
Photo by Anastasia Simone
Climb the steep, timeworn stairs, and you’ll find yourself in a light-flooded, bones-intact loft overlooking the Bowery still humming with the spirit of downtown’s past. It feels lived in, like the kind of studio where artists once worked late into the night.
Inside, the shows unfold with quiet intelligence and intuitive curiosity. Many of the artists shown here approach their work like anthropologists. They go out into the world, observe the small gestures of daily living, and return to make art out of their findings.
Familiar names share the space with head-tilting new ones. You might see worlds remade in LEGO, pictures sewn from previously-loved dresses, and videos of that unfold like small films and take you into the artist’s world. The paintings, and there are many, are soft-toned, earth-colored, and filled with warmth and stillness.
This is a gallery of attention, where tenderness is a radical act, and the everyday, closely observed, shimmers from having been seen. We always leave with a sense of wonder, a little more inspired, and a lot more connected to everything and everyone around us.
Hoffman Donahue, founded in 2025, brings together Bridget Donahue of New York and Hannah Hoffman of Los Angeles. The pair met years ago while working at Gavin Brown Enterprises and never stopped the conversation. Both have championed artists whose work draws strong attention from museums. About seventy percent of the artists they show are women. Their mission is to create a space with small gallery intimacy with larger, bi-coastal opportunities for the artists they love.

Two generations of artists, decades apart, making high-concept, anti-establishment work on the topic of freedom.

One of downtown's most beloved alternative art spaces. Politics, performance, community, and experimentation collide here. Black walls and raw, deeply human shows that cling to your mind long after you leave.

Take the pulse of the new New York scene at this spacious, sunny second-floor gallery overlooking Canal Street, where artistic careers are launched and revitalized.

Fuel up (or refuel) after you’ve explored the NoLita galleries at this white brick and wood-clad, family-run coffee shop on Elizabeth Street. Try the famous Tiramisu blend.
Experimental sound, mysticism, and painting tune to a hypnotic frequency at this transportive show. Greg Parma Smith has created an exhibition that plays like an album — each painting its own track. If paint had a sound, it might be this.