Exhibition
Through August 7

Bryan Fernandez: En tránsito

The International Studio & Curatorial Program (ISCP) presents Bryan Fernandez: En tránsito, the artist’s first institutional solo exhibition, curated by Zuna Maza. Fernandez’s most essential tool is observation, which informs his ongoing efforts to document and center his community via large-scale paintings, mixed media, collage, and assemblage works. 

Join us for the Opening Reception on Tuesday, March 17 from 6–8pm. 

The artist’s community encompasses the Dominican diaspora in his Manhattan neighborhood of Washington Heights, where he was born and raised, extends to other cities in the Northeastern United States, and to places in the Dominican Republic itself—especially Santiago de los Caballeros, where his family is from, and the capital, Santo Domingo. Fernandez observes a lack of authentic representation of Dominicans in mainstream media and aims to counter colonial and anti-Black narratives by focusing on diverse experiences and cultural expressions, from the intimate and individual to the public and societal. A painter and sculptor, Fernandez introduced collage and assemblage elements in 2020, at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. He has since come to integrate readily available textiles, papers, miscellaneous objects, and even trash found locally, alongside mediums like acrylic and pastel.     

En tránsito (in transit) is a selection of Fernandez’s recent work addressing diasporic flows, modes of transportation, and the surveillance and policing of communities in public space. During his residency at ISCP in 2024, the artist followed a documentary artistic exercise focused on transit methods and the Dominican community in Manhattan and in the Dominican Republic. The resulting artworks underscore the racial, colonial, and imperial tensions around individual agency, freedom of transportation, and ever-present systems of control, all mediated through Fernandez’s dynamic material explorations. The artist credits his own interactions, both recent and past, and Dixa Ramírez’s Colonial Phantoms: Belonging and Refusal in the Dominican Americas, from the 19th Century to the Present (NYU Press, 2018) for setting him on this path.

Bryan Fernandez is an interdisciplinary artist from Washington Heights, New York City who is of Afro-Dominican descent. Fernandez holds a BFA from the School of Visual Arts and is an MFA candidate at Yale School of Art. His works have been exhibited at institutions including The Shed, New York; New Image Art Gallery, Los Angeles, California; MECA Art Fair, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic; and Untitled Art Fair, Miami, Florida. He is a two-time Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation Grantee and his work is currently in the Bronx AIM biennial at the Bronx Museum, New York. He is a 2024–25 recipient of The New York Community Trust’s Edward and Sally Van Lier Fund Residency at ISCP. 

Zuna Maza is a curator from San Juan, Puerto Rico, based in Brooklyn, New York. Her curatorial practice focuses on installation, multimedia, and material-focused projects. She is Assistant Curator at El Museo del Barrio, where she recently co-curated Candida Alvarez: Circle, Point, Hoop, the artist’s first museum survey in New York. Prior to joining El Museo, she held curatorial roles and fellowships at Dia Art Foundation, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Studio Museum in Harlem. Maza is an editor of a forthcoming publication on Candida Alvarez and was part of the editorial team for Delcy Morelos (Dia Art Foundation, 2024). She received her MA from Hunter College.

Bryan Fernandez: En tránsito is curated by Zuna Maza. It is supported by The New York Community Trust’s Edward and Sally Van Lier Fund; Marion Boulton “Kippy” Stroud Foundation; Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso; Hartfield Foundation; James Rosenquist Foundation; Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation; New York City Council District 34; New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council; New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature; van Beuren Charitable Foundation; William Talbott Hillman Foundation; and Woodman Family Foundation.

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Accessibility information: Please note that the entrance to ISCP has seven steps and a ramp, which is ADA compliant. There are seven artist studios and one exhibition space which can be accessed on the first floor of ISCP. There is an accessible bathroom on the first floor at the end of the hallway, up one step, where the artist studios are located. To access the second floor there is a staircase with a grab bar installed on the right side with 22 steps. The second floor has 22 artist and curator studios, one exhibition space, and a lounge where remarks by our guest speaker will take place. To access the third floor there is a staircase with a grab bar installed on the right side with 24 steps. The third floor has five artist and curator studios. ISCP can access a freight elevator to bring visitors between the first and second floors on request. 

ISCP can offer two reserved parking spaces on request for people with disabilities. Please email programs@iscp-nyc.org to request a parking space and/or freight elevator usage.

Participating Residents

ISCP Talk
February 24, 2026, 6:30–7:30pm

Artists at Work: Andreia Santana in Conversation with Tobi Maier

For this Artists at Work, ISCP artist-in-residence Andreia Santana will be joined by curator, art critic, and editor Tobi Maier. Santana will discuss her publication, Eros and Errors, and will engage in dialogue with Maier about her practice and reflections on politicized materials and how they shape our understanding of archeology, history, and gender as social constructs. A Q&A with the audience will follow. 

Andreia Santana’s practice encompasses sculpture, installation, and performance. Her work explores multiple themes including collective transcorporeality–the view that human bodies are not separate entities, but are porous and in perpetual, material exchange with the environment; the politics of gendered labor;  and intersectional feminist and queer discourse.   Santana’s art reflects the complexities of human experience, blurring the boundaries between public and private, and personal and political. Her work has been exhibited at institutions such as the Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art, Porto; Oakville Galleries, Toronto; MAAT, Lisbon; Sans Titre, Paris; Kunstraum Niederösterreich, Vienna and Louis Reed, New York, among others. 

Tobi Maier is the Chief Curator at Amant, New York, where he recently organized the exhibitions of Women’s History Museum, Grisette à l’enfer (2025) Lu Yang, DOKU! DOKU! DOKU!:samsara.exe (2025); Mimosa Echard Facial (2025); and Dietmar Busse Fairytales: 1991-1999 (2024). Prior to this role, he served as Director for Lisbon’s Municipal Galleries, was co-founder of SOLO SHOWS in São Paulo, Associate Curator for the 30th edition of the São Paulo Art Biennial, Curator for Ludlow 38 in New York, and Curator for the Frankfurter Kunstverein in Frankfurt. He holds a MA from the Royal College of Art in London. He has edited and written for various publications, including Artforum, ArtReview, Flash Art, Frieze, OEI, Texte zur Kunst, aperture, and Mousse

This program is supported by Luso-American Development Foundation (FLAD); Hartfield Foundation; James Rosenquist Foundation; Joe Sultan; Lèna Saltos; Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation; New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council; Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso; New York City Council District 34; New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature; New York State Senator Julia Salazar; Dr. Samar Maziad; Sarah Jones; van Beuren Charitable Foundation; William Talbott Hillman Foundation; and Woodman Family Foundation.

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Accessibility information: Please note that the entrance to ISCP has seven steps and a ramp, which is ADA compliant. There are seven artist studios and one exhibition space which can be accessed on the first floor of ISCP. There is an accessible bathroom on the first floor at the end of the hallway, up one step, where the artist studios are located. To access the second floor there is a staircase with a grab bar installed on the right side with 22 steps. The second floor has 22 artist and curator studios, one exhibition space, and a lounge where remarks by our guest speaker will take place. To access the third floor there is a staircase with a grab bar installed on the right side with 24 steps. The third floor has five artist and curator studios. ISCP can access a freight elevator to bring visitors between the first and second floors on request.

ISCP can offer two reserved parking spaces on request for people with disabilities. Please email programs@iscp-nyc.org to request a parking space and/or freight elevator usage.

 

6:30–7:30pm

Participating Residents

ISCP Talk
February 19, 2026, 6:30–7:30pm

Land of Eternal Summer: Maya Jeffereis in Conversation with Sofia Thiệu D’Amico

In conjunction with the exhibition Maya Jeffereis: Land of Eternal Summer, ISCP artist-in-residence Maya Jeffereis will discuss her creative processes and her thematic interests, including the subjects of diasporic longing, archival obfuscation, poetry as collective memory, and the land as a site of reimagining belonging. She will be joined by curator and writer Sofia Thiệu D’Amico. They will also talk about her experimental film and photography practices, and natural dye fiber art. Following the discussion, Jeffereis will lead a walkthrough of the exhibition in ISCP’s project space. 

Maya Jeffereis is a New York-based artist and filmmaker working with video installation and experimental film. Jeffereis’s work has been presented in the United States and internationally, including at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; Brooklyn Museum, New York; The Noguchi Museum, New York; and Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Connecticut, among other institutions. Her work has screened in international film festivals including Images Festival, Canada; Third Horizon Film Festival, Miami, Florida; Cosmic Rays, Chapel Hill, North Carolina; and Alchemy Film and Moving Image Festival, United Kingdom.

Sofia Thiệu D’Amico is an independent curator, writer, and researcher based in New York and co-director of Transmitter. Her work engages social practice and poetics, with recent research focused on intercolonial solidarities and abolitionist imaginings. She previously served as assistant curator at Canal Projects and has held arts administration roles at the Vera List Center for Arts and Politics, the Isamu Noguchi Museum, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), among others. Sofia holds an MA from Bard College’s Center for Curatorial Studies; her thesis research will appear in Borders of Art: Migration, Mobility and Artistic Practice (American University of Cairo Press, 2026). She is on the curatorial team of the upcoming 2026 Immigrant Artist Biennial

This program is supported by the Marion Boulton “Kippy” Stroud Foundation; Alice and Lawrence Weiner; Danna and Ed Ruscha; Hartfield Foundation; Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation; Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation; New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council; New York State Senator Julia Salazar; Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso; New York City Council District 34; New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature; James Rosenquist Foundation; van Beuren Charitable Foundation; and William Talbott Hillman Foundation.

6:30–7:30pm

Participating Residents