Event details
March 20, 8 PM
Location: Store Space / Malloy Wing
Free and open to the public
For information on planning your visit and accessibility, please see our Visit page
Join us Thursday, March 20, at 8 pm, for a celebration and DJ set by Queer Ecology Hanky Project organizer Mary Tremonte (DJ Mary Mack). Work by the Queer Ecology Hanky Project is on view in the exhibition a field of bloom and hum.
Tremonte will be in conversation with fellow co-founder V Adams and Skidmore professors Ruben Castillo and Emily Le Sage on Wednesday, March 19, at 6 pm.
These events are part of the 2025 Alfred Z. Solomon Residency, in conjunction with the exhibition a field of bloom and hum. Adams and Tremonte will be visiting with classes throughout their time at Skidmore and creating new work with students.
This event is free and open to the public.
Mary Tremonte is an artist, educator, and DJ based in Pittsburgh, with a piece of her heart in Toronto. A member of Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative, she works with printmaking in the expanded field, including printstallation, interactive silk-screen printing in public space, and wearable artist multiples such as queer scout badges. As DJ Mary Mack she strives to make safe(r) spaces on dance floors for embodying a body politic with pleasure. With Justseeds and independently Mary has exhibited, presented lectures and workshops, and performed throughout the US and internationally. Formerly the youth programs coordinator at The Andy Warhol Museum, she values art education as a means of empowerment and social change.
The Alfred Z. Solomon Residency Fund was established by a bequest to Skidmore College in 2005. It supports short and long-term residencies at the Tang Teaching Museum in collaboration with Art History and Art departments to bring notable scholars, artists, and critics to classrooms, studios, and the museum. The residencies address a wide range of issues in the visual arts and feature a variety of opportunities for both formal and informal interaction.