animals, and unguarded, in-between moments. McCartney had a gift for collapsing the distance between subject and viewer; even her celebrity portraits feel unvarnished, almost incidental, as if fame were just another texture in the frame.
The show also traces the breadth of her lifeโher parallel career in music, her advocacy for animal rights, her eye for the everyday as something worth dignifying. If the retrospective has a thesis, itโs in the title: the light isnโt staged, itโs foundโcaught in motion, in intimacy, in the fleeting expressions that resist mythmaking even as they document it.
โCarol Seitz: Growth in Difficult Placesโ at Convey/er/or in Poughkeepsie
May 2-June 27

Carol Seitzโs photographs find resilience in unlikely placesโplants pushing through cracks, thriving against odds. What begins as close observation opens into metaphor: who gets the conditions to flourish, and who doesnโt? Seitzโs images suggest that growth is universal, but equity is not, inviting viewers to consider care, intervention, and community responsibility. At Convey/er/or in Poughkeepsie.
“Stephen Olivier: Hazmat” at ASK in Kingston
May 2-31

At Art Society of Kingstonโs Spotlight Gallery, โHazmatโ finds Stephen Olivier working through the charged material of his own history. Painting and sculpture intersect in a body of work shaped by Catholic upbringing, queer identity, and an unresolved paternal legacy, each piece carrying a sense of excavationโwhatโs buried, what lingers, what refuses to settle. Olivierโs forms veer between the symbolic and the visceral, where belief systems and personal memory collide without easy resolution. The result is less confession than confrontation, a practice of sorting through inherited narratives and the emotional residue they leave behind.
โJenny Snider: Beyond the Paleโ at Time and Space Limited in Hudson
Through May 17

โBeyond the Paleโ at Time and Space Limited draws on Jenny Sniderโs long engagement with Soviet Constructivism and the artists caught in its orbit, tracing the collision of artistic ambition and Stalinist repression. A third thread, the Pale of Settlement, brings in family history and Jewish displacement. The result is a historically charged body of work that links avant-garde art, political violence, and lived inheritance.
โBecause, Now Is the Time of Monstersโ at Wassaic Project in Wassaic
May 16-September 12

At Wassaic Project, the summer exhibition โBecause, Now Is the Time of Monstersโ takes its title from Marxist theorist Antonio Gramsciโs writing on the โinterregnumโโthat unsettled space between a dying order and whatever comes next. Featuring nearly 40 artists across the cavernous floors of Maxon Mills, the show leans into that instability, where the familiar starts to slip. Motel rooms stage moral allegories, galaxies swirl inside coffee cups, and oversized teeth hover somewhere between cartoon and threat. Playful, ominous, and occasionally absurd, the work resists easy reading, building toward something like a collective fever dream of the present moment.
“Millicent Young: Holding Light Sutra” at Ritz Theater Stagehouse in Newburgh
May 9-July 12

โHolding Light Sutraโ transforms the long-closed Ritz Theater Stagehouse into an immersive meditation on fracture and repair. In collaboration with Safe Harbors of the Hudson, Strongroom presents Millicent Youngโs multimedia installation, centered on a suspended cube of white horsehair that catches and scatters projected light. Video, sound, and field recordingsโdrawn from Ulster County and the Atlantic coastโlayer into a work that moves between intimacy and vastness. Set within a space marked by decay and revival, the installation considers displacement, memory, and the fragile conditions of belonging.
“Alighiero Boetti: Tutto Boetti 1966-1993” at Magazzino in Cold Spring
Through April 26, 2028

At Magazzino Italian Art, โTutto Boetti 1966โ1993โ reframes Alighiero Boetti as a prophet of distributed creativity. By signing his work โAlighiero e Boetti,โ the artist split authorship at its source, opening the door to a practice built on collaboration, delegation, and exchange. Textiles produced with Afghan artisans and systems-driven works alike dissolve the idea of the lone maker, replacing it with a network of contributors and processes. Decades on, the exhibition reads less as retrospective than blueprintโan early model for a world where authorship is shared, unstable, and inseparable from the systems that produce it.
“Speakeasy Happy Hour” at Utopia in Kingston
May 2-30

At Utopia, โSpeakeasy Happy Hourโ blurs the line between exhibition and sensory experiment. Curated by Luke Whittaker, the group show pairs paintings by six emerging artists with cocktails designed to echo their visual languageโinviting viewers to taste, smell, and physically register whatโs on the wall. The premise is simple but disarming: can a painting extend beyond sight into the body? As color, narrative, and atmosphere translate into flavor, the gallery becomes a space of cross-sensory interpretation, where looking gives way to a more immersive, and slightly disorienting, form of engagement.
“byCONTRAST: Apparent Contradictions” at Kleinert/James Center for the Arts
Through May 10

At Kleinert/James Center for the Arts in Woodstock, โbyCONTRAST: Apparent Contradictionsโ turns the language of quilts into something wry and contemporary. Organized with Studio Art Quilt Associates, the exhibition gathers 30 fiber artists working at the intersection of craft and concept, using stitched, layered textiles to explore the contradictions embedded in everyday speechโphrases that mean two things at once, or collapse under their own logic. Curated by fiber artist Ann Johnston, the show highlights the mediumโs range, from meticulous patterning to painterly abstraction, all grounded in the tactile intimacy of cloth.
This article appears in May 2026.










The Fennimore museum, in cooperstown, is not in the Hudson valley. There are many museums that are, that are not mentioned such as the Loeb and Dia, etc.