On view from February 14 through May 10,
Improper Frames gathers artists who probe the unstable edges of Cleveland’s built environment, tracing the fault lines between documentation and lived experience. Organized by Cleveland Print Room and curated by Theodossis Issaias, the exhibition unfolds as a response to the city’s recently completed property inventory—an exhaustive survey that catalogues parcels and structures with bureaucratic precision. While such inventories promise clarity and order, the works presented here reveal what slips through official grids: memory, improvisation, and the quiet negotiations that shape daily life.
Cleveland, long defined by cycles of industrial growth and contraction, has seen its neighborhoods reclassified and revalued through shifting policies and redevelopment plans. Against this backdrop, the participating artists approach the survey not as a neutral tool, but as a framing device that determines which stories are legible. Trees extend across invisible property lines, disregarding cadastral borders. Photographic assemblages collect fragments of testimony and architecture, layering them into provisional wholes. Dust accumulates inside a home, becoming an unintended archive—an index of presence that no municipal ledger records.
The exhibition features Amber Ford, Jon Gott, Michael Indriolo, Da’Shaunae Marisa, Vivica Satterwhite, and Alejandro Vergara, each developing projects through sustained engagement with Cleveland’s evolving terrain. Their practices move between photography, installation, and spatial intervention, suggesting that the city is less a fixed map than a series of overlapping frames. Improvised structures rise in vacant lots; partial views hint at lives unfolding just beyond the picture’s edge. These gestures resist the clean boundaries of classification, proposing instead a layered understanding of place.
Improper Frames ultimately questions who has the authority to define a neighborhood’s limits and future. By foregrounding what is provisional, obscured, or unruly, the exhibition invites viewers to reconsider the city not as a completed survey, but as a living composition—one continually revised by those who inhabit it.
Image:
Private Property Tree—West Boulevard, part of Momentary Grounds, 2025. | Alejandro Vergara. Courtesy of the artist