Upcoming Events
December 2025
Time
Location
Art Event
Event Details
Attend the opening reception for Jordan Porter-Woodruff’s The Children Play Games on Sunday, December 14th, from 2:00-5:00pm. In The Children Play Games, the
Event Details
Attend the opening reception for Jordan Porter-Woodruff’s The Children Play Games on Sunday, December 14th, from 2:00-5:00pm.
In The Children Play Games, the artist explores the fragile relationship between play, perception, and imagination through a lens that intertwines past memories, present realities, and future possibilities. The show invites viewers to reflect on how children engage with their world in an age where Artificial Intelligence and deep Internet culture increasingly shape their experiences and understanding. By juxtaposing traditional play with AI-infused elements the artist creates a dialogue about the shifting boundaries of authenticity and creativity in childhood.
Today’s children grow up alongside intelligent machines while immersed in an endless, unfiltered digital stream. Their minds are trained to scroll and react, often at the expense of slower, tactile forms of play that once nurtured fine motor skills, independent thought, and imaginative problem-solving. Algorithmic feeds promise limitless information but leave little room for open-ended discovery, offering access without the depth of true exploration.
Artificial Intelligence sharpens this dilemma by performing acts of invention that once belonged to the developing mind. From generating pictures to completing stories, AI delivers finished creations that bypass the frustration—and growth—of making something from nothing. When creativity is outsourced to algorithms, children risk becoming consumers of novelty rather than creators of it, spectators to a simulation of imagination that demands nothing of their own.
Against this backdrop, The Children Play Games seeks to reclaim the essential terrain of imagination. Each photograph functions as a portal into a dreamlike, yet critical space where the physical and digital coexist without clear hierarchy. By inviting viewers to step into these constructed realities, the exhibition calls on society at large to consider how we might safeguard environments that sustain curiosity, protect the vital connection between mind and hand, and empower the next generation to shape worlds of their own making rather than surrender to those designed for them.
RSVP for this event.
Golden Hour at Epiphany:
Stop by Epiphany for Golden Hour beforehand for free live music, drinks and lite bites in the Café Bar! Doors open at 5pm with 1/2 priced bottles of wine and other specials until 7:00pm
Golden Hour Menu + Music Schedule
Please note that outside food or beverages are not permitted in the venue.
RSVP Now
Make sure to RSVP to this amazing event!
Please let us know if you can make it to the event.
YesMaybe
OpenSpaces Still Available
Can not make it to this event?Change my RSVP
Organizer
Time
Location
Art Event
Event Details
Attend the opening reception for Every Man is an Island by Natasha Moustache on Sunday, December 14th, from 2:00-5:00pm. Metaphysical poet John Donne famously wrote, “No man
Event Details
Attend the opening reception for Every Man is an Island by Natasha Moustache on Sunday, December 14th, from 2:00-5:00pm.
Metaphysical poet John Donne famously wrote, “No man is an island, entire of itself,” in his 1624 meditation on the interconnectedness of humanity. In Every Man is an Island, artist Natasha Moustache turns this idea inward, asking what it means to exist both within and apart. To belong to a place that embodies solitude and connection at once.
The Seychelles Islands, an archipelago of 115 islands scattered across the Indian Ocean, embody this paradox. In Moustache’s black and white photographs, the island emerges not as a place apart, but as a living communion of body and spirit, humanity and nature, self and divine. Each image becomes a quiet testament to the ways in which life here is interwoven with the elements — water, wind, light, and faith.
Within this constellation of islands, humanity is held tenderly by the microcosm of the islands themselves, a mirror reflecting the vast, interconnected universe beyond.
RSVP for this event.
Golden Hour at Epiphany:
Stop by Epiphany for Golden Hour beforehand for free live music, drinks and lite bites in the Café Bar! Doors open at 5pm with 1/2 priced bottles of wine and other specials until 7:00pm
Golden Hour Menu + Music Schedule
Please note that outside food or beverages are not permitted in the venue.
RSVP Now
Make sure to RSVP to this amazing event!
Please let us know if you can make it to the event.
YesMaybe
OpenSpaces Still Available
Can not make it to this event?Change my RSVP
Organizer
Time
Location
Art Event
Event Details
Attend the opening reception for Black Female Presence with Shane-Jahi Jackson on Sunday, December 14th, from 2:00-5:00pm. The image of Black women in Western Art is one
Event Details
Attend the opening reception for Black Female Presence with Shane-Jahi Jackson on Sunday, December 14th, from 2:00-5:00pm.
The image of Black women in Western Art is one riddled with stereotypes, racial
mythologies, visions of servitude and sexual transgressions.
In 1994, Harvard’s Dubois Institute began a research project which later birthed seven volumes on The Image of the Black in Western Art by Harvard’s scholar Henry Louis Gates and David Bindman. All volumes document in detail the fate of ‘black presence’ in European Art and how it historically served to relegate blackness as the extreme opposite of white superiority.
This exhibition continues in the same vein but removes all references to European Art to focus squarely on the Black female model and not as a tool to reaffirm European representational superiority and Christian morals about the body.
Shane-Jahi Jackson’s, Black Female Presence, evades providing the viewer an instructional manual on how to interpret his series of semi-nude figurative paintings of Black women. His “no comment stance” is a deliberate one that resists the impulse to qualify or explain the why of these paintings. Instead, he demands that the viewer have the same reaction or sentiment of awe and the sublime upon seeing Botticelli’s Renaissance painting on the Birth of Venus for the first time without erotizing the image.
The ensemble of works posits the idea that Black women can also be a portal to the Universal and invites the viewer to leave their cliches, biases and judgement at the door.
Shane-Jahi celebrates these women.
RSVP for this event.
Golden Hour at Epiphany:
Stop by Epiphany for Golden Hour beforehand for free live music, drinks and lite bites in the Café Bar! Doors open at 5pm with 1/2 priced bottles of wine and other specials until 7:00pm
Golden Hour Menu + Music Schedule
Please note that outside food or beverages are not permitted in the venue.
RSVP Now
Make sure to RSVP to this amazing event!
Please let us know if you can make it to the event.
YesMaybe
OpenSpaces Still Available
Can not make it to this event?Change my RSVP
Organizer
Time
Location
Art Event
Event Details
Attend the opening reception for Hope Is the Last Thing by Rebecca Keller on Sunday, December 14th, from 2:00-5:00pm. The works in this
Event Details
Attend the opening reception for Hope Is the Last Thing by Rebecca Keller on Sunday, December 14th, from 2:00-5:00pm.
The works in this exhibition are inspired by Epiphany Center for the Arts’ history as a church building, especially the dedicatory plaque hung around the corner in the hall. The grey and white text-based paintings are inspired by the plaque’s color and shape. But while these paintings initially evoke banal, cliched, vaguely uplifting “word art” in vacation rentals and hotels, the language in them quickly veers into denser, darker, trickier, more complicated interpretations.
Though intended to seem like ‘old sayings’ all the texts are original. They are inspired by Emily Dickinson’s “Hope is a thing with feathers” and the Greek myth of Pandora, who opened a forbidden chest and allowed all the evils in the world to fly out. Panicked, she slammed the chest closed, shutting the gift of hope inside.
The themes of wings, flight and transcendence are continued in the images of birds and boats. Traditional iconography in Christian churches, such images are metaphors for faith and belief. Here again, tropes associated with lightness and beauty reveal their darker side as the birds (our stand-ins?) are sometimes in danger, or in anguish, and boats drift unmoored, without direction. But others float or fly past, unconcerned and unaware.
These works refer to the difficulty of maintaining hope, and the insistence that we keep trying anyway. They call to mind the pain of distress as well as the possibility of grace.
RSVP for this event.
Golden Hour at Epiphany:
Stop by Epiphany for Golden Hour beforehand for free live music, drinks and lite bites in the Café Bar! Doors open at 5pm with 1/2 priced bottles of wine and other specials until 7:00pm
Golden Hour Menu + Music Schedule
Please note that outside food or beverages are not permitted in the venue.
RSVP Now
Make sure to RSVP to this amazing event!
Please let us know if you can make it to the event.
YesMaybe
OpenSpaces Still Available
Can not make it to this event?Change my RSVP
Organizer
Time
Location
Art Event
Event Details
Attend the opening reception for The Language We Create on Sunday, December 14th, from 2:00-5:00pm. The Language We Create speaks directly to the role of
Event Details
Attend the opening reception for The Language We Create on Sunday, December 14th, from 2:00-5:00pm.
The Language We Create speaks directly to the role of artists in the world of visual communication.
Throughout the diversity of their explorations, these 11 artists, all cohort residents of Chicago Artists Coalition, remain in dialogue with one another. Each work brings its own context, the clear signature of its creator - a story crafted through the artist’s uniquely defined language. These pieces, while distinct, have common threads that link them one to another.
We see a vocabulary built on textures, colors, and shapes, layered with movement and light in the same way nouns, verbs and adjectives are traditionally woven together in prose. These combinations as envisioned by the artist craft their narrative, document their reality.
Language however, is an inherently social tool used to enhance relationships, for expression and connection. While the work is its own being, it asks the viewer to bring their own interpretation to the experience, linking themselves to the piece as well.
RSVP for this event.
Golden Hour at Epiphany:
Stop by Epiphany for Golden Hour beforehand for free live music, drinks and lite bites in the Café Bar! Doors open at 5pm with 1/2 priced bottles of wine and other specials until 7:00pm
Golden Hour Menu + Music Schedule
Please note that outside food or beverages are not permitted in the venue.
RSVP Now
Make sure to RSVP to this amazing event!
Please let us know if you can make it to the event.
YesMaybe
OpenSpaces Still Available
Can not make it to this event?Change my RSVP
Organizer
Time
Location
Art Event
Event Details
Attend the opening reception for How Could We Forget About You by Noel Mercado on Sunday, December 14th, from 2:00-5:00pm. What have you forgotten? When you found
Event Details
Attend the opening reception for How Could We Forget About You by Noel Mercado on Sunday, December 14th, from 2:00-5:00pm.
What have you forgotten? When you found it or rediscovered it were you happy, sad, annoyed, delighted, regretful? It was once important and then it became forgotten. What is new to you was once forgotten by me. The work on display is a representation of compartmentalizing ideas and memories with no distinct beginning or end.
RSVP for this event.
Golden Hour at Epiphany:
Stop by Epiphany for Golden Hour beforehand for free live music, drinks and lite bites in the Café Bar! Doors open at 5pm with 1/2 priced bottles of wine and other specials until 7:00pm
Golden Hour Menu + Music Schedule
Please note that outside food or beverages are not permitted in the venue.
RSVP Now
Make sure to RSVP to this amazing event!
Please let us know if you can make it to the event.
YesMaybe
OpenSpaces Still Available
Can not make it to this event?Change my RSVP
Organizer
February 2026
Time
Location
Art Event
Event Details
Attend the closing reception for How Could We Forget About You by Noel Mercado on Saturday, February 14th, from 5:00-8:00pm. What have you forgotten? When you found
Event Details
Attend the closing reception for How Could We Forget About You by Noel Mercado on Saturday, February 14th, from 5:00-8:00pm.
What have you forgotten? When you found it or rediscovered it were you happy, sad, annoyed, delighted, regretful? It was once important and then it became forgotten. What is new to you was once forgotten by me. The work on display is a representation of compartmentalizing ideas and memories with no distinct beginning or end.
RSVP for this event.
Golden Hour at Epiphany:
Stop by Epiphany for Golden Hour beforehand for free live music, drinks and lite bites in the Café Bar! Doors open at 5pm with 1/2 priced bottles of wine and other specials until 7:00pm
Golden Hour Menu + Music Schedule
Please note that outside food or beverages are not permitted in the venue.
RSVP Now
Make sure to RSVP to this amazing event!
Please let us know if you can make it to the event.
YesMaybe
OpenSpaces Still Available
Can not make it to this event?Change my RSVP
Organizer
Time
Location
Art Event
Event Details
Attend the closing reception for Every Man is an Island by Natasha Moustache on Saturday, February 14th, from 5:00-8:00pm. Metaphysical poet John Donne famously wrote, “No man
Event Details
Attend the closing reception for Every Man is an Island by Natasha Moustache on Saturday, February 14th, from 5:00-8:00pm.
Metaphysical poet John Donne famously wrote, “No man is an island, entire of itself,” in his 1624 meditation on the interconnectedness of humanity. In Every Man is an Island, artist Natasha Moustache turns this idea inward, asking what it means to exist both within and apart. To belong to a place that embodies solitude and connection at once.
The Seychelles Islands, an archipelago of 115 islands scattered across the Indian Ocean, embody this paradox. In Moustache’s black and white photographs, the island emerges not as a place apart, but as a living communion of body and spirit, humanity and nature, self and divine. Each image becomes a quiet testament to the ways in which life here is interwoven with the elements — water, wind, light, and faith.
Within this constellation of islands, humanity is held tenderly by the microcosm of the islands themselves, a mirror reflecting the vast, interconnected universe beyond.
RSVP for this event.
Golden Hour at Epiphany:
Stop by Epiphany for Golden Hour beforehand for free live music, drinks and lite bites in the Café Bar! Doors open at 5pm with 1/2 priced bottles of wine and other specials until 7:00pm
Golden Hour Menu + Music Schedule
Please note that outside food or beverages are not permitted in the venue.
RSVP Now
Make sure to RSVP to this amazing event!
Please let us know if you can make it to the event.
YesMaybe
OpenSpaces Still Available
Can not make it to this event?Change my RSVP
Organizer
Time
Location
Art Event
Event Details
Attend the opening reception for Black Female Presence with Shane-Jahi Jackson on Saturday, February 14th, from 5:00-8:00pm. The image of Black women in Western Art is one
Event Details
Attend the opening reception for Black Female Presence with Shane-Jahi Jackson on Saturday, February 14th, from 5:00-8:00pm.
The image of Black women in Western Art is one riddled with stereotypes, racial
mythologies, visions of servitude and sexual transgressions.
In 1994, Harvard’s Dubois Institute began a research project which later birthed seven volumes on The Image of the Black in Western Art by Harvard’s scholar Henry Louis Gates and David Bindman. All volumes document in detail the fate of ‘black presence’ in European Art and how it historically served to relegate blackness as the extreme opposite of white superiority.
This exhibition continues in the same vein but removes all references to European Art to focus squarely on the Black female model and not as a tool to reaffirm European representational superiority and Christian morals about the body.
Shane-Jahi Jackson’s, Black Female Presence, evades providing the viewer an instructional manual on how to interpret his series of semi-nude figurative paintings of Black women. His “no comment stance” is a deliberate one that resists the impulse to qualify or explain the why of these paintings. Instead, he demands that the viewer have the same reaction or sentiment of awe and the sublime upon seeing Botticelli’s Renaissance painting on the Birth of Venus for the first time without erotizing the image.
The ensemble of works posits the idea that Black women can also be a portal to the Universal and invites the viewer to leave their cliches, biases and judgement at the door.
Shane-Jahi celebrates these women.
RSVP for this event.
Golden Hour at Epiphany:
Stop by Epiphany for Golden Hour beforehand for free live music, drinks and lite bites in the Café Bar! Doors open at 5pm with 1/2 priced bottles of wine and other specials until 7:00pm
Golden Hour Menu + Music Schedule
Please note that outside food or beverages are not permitted in the venue.
RSVP Now
Make sure to RSVP to this amazing event!
Please let us know if you can make it to the event.
YesMaybe
OpenSpaces Still Available
Can not make it to this event?Change my RSVP
Organizer
Time
Location
Art Event
Event Details
Attend the closing reception for Jordan Porter-Woodruff’s The Children Play Games on Saturday, February 14th, from 5:00-8:00pm. In The Children Play Games, the
Event Details
Attend the closing reception for Jordan Porter-Woodruff’s The Children Play Games on Saturday, February 14th, from 5:00-8:00pm.
In The Children Play Games, the artist explores the fragile relationship between play, perception, and imagination through a lens that intertwines past memories, present realities, and future possibilities. The show invites viewers to reflect on how children engage with their world in an age where Artificial Intelligence and deep Internet culture increasingly shape their experiences and understanding. By juxtaposing traditional play with AI-infused elements the artist creates a dialogue about the shifting boundaries of authenticity and creativity in childhood.
Today’s children grow up alongside intelligent machines while immersed in an endless, unfiltered digital stream. Their minds are trained to scroll and react, often at the expense of slower, tactile forms of play that once nurtured fine motor skills, independent thought, and imaginative problem-solving. Algorithmic feeds promise limitless information but leave little room for open-ended discovery, offering access without the depth of true exploration.
Artificial Intelligence sharpens this dilemma by performing acts of invention that once belonged to the developing mind. From generating pictures to completing stories, AI delivers finished creations that bypass the frustration—and growth—of making something from nothing. When creativity is outsourced to algorithms, children risk becoming consumers of novelty rather than creators of it, spectators to a simulation of imagination that demands nothing of their own.
Against this backdrop, The Children Play Games seeks to reclaim the essential terrain of imagination. Each photograph functions as a portal into a dreamlike, yet critical space where the physical and digital coexist without clear hierarchy. By inviting viewers to step into these constructed realities, the exhibition calls on society at large to consider how we might safeguard environments that sustain curiosity, protect the vital connection between mind and hand, and empower the next generation to shape worlds of their own making rather than surrender to those designed for them.
RSVP for this event.
Golden Hour at Epiphany:
Stop by Epiphany for Golden Hour beforehand for free live music, drinks and lite bites in the Café Bar! Doors open at 5pm with 1/2 priced bottles of wine and other specials until 7:00pm
RSVP Now
Make sure to RSVP to this amazing event!
Please let us know if you can make it to the event.
YesMaybe
OpenSpaces Still Available
Can not make it to this event?Change my RSVP
Organizer
Time
Location
Art Event
Event Details
Attend the closing reception forThe Language We Create on Saturday, February 14th, from 5:00-8:00pm. The Language We Create speaks directly to the role of artists
Event Details
Attend the closing reception forThe Language We Create on Saturday, February 14th, from 5:00-8:00pm.
The Language We Create speaks directly to the role of artists in the world of visual communication.
Throughout the diversity of their explorations, these 11 artists, all cohort residents of Chicago Artists Coalition, remain in dialogue with one another. Each work brings its own context, the clear signature of its creator - a story crafted through the artist’s uniquely defined language. These pieces, while distinct, have common threads that link them one to another.
We see a vocabulary built on textures, colors, and shapes, layered with movement and light in the same way nouns, verbs and adjectives are traditionally woven together in prose. These combinations as envisioned by the artist craft their narrative, document their reality.
Language however, is an inherently social tool used to enhance relationships, for expression and connection. While the work is its own being, it asks the viewer to bring their own interpretation to the experience, linking themselves to the piece as well.
RSVP for this event.
Golden Hour at Epiphany:
Stop by Epiphany for Golden Hour beforehand for free live music, drinks and lite bites in the Café Bar! Doors open at 5pm with 1/2 priced bottles of wine and other specials until 7:00pm
Golden Hour Menu + Music Schedule
Please note that outside food or beverages are not permitted in the venue.
RSVP Now
Make sure to RSVP to this amazing event!
Please let us know if you can make it to the event.
YesMaybe
OpenSpaces Still Available
Can not make it to this event?Change my RSVP
Organizer
Time
Location
Art Event
Event Details
Attend the closing reception for Hope Is the Last Thing by Rebecca Keller on Saturday, February 14th, from 5:00-8:00pm. The works in this exhibition are inspired by
Event Details
Attend the closing reception for Hope Is the Last Thing by Rebecca Keller on Saturday, February 14th, from 5:00-8:00pm.
The works in this exhibition are inspired by Epiphany Center for the Arts’ history as a church building, especially the dedicatory plaque hung around the corner in the hall. The grey and white text-based paintings are inspired by the plaque’s color and shape. But while these paintings initially evoke banal, cliched, vaguely uplifting “word art” in vacation rentals and hotels, the language in them quickly veers into denser, darker, trickier, more complicated interpretations.
Though intended to seem like ‘old sayings’ all the texts are original. They are inspired by Emily Dickinson’s “Hope is a thing with feathers” and the Greek myth of Pandora, who opened a forbidden chest and allowed all the evils in the world to fly out. Panicked, she slammed the chest closed, shutting the gift of hope inside.
The themes of wings, flight and transcendence are continued in the images of birds and boats. Traditional iconography in Christian churches, such images are metaphors for faith and belief. Here again, tropes associated with lightness and beauty reveal their darker side as the birds (our stand-ins?) are sometimes in danger, or in anguish, and boats drift unmoored, without direction. But others float or fly past, unconcerned and unaware.
These works refer to the difficulty of maintaining hope, and the insistence that we keep trying anyway. They call to mind the pain of distress as well as the possibility of grace.
RSVP for this event.
Golden Hour at Epiphany:
Stop by Epiphany for Golden Hour beforehand for free live music, drinks and lite bites in the Café Bar! Doors open at 5pm with 1/2 priced bottles of wine and other specials until 7:00pm
Golden Hour Menu + Music Schedule
Please note that outside food or beverages are not permitted in the venue.
RSVP Now
Make sure to RSVP to this amazing event!
Please let us know if you can make it to the event.
YesMaybe
OpenSpaces Still Available
Can not make it to this event?Change my RSVP
Organizer
Upcoming Events
December 2025
February 2026