Soft Spaces, on view from February 20 to April 12, 2026, brings together installation works by alumni of the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art Fellowship, an international and intergenerational program dedicated to centering LGBTQIA+ artists of color. Conceived as an evolving exhibition, the project reflects the Fellowship’s ethos of collective learning, care, and experimentation. Rather than presenting a single narrative,
Soft Spaces unfolds as a constellation of voices shaped by mentorship, dialogue, and the shared pursuit of sustainable, self-determined artistic practices.
The notion of “softness” here is not synonymous with fragility, but with intention. It points to environments where vulnerability is possible and where process is valued as much as outcome. Across works by 38 artists from the 2019–20, 2020–21, and 2021–22 cohorts, the exhibition foregrounds practices that resist rigidity and fixed identity. Painting, photography, performance, film, digital media, and installation intersect to create spaces that invite pause, reflection, and emotional attunement. These works offer shelter while remaining politically and socially engaged.
Within this session, the work of photographer and visual artist Sarp Kerem Yavuz stands out for its incisive engagement with gender, power, religion, and violence. Born in Paris and raised in Istanbul, Yavuz brings a transnational sensibility to his practice, working across photography, neon, projection, and video. His images often balance beauty and unease, using light and symbolism to explore how bodies and beliefs are shaped by cultural and political forces. His presence within
Soft Spaces underscores the exhibition’s commitment to complexity rather than comfort alone.
Collectively,
Soft Spaces proposes softness as a radical strategy. It suggests that care, slowness, and mutual support can be modes of resistance in a world that often demands hardness and speed. By foregrounding process, community, and lived experience, the exhibition affirms art-making as both a personal and communal act. These installations do not seek to resolve tension, but to hold it—creating room for identities, histories, and futures to exist with nuance, dignity, and openness.
Image:
Sarp Kerem Yavuz, Şefik, 2023. AI-Generated image on Polaroid film, 9 x 9 in. (framed). Collection of the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art. Museum purchase, O’Neal Fund, 2023.20.3. © Sarp Kerem Yavuz