Botanical Monoprinting Workshop with Second State Press
Apr
18
12:00 PM12:00

Botanical Monoprinting Workshop with Second State Press

Botanical Monoprints

On Monday, April 18th, Second State Press will be hosting an interactive monoprinting workshop. Monoprinting is a form of printmaking that allows individuals to create unique, fluid images with every print. It is a low-stakes freeform process perfect for artists and creatives of all ages that has endless possibilities. In this workshop, participants will be using found natural materials such as fresh plant matter, netting, and paper to make compositions inspired by the natural world.

View Event →
Harvest Skillshare + Potluck
Apr
17
2:00 PM14:00

Harvest Skillshare + Potluck

  • The Open Kitchen and Sculpture Garden (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Join us for a community gathering and environmental art workshops, amongst shared food and creative collaboration.

Sharing their skills:
Lou Helmer from Iglesias gardens teaching eco printing

Lavinia Solomon with tincture making and talking about plants mental health qualities.

Sunshine (Caitlin Ott) with edible blossoms and foraged recipes (stinging nettle, garlic mustard, dandelions).

Like all EFF events, this is free for all to attend, but we encourage attendees to donate what they can to the experts sharing their skills at this event. A donations pot will be split amongst all teachers at this event.

View Event →
Printing Seeds: Children's Silkscreen Workshop
Apr
16
1:00 PM13:00

Printing Seeds: Children's Silkscreen Workshop

Partnering for a Native Plant educational workshop for children ages 6-12, Eliza Nobles and Second State Press will be leading an interactive workshop through the greenery at Palumbo Park to teach about the plants living in the beds, the importance of native biodiversity, and how to properly care for them within each season. Second State Press will be guiding the children through a short demonstration of how to pass ink through a silkscreen, then creating pennant banners with the kids featuring a selection of the native plants living at Palumbo Park for them to take home and continue looking out and caring for the plants within their own neighborhood.

View Event →
Community Sustainability Series: Workshop #3
Apr
16
1:00 PM13:00

Community Sustainability Series: Workshop #3

How can our collective practices as creative individuals help sustain and nourish that which we hold dear?


The University City Arts League is hosting a series of workshops with our neighbors and community members through the month of April as part of Da Vinci Art Alliance’s Everyday Futures Festival.

How can our collective practices as creative individuals help sustain and nourish that which we hold dear? This is an answer we can only find together through community sustainability. Individuals of all ages and backgrounds are invited to drop-into one or all of these workshops to create alongside an Arts League Teaching Artist in exploration of what sustaining a community looks like in our current climate. The collaborative piece will find its conclusion during the Everyday Futures Fest on April 24th.

Registration is free but required.


Workshop #1 –

When: Saturday, April 2, 2022 | 1 PM - 3 PM

Where: Clark Park


Workshop #2 –

When: Saturday, April 9, 2022 | 1 PM - 3 PM

Where: 48th & Woodland Playground


Workshop #3 –

When: Saturday, April 16, 2022 | 1 PM - 3 PM

Where: UCAL


Everyday Futures Festival –

Sunday, April 24, 2022 | 12 PM - 7 PM

View Event →
Geocache and Flower Pot Decorating
Apr
16
11:00 AM11:00

Geocache and Flower Pot Decorating

Presented by Let’s Go Outdoors.
Feeling a little crafty and searching for something to do? Come to Pleasant Hill Park in Northeast Philadelphia to decorate a flower pot (we'll have the pots and decorations) and stick around to search for "treasures" by participating in our beginner Geocache course - think "Hide and Seek" with a GPS!

Register here.

View Event →
Heat Response: Projected Growing Season
Apr
14
7:30 PM19:30

Heat Response: Projected Growing Season

Our Projected Growing Season is here to give our silent soldiers a voice. To open the Heat Response conversation, José Ortiz-Pagán has orchestrated a series of interviews with local urban gardeners and farmers which have been translated into growing season projections. Julia DeFonso and Allyson Whisler, Community Arts Practice Students at Temple University’s Tyler School of Art and Architecture, have dedicated their semester’s study to assisting José Ortiz-Pagán on making this project a reality. Take a moment to listen to the voices of those in our community doing their part to make a difference and make the conscious step to use your voice to protect the land that has given us all so much. Thank you all for joining us.

View Event →
Second Thursday
Apr
14
6:00 PM18:00

Second Thursday

  • 1800 North American Street Philadelphia, PA, 19122 United States (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Come see art, get inspired and even have delicious dinner as you visit the 1800 North building! We have eight subtenant businesses here whose creative work ranges from activating salvaged materials, restoring historic neon, empowering artists, building amazing bicycles, supporting artisan businesses, growing gorgeous flowers, and mixing up delicious cocktails. We will be opening our doors monthly on Second Thursdays to welcome you all!

NextFab will be showing the work of our Center for Art in Wood Winter Residency fellow Robert Aiosa. NextFab will be doing chain making demos in the Jewelry Studio with the talented Caroline Gore. We are also offering tours of our artisan studios.

The Resource Exchange will have their reCreate Gallery open showing the work of artist Carol Cole. Their nonprofit shop, gallery, and workshop space promotes creative reuse, recycling, and resource conservation by diverting valuable materials from the waste stream and redirecting them to artists, builders, educators, and the general public.

The Neon Museum of Philadelphia is offering HALF OFF admission to their collection including their special exhibit Neon Currents.

Sor Ynez will be serving up their traditionally inspired cuisine with Mexican ingredients and methods, but focused on a modern and sustainable future. They are currently featuring an all female owned/operated citywide special with La Gritona Reposado & Love City Lager.

And more from the other folks at 1800 North...

Things to know:

Can't wait to see you here! If you can't make it this month, join us for the next one on May 12th!

View Event →
Preserving the Narrative: Art, Culture & Stewardship Panel discussion
Apr
14
6:00 PM18:00

Preserving the Narrative: Art, Culture & Stewardship Panel discussion

  • Da Vinci Art Alliance + virtual event (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Who decides our history?
Who do we anoint to control the art and cultural historical narrative?
How do we challenge the ongoing and active erasure of cultures, traditions, and teachings within institutional frameworks?

Join us in a panel discussion including the African American Museum of Philadelphia (AAMP), We Are the Seeds, social practice artist Gigi McGraw, and others to dissect this and adjacent topics critical to the preservation of culture.

This panel will be a hybrid event - attendees are welcome to attend at DVAA, or attend via zoom (link emailed to those registered).

About the Panelists:

Tailinh Agoyo is co-founder and director of We Are the Seeds, a non-profit organization committed to amplifying Indigenous voices through the arts. Now in its sixth year, We Are the Seeds has produced over 145 public programs, increasing agency and direct engagement between Indigenous peoples and audiences. Agoyo is also the host of From Here, With a View, a podcast that honors the voices of Indigenous artists, performers, educators, and change-makers. She has worked in film and television for more than thirty years and helped to produce the beautiful children’s book I Will Carry You. Her own artwork is focused on capturing the vibrancy of Indigenous peoples today, including The Warrior Project, a collection of photos of Native youth and their continuing commitment to environmental stewardship. In addition to these many projects and roles, she is mom to four wonderful boys.

Gigi McGraw is a social practice artist, actress, and writer who coined the term PhilHERstorian to describe her invested interest in the cultural and historical preservation of Philadelphia.  She is the founder and curator of POMON- Philadelphia Online Museum of Neighborhoods (virtual grand-opening February 2023) and earned her Master’s Degree in theater from Villanova University. Gigi is fascinated with the life stories of individuals; and is inspired by projects such as the Federal Writers’ Project of the 1930’s, which recorded the narratives of the formerly enslaved. She is also an advocate for hyperlocal history projects.  Gigi documents life through recorded testimony, exhibits, print, and creative missions locally and abroad.

Morgan Lloyd
Morgan T. Lloyd is an Afro-Indigenous curator, community arts administrator, educator, and public historian from Lenapehoking (Philadelphia area) with a passion for uplifting the area's rich BIPOC Antebellum histories. Working alongside the programming team at AAMP, she oversees AAMP's docent core and provides interpretive tours.

Additionally, she serves as an Andrew W. Mellon Curatorial Fellow at the Philadelphia Museum of Art with curatorial initiatives to uplift local Black and local Indigenous narratives in the Early American galleries. Also, she is an educational partner with several Philadelphia area schools, including Agnes Irwin Upper School.


Zindzi Harley
Currently serving as Assistant Curator at the African American Museum in Philadelphia. An Alumna of the University of Arts where I completed my M.A. in Museum Studies. I also act as Project Curator of Past Present Projects, a local Philadelphia arts organization that exhibits contemporary art in historic sites. My research focuses on the histories of Black museums and how we can learn from these founding museums to leverage institutional structures that advocate for the preservation of cultural heritage of the African diaspora. Zindzi Harley was a curator for our exhibitionsDistant Memory featuring artists Colin Pezzano and Emily Carris-Duncan, and Black Quantum Futurism's Ancestors returning again / this time only to themselves at historic Hatfield House.

Moderated by David Acosta
David Acosta (Also known as Juan Armando David Acosta Posada) is a writer, poet, cultural worker and co-founder of Casa de Duende, along with his life partner Jerry Macdonald.

He has served on a wide range of committees and boards, including past work with the Philadelphia International Film Festival, The Philadelphia Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, The PA Council on the Arts, as well as a founding member of Our Living Legacy (1988), the nation's first festival devoted to art and AIDS. In 1993 he served on the East Market Street Sculpture Review Committee, which selected artist Raymond Sandoval’s Tanamend sculpture from among more than 3,000 artist proposals. He was a founding member of The Latin American Writers Collective, Desde Este Lado, as well as the magazine that bore its name. He was also a co-founder of the Philadelphia Working Fund for Artists with HIV/AIDS. In 1989 he curated the Pieces of Life Project at Taller Puertorriqueño which brought the National Names Project (Originators of the AIDS Quilt Project) to Philadelphia, and specifically to a Latino community in a large metropolitan city, at that time a first for the Names Project.

View Event →
Makers' Market at Gateway Garden
Apr
14
3:00 PM15:00

Makers' Market at Gateway Garden

PHS presents a weekly market that showcases the diverse talents of Philly’s makers and small businesses. Art, ceramics, jewelry, skin care, plants, and food will be featured at the market, which will take place in the recently constructed Gateway Garden at Drexel. The Gateway Garden, a collaboration between PHS and Drexel University, is a 10,000 square foot horticultural oasis that serves as a gateway to University City from the east and center of the city. This is a space for students, faculty, and the community at large to gather with one another and spend time surrounded by lush greenery, plants, trees, and flowers.

View Event →
Community Potluck at the Open Kitchen and Sculpture Garden
Apr
13
6:00 PM18:00

Community Potluck at the Open Kitchen and Sculpture Garden

  • Open Kitchen and Sculpture Garden (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

The Open Kitchen Sculpture Garden is a visionary project that uses a fundamental need such as food as a means to initiate a collective and communal experience. Bring food to share, invite some friends, and make new friends at this upcycled urban oasis!

Learn more about the Garden here: https://billypenn.com/2018/07/31/this-magical-sculpture-garden-in-west-kensington-is-a-colombian-american-artists-dream/

View Event →
Plant Swaps at PHS Pop Up Gardens: South Street
Apr
12
6:00 PM18:00

Plant Swaps at PHS Pop Up Gardens: South Street

PHS Plant Swaps are a free, family-friendly event. Bring plants, plant cuttings, or any garden-related items (i.e., books, tools, vegetables from your garden, etc.), then come to our gardens to swap and meet new plant enthusiasts. It’s a one-for-one exchange; if you bring five items, you'll go home with five new items! We will have plant experts on hand to help identify unknown plants and special plant society guests with demonstration specimens.

View Event →
Wyck's Garden Home Farm Club
Apr
12
6:00 PM18:00

Wyck's Garden Home Farm Club

Starting Tuesday, April 5th, Wyck’s historic Farm will be hosting Home Farm Club, the large, cohesive, collaboratively-run kitchen garden club. The club will meet every Tuesday (4pm-6pm) and Friday (9am-11am) until November 2022. No prior experience or time commitment required. Children accompanied by a parent or guardian are welcome and invited to attend. Enter through Walnut Lane entrance.

View Event →
Philly City Repair Project: Spring Fundraiser
Apr
10
1:00 PM13:00

Philly City Repair Project: Spring Fundraiser

For the first time since spring of 2019 Philly City Repair Project will be hosting an in person, live music fundraiser!

Partnering up with our friends from @fareastdescendant to give you a rooftop dining and bar experience that will feature authentic Cantonese flavors and unique cocktails/drinks. Funds raised will go towards community gardens and green spaces across North, West, and Southwest Philly!

Join us on Sunday, April 10th as we party with a purpose:

$10 – $20 suggested donation for ticket entry to the fundraiser.

$45 ticket for entry + buffet which includes: Fried rice, Taro Fries, 5 Venom Chicken, Char Sui Mushrooms, and Shrimp Toast.

Purchase a ticket by clicking the button below. Please help us share the event and we can’t wait to party with everyone soon

View Event →
Notes of Connection : Paper Making Workshop with Lia Huntington
Apr
10
11:00 AM11:00

Notes of Connection : Paper Making Workshop with Lia Huntington

On Sunday, April 10th, Lia Huntington will be leading a paper-making workshop at NextFab at their Kensington location (1800 North American Street in Philadelphia). Lia is currently exhibiting work at DVAA in Gallery 2, learn more about the exhibit here. We will provide photo’s to embed in the paper, similar to how Lia did in her exhibit! Use the button below to register.

View Event →
Heat Response: Projected Growing Season
Apr
9
7:30 PM19:30

Heat Response: Projected Growing Season

Our Projected Growing Season is here to give our silent soldiers a voice. To open the Heat Response conversation, José Ortiz-Pagán has orchestrated a series of interviews with local urban gardeners and farmers which have been translated into growing season projections. Julia DeFonso and Allyson Whisler, Community Arts Practice Students at Temple University’s Tyler School of Art and Architecture, have dedicated their semester’s study to assisting José Ortiz-Pagán on making this project a reality. Take a moment to listen to the voices of those in our community doing their part to make a difference and make the conscious step to use your voice to protect the land that has given us all so much. Thank you all for joining us.

View Event →
To a Green Thought in a Green Shade Opening Reception
Apr
9
4:00 PM16:00

To a Green Thought in a Green Shade Opening Reception

In congruence with the Everyday Futures Fest, Noëlle King has brought 18 diverse artists from all over the world together to express their deep connection to the natural environment and it’s healing.

A Green Thought in a Green Shade will be on view in Gallery 1 beginning April 7th, and will be available as a video walkthrough shortly after. Join us at Da Vinci Art Alliance for the opening reception on April 7th from 5-7pm.

View Event →
Prayer Beads for the Anthropocene Opening Reception
Apr
9
4:00 PM16:00

Prayer Beads for the Anthropocene Opening Reception

Through Prayer Beads for the Anthropocene, Lia Huntington will be explores how we sustain ourselves in a world so full of destruction, and how we can learn to use where we are in this age of the anthropocene to foster a sense of safety within ourselves. She will be documenting human interactions with public spaces through paper making and metal smithing processes. The constructing fiber and welded structures she creates will act as portals to explore our individual experiences as we move through life within Philadelphia.

Prayer Beads for the Anthropocene will be on view in Gallery 2 beginning April 7th, and will be available as a video walkthrough shortly after. Join us at Da Vinci Art Alliance for the opening reception on April 7th from 5-7pm.

View Event →
Opening Reception Receptions of Garden, by Pia Girolama
Apr
9
2:00 PM14:00

Opening Reception Receptions of Garden, by Pia Girolama

DVAA Member, Pia Girolama is exhibiting at Cerulean Arts the April. Support the Artist by attending the opening reception on April 9th, from 2pm-5pm at Cerulean Arts. Learn more about the exhibit by clicking the button below.

About the Exhibit:

In a departure from my usual way of working, which is from my own field sketches and photographs, during the Covid pandemic travel ban I began to work from the Instagram photographs of a lifelong friend who lived on the West Coast, Laurel Adrian Termini. Laurel and I had not seen each other in person since college; we were roommates at Barnard College in NYC during the late 70’s early 80’s. Laurel connected with me some years ago on Facebook and then Instagram. She admired work which I was posting online and started to acquire it.

During the COVID 19 pandemic lockdown, the studio was a refuge and I worked steadily on a series focusing on the Arctic which was based on a trip to the Svalbard Archipelago above the Arctic Circle in 2019. I was finishing up the series when I began noticing Laurel’s Instagram feed filling up with keenly observed photos from the Huntington Gardens, a botanical garden near where she lives. I could see that she was not merely capturing pretty pictures but focusing on forms, line, shadow, and mystery and producing some compelling work. Laurel, a dentist, had to continue working during the lockdown and being on the front lines of health care was taking its toll. She made weekly trips to the Huntington and walking through the gardens and observing and photographing aspects of the plant life helped her de-stress. I felt moved to paint from her images and asked whether I could use them as a jumping off point for my own work. She agreed and so began a back and forth exchange of images and ideas.

Making art has always been a source of wellbeing for me. The ability to deeply focus and achieve the sense of flow when immersed in a painting leads to a sense of calm and an elevation of mood. It is now well known that making art and also viewing art can produce a meditative state. Being in nature produces that similar state of calm and elevation of mood. Studies confirm that making art, viewing art and being in nature produce positive physiological changes such as lowering of blood pressure and cortisol levels.

View Event →
Community Sustainability Series: Workshop #1
Apr
9
1:00 PM13:00

Community Sustainability Series: Workshop #1

How can our collective practices as creative individuals help sustain and nourish that which we hold dear?

The University City Arts League is hosting a series of workshops with our neighbors and community members through the month of April as part of Da Vinci Art Alliance’s Everyday Futures Festival.

How can our collective practices as creative individuals help sustain and nourish that which we hold dear? This is an answer we can only find together through community sustainability. Individuals of all ages and backgrounds are invited to drop-into one or all of these workshops to create alongside an Arts League Teaching Artist in exploration of what sustaining a community looks like in our current climate. The collaborative piece will find its conclusion during the Everyday Futures Fest on April 24th.

Registration is free but required.

Workshop #1 –

When: Saturday, April 2, 2022 | 1 PM - 3 PM

Where: Clark Park

Workshop #2 –

When: Saturday, April 9, 2022 | 1 PM - 3 PM

Where: 48th & Woodland Playground

Workshop #3 –

When: Saturday, April 16, 2022 | 1 PM - 3 PM

Where: UCAL

Everyday Futures Festival –

Sunday, April 24, 2022 | 12 PM - 7 PM

View Event →
Environment & Entanglement: Panel Discussion with the artists from To a Green Thought in a Green Shade
Apr
9
1:00 PM13:00

Environment & Entanglement: Panel Discussion with the artists from To a Green Thought in a Green Shade

Join us over Zoom for a Panel Discussion with the artists from To a Green Thought in a Green Shade , an exhibit happening at DVAA in congruence with the Everyday Futures Fest. Curator Noëlle King has brought 18 diverse artists from all over the world together to express their deep connection to the natural environment and it’s healing.

View Event →
Craft Lab
Apr
8
6:00 PM18:00

Craft Lab

Craft Lab is a chance for DVAA members and friends to gather for a couple hours each month and work on any and all artistic projects. Draw a picture, write a poem, sew, knit. Do what makes your creative soul happy. Share ideas and knowledge with fellow artist at DVAA!

Join us to watch a documentary about sustainable fashion design!

View Event →
Wyck's Garden Home Farm Club
Apr
8
9:00 AM09:00

Wyck's Garden Home Farm Club

Starting Tuesday, April 5th, Wyck’s historic Farm will be hosting Home Farm Club, the large, cohesive, collaboratively-run kitchen garden club. The club will meet every Tuesday (4pm-6pm) and Friday (9am-11am) until November 2022. No prior experience or time commitment required. Children accompanied by a parent or guardian are welcome and invited to attend. Enter through Walnut Lane entrance.

View Event →
Suet & Fruit Birdfeeder Workshop
Apr
7
6:00 PM18:00

Suet & Fruit Birdfeeder Workshop

Interested in bringing more birds into your backyard or patio? Then this is the perfect workshop for you! We will be covering topics such as types of feeders and feed, how to properly care for your feeders, and what birds you can expect to visit.

No pre-registration required for this free event. Each participant will leave with a homemade birdfeeder.

Suet feed is an excellent high-energy source of nutrition for birds, and can attract different species that a typical seed feeder. Audubon staff will walk you through the steps of creating your own suet feeder, introduce you to fruit feeders, and teach what you might expect from putting up alternative feeders in your backyard, patio, or window.

View Event →
Makers' Market at Gateway Garden
Apr
7
3:00 PM15:00

Makers' Market at Gateway Garden

PHS presents a weekly market that showcases the diverse talents of Philly’s makers and small businesses. Art, ceramics, jewelry, skin care, plants, and food will be featured at the market, which will take place in the recently constructed Gateway Garden at Drexel. The Gateway Garden, a collaboration between PHS and Drexel University, is a 10,000 square foot horticultural oasis that serves as a gateway to University City from the east and center of the city. This is a space for students, faculty, and the community at large to gather with one another and spend time surrounded by lush greenery, plants, trees, and flowers.

View Event →
Make Your Own Wildflower Seed Balls
Apr
7
to Apr 10

Make Your Own Wildflower Seed Balls

Guerilla Gardening: Make your own wildflower seed balls!

Stop by Iffy Books and make wildflower seed balls you can toss anywhere!
We'll provide the compost, clay, and native wildflower seeds. This free tutorial runs from Thursday, April 7 to Sunday, April 10. Visit any time from noon to 6 p.m. to get a how-to zine and learn more.

View Event →
Shake The Table: a Public Newsroom Event
Apr
5
6:00 PM18:00

Shake The Table: a Public Newsroom Event

Connect with local reporters who cover city government and share your experience navigating city systems.

Join Resolve Philly and local reporters from newsrooms across the city to share your experiences with accessing city systems and resources. Attendees will have the chance to ask questions directly to journalists about their approach to covering city government. With music and food, this event serves as a kick-off for Resolve's new initiative Shake the Table: Community-led accountability for city systems. There will be opportunities to learn about how to be involved in this project into the future, through ongoing Sound OFF community conversations and a “Secret Shopper” Program.

Please note that this event will be hosted in a combined indoor and outdoor space. While people are indoors, we ask that you remain masked unless eating and drinking.

View Event →
Wyck's Garden Home Farm Club
Apr
5
4:00 PM16:00

Wyck's Garden Home Farm Club

Starting Tuesday, April 5th, Wyck’s historic Farm will be hosting Home Farm Club, the large, cohesive, collaboratively-run kitchen garden club. The club will meet every Tuesday (4pm-6pm) and Friday (9am-11am) until November 2022. No prior experience or time commitment required. Children accompanied by a parent or guardian are welcome and invited to attend. Enter through Walnut Lane entrance.

View Event →
Plant Swaps at PHS Pop Up Gardens: Manayunk
Apr
4
6:00 PM18:00

Plant Swaps at PHS Pop Up Gardens: Manayunk

PHS Plant Swaps are a free, family-friendly event. Bring plants, plant cuttings, or any garden-related items (i.e., books, tools, vegetables from your garden, etc.), then come to our gardens to swap and meet new plant enthusiasts. It’s a one-for-one exchange; if you bring five items, you'll go home with five new items! We will have plant experts on hand to help identify unknown plants and special plant society guests with demonstration specimens.

Please register in advance. More information and registration will be available on https://phsonline.org/events

View Event →