• About
    • Business
    • Living
    • The Crossroads
    • History
    • About the CCA
    • CCA Board
    • Crossroads Truck
    • Press
    • Member Discounts
    • 20th Street Streetscape
    • Street Tree Initiative
    • Liquor Licenses
    • PIEA
    • First Friday Sponsors
  • Contact
  • Community Resources
    • Community Improvement District
    • Security
    • Behavioral Health Services
    • Graffiti Cleanup
    • Urban Forest
  • Become a Member
  • Log In
  • Your Corner
    • Your Profile
    • Add Event
    • Add/Edit Your Discount
    • WordPress Admin
    • Add New Member
  • When autocomplete results are available use up and down arrows to review and enter to go to the desired page. Touch device users, explore by touch or with swipe gestures.

Crossroads Arts District

Kansas City's Creative Neighborhood

  • Events
  • First Friday in the Crossroads
    • About First Fridays
    • This First Friday in the Crossroads
    • Our First Friday Sponsors
  • Explore
    • Arts
    • Entertainment
    • Event Space
    • Food & Drink
    • Retail
    • Services
  • Visitor Info
    • Getting Around
    • FAQ

KC Disability Pride Gallery Activation — First Friday Opening

June 27, 2025 By sbrewer@artskc.org

ArtsKC’s Community Gallery Program supports local artists, arts organizations, and businesses by providing shared access to our Crossroads space to showcase work across disciplines. The program aims to amplify underrepresented voices and activate the gallery during high-visibility period. More information can be found at www.artskc.org.

________________________________________________

Celebrate the kick-off of Disability Pride Gallery Program! Check
out the art, mingle with featured artists, and enjoy musical
performances.

Nothing about us without us! In a world that often
misrepresents disability as solely tragic or portrays
disability as monolithic, this collective of disabled,
neurodivergent, and chronically-ill artists offers more
nuanced expressions of their complex lived
experiences. We seek to center authentic
representations of disability, provide visibility, and
stimulate conversations about accessibility and
community care. Disability Pride does not exist to
simply celebrate identity, but to insist that disabled
lives are worth living — to willfully inhabit in-between
spaces of grief and joy, pain and pleasure.

Gracie Caggiano &
Gwen DeLaney, curators

Gallery Hours:

  • First Friday (July 4th) — 4 – 8pm
  • Sunday (July 6th only) — 1 – 4pm
  • Wednesday — 3:30 – 6:30pm (July 9th & July 23rd only)
  • Friday, Saturday — 1 – 4pm

Gallery is also open during public events.

Keeper of Memories: A Celebration of Works by Gerry Trilling

June 27, 2025 By casey@thestudiosinc.org

Keeper of Memories: A Celebration of Works by Gerry Trilling is an exhibition working in collaboration with her husband, Howard Trilling, to remember and celebrate Gerry Trilling’s life throughout her career and work as an artist.

Gerry Trilling was a conceptual artist who presented a personal recounting of the history and assimilation of the American Jewish Diaspora in exquisite deadpan. Her parents escaped the Holocaust, relocating to St. Louis where she grew up in a community of immigrants viewing identity, assimilation and belonging as linked to home environments and material culture.

While Trilling used a variety of fabrics to mark the passage of time, she was not nostalgic. She embraced our contemporary material culture, itself omnivorous in the extreme. Nothing was off limits in her unsentimental investigation of the passage from greenhorn to assimilation. Materials, patterns, and certain numerical codes were her conceptual signifiers. Her work insists that you, the viewer, reach into your own personal place of memory and association. Trilling’s work is featured in the collections of the Albrecht-Kemper Museum of Art, Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, and Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. Gerry Trilling was an Alumni of the Studios Inc. artist residency program from 2015 to 2017.

Studios Inc will be hosting an opening reception, August 1st from 5 – 8 pm. All are encouraged to come and celebrate Gerry Trilling, and welcome to bring photos to add to a wall of memories for her. The exhibition will be open from August 1st, to September 26th.

Gallery hours are Wednesdays through Friday 10 am to 4 pm, and Saturdays 12 pm to 4 pm.

Art of the Wish

June 17, 2025 By smote@maaa.org

Art of the Wish–If you had a wish for the world, what would it be? Two artists traveled the country asking this question to elders from diverse backgrounds and locations. Inspired by more than 250 wishes, Art of the Wish is a poignant and memorable reflection of the beauty in generational storytelling.

In 2017, artists Marn Jensen and Andy Newcom spent six months traveling the country, talking to dozens of 80 to 100-plus-year-olds asking, “If you had a wish for the world, what would it be? ”They contacted senior living communities, visited hospices, and connected with caregivers to create artworks embodying each individual’s wish.

“We were very deliberate in finding a diverse crowd,” Jensen said in a recent interview, “making sure we reached people with different ethnicities, religious affiliations, sexual orientation, income levels, political beliefs … It was important to us to get lots of different people with different backgrounds.”

Equally important to the artwork is the accompanying extended label “story” behind each wish. “We both have a love for story telling as well as the visual work, and it was important to give each piece a slice of context to set the stage,”Newcom says. The works in Art of the Wish are composed of several mediums — from photography to sculpture, textile to encaustic, mixed media to painting — allowing the “wish” to inspire the direction of each piece. The artists are very intentional about the materials used, often incorporating repurposed, found objects that had once been tossed aside. They scoured thrift malls and flea markets to look for things that were discarded or had “vulnerability” because those characteristics applied to so many of the people they spoke with.

“Breathing new life into these objects is a perfect metaphor for appreciating the potential and beauty in old things,” Jensen explained.

One piece in the exhibit is a joyful, quilt-like collage of correspondence and memorabilia collected from generations of one family. The subject’s wish: “I wish I knew how to honor their lives, their meaning, their importance to me.” While another work incorporates thousands of knots shaped from clothesline, acknowledging the thousands of hours spent on mundane chores — such as washing clothes and hanging laundry — performed by so many women that the artists interviewed.

The artists’ “wish” is to inspire people to have a simple conversation with an older person because “it not only will make their day, it will make your day, too.”

Art of the Wish offers plenty of engaging intergenerational programming opportunities, creative reuse and hands-on “making” workshops, storytelling activities, and much more

Sonié Joi Thompson- Ruffin — Colour:-what colour is your gray?

June 6, 2025 By info@leedy-voulkos.com

“Art is documentation and testimony to our very existence. Let it go and see what happens — it becomes a living record, an unfolding story of truth, emotion, and spirit. We release control, and in that surrender, the work reveals its power. It becomes more than just creation; it becomes a mirror to our deepest truths, capturing the essence of what was once unspoken and allowing us to witness the transformation of the soul.” ―Sonié Joi Thompson- Ruffin ©

Colour is not just seen — it is felt, resonating within my body, intertwined with sound, movement, and emotion. Each hue carries its own energy, guiding my creative process and shaping the way I experience the world. Through abstract painting, I capture colour’s dynamic energy, allowing it to flow freely, blend, and form spontaneous, organic compositions.

Colour is sacred — it is the language of the soul, transcending the visual to touch the very core of our existence. It shapes our emotions, perceptions, and memories, moving through us in ways both profound and subtle. In my work, I seek to unlock colour’s emotional power, giving it voice and presence. It is not merely an aesthetic choice, but a force that heals, disrupts, and transforms.

In my textile work, colour flows and intertwines with fabric, guiding every stitch and weave. It becomes an emotional language, creating layers of depth and texture that reflect the dynamic relationship between colour and form. Each piece is a living, breathing entity, telling its own story, just as abstract pouring does with paint.

Colour connects us to our past, our present, and each other in ways words cannot capture. It awakens memories, soothes pain, ignites passion, and shapes our identities.

This exhibition invites you to ignite your senses and revolutionize how you experience colour — remember, resist, rise — and hear the truths colour has already whispered to your soul.

Sonié Joi Thompson-Ruffin is a textile artist, author, abstract painter, and curator whose work explores the layered language of colour, cloth, and cultural memory. Her practice is rooted in sharing stories through fabric and abstraction, honoring ancestral legacies and elevating both personal and collective histories. Raised in Southwest Missouri, she completed the Henry R. Bloch Entrepreneur in Public Administration program at the University of Missouri-Kansas City.

Guided by her experience of synesthesia — where sound, colour, and emotion intersect — Ruffin creates art that is both deeply intuitive and profoundly resonant. Her quilts and paintings serve as visual testimony, blending symbolic motifs, rich textures, and rhythmic compositions that evoke a sense of healing, reflection, and remembrance.

Her artwork has been exhibited in esteemed institutions including the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s Renwick Gallery, the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Spencer Museum, the Holter Museum, Mulvane Museum, David C. Driskell Center, Spiva Musuem for the Arts, Spelman University, Harvard University, American Craft Musuem. She is a Charlotte Street Visual Art Fellow, an Art Omi Fellow, USA Fellowship Nominee, 2023 – 24, Delta Sigma Theta Arts & Letters Award | Woman of Courage, Kansas Masters, and the 2000 Kansas Governor’s Choice Artist.

Ruffin’s artwork can be found in the permanent collections of The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Spencer Museum of Art, 21c Museum Hotel Collection, American Jazz Museum, Bibbs Collection, William Gautreaux Collection, Tony Coleman Collection, Williams Collection, Malcolm Henderson, Britton Collection, D.L. Mitchell, Sprint, McDaniel-Hazley Insurance Co., Bell Corp, and Truman Medical Centers.

Beyond her studio practice her public art is visible and alive living at the Leon Jordan East Patrol and Lab, Pembroke Hall Family Foundation, Waldo in Brookside and Truman Medical centers.

She served as the former curator for the American Jazz Museum Changing Gallery for eight years. Sonié serves on the Kansas City Musuem Board, and is a founding member of AAACollective in Kansas City.

Threshold III: Ancestral Memory — Kevin Demery and Andrew Pequeño

June 6, 2025 By info@leedy-voulkos.com

Threshold brings together the work of Kevin Demery & Andrew Pequeño in an exhibition that explores the passage between memory and material, presence and absence, rupture and repair. Both artists engage with personal and collective histories shaped by displacement, incarceration, and generational trauma, constructing visual worlds where the remnants of the past linger — ghostlike, tender, and unresolved.

Andrew Pequeño’s mixed media works, rooted in the Chicano carceral tradition of paños, use soft, unconventional materials to reframe inherited narratives through gestures of care and transformation. His dreamlike figures exist in liminal spaces, suspended between loss and longing.

Demery’s sculptural and installation-based practice reactivates historical artifacts and symbols of Black American life, recontextualizing them within poetic and fragmented environments. Through acts of assemblage, he creates sites of both mourning and resistance.

Together, their work speaks to the weight of what we carry across generations — and the thresholds we cross to remember, reimagine, and heal.

____

Kevin Demery

Artist Statement

I’ve always found poetry in objects that convey multiple histories, objects that, through context and placement, drastically change meaning. For this reason, I use a wide variety of media rooted in traditions of assemblage. My practice triangulates intimate examinations of childhood, racial subjugation, and autobiography. I employ a kitsch-like aesthetic that often veils the weight of the subject matter intentionally. I traverse a multitude of applications and presentations to draw the viewer into an environment with each piece. This is done as a means to evince the power of the materials and imagery used to evoke curiosity into the narratives that lie within them.

An example of how I employ these methods is work that exemplifies my process, Gardens of Night, 2020. In this work, I have a coffin-like cross box that I crafted by hand, outfitted with acrylic neon tubing. The box rests atop a worn, repurposed church pew. The neon illuminates the exterior, creating a rich black void that obscures a glass bottle holding a miniature military-grade American flag that is meant to sit beside gravesites. The impetus behind making this work was to create a miniature monument to the black body laid to rest in the name of American and Christian ideals that have not sought to serve or uplift a community inextricably tied to its histories. If read to scale, the coffin would only fit the body of a child.

Many of my works reference history independent from a particular narrative and speak as a form of poetry to larger cultural experiences. I make these objects to interrogate Black historical narratives, acting as a haunting specter to the sociopolitical backdrop in which I find myself. I’m drawn to the arrangement of symbols to illuminate further the nuances of the histories I awaken. In this, I find links between the objects I create and my experience growing up as an African-American youth amid atmospheres riddled with political inertia, poverty, and violence.

Bio

Kevin Demery’s work explores the interplay between U.S. history and signifiers of power, developing an artistic language that invites the viewer to move between the aesthetic of his work and recurring motifs of historical violence, surveillance, and childhood trauma. He uses sculpture as a vehicle to engage audiences with iconic elements such as children’s puzzles, wind chimes, and plaster-cast hands to refer to specific histories and poetically interpret them within larger cultural experiences.

Demery received his BFA from the California College of the Arts in San Francisco, CA in 2014 and his MFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago in Chicago, IL in 2018. He is a full-time professor at the Kansas City Art Institute in Kansas City, MO. He is one of three recipients of the 2024 Charlotte Street Visual Artist Awards and his work is currently on view at the Nelson Atkins Museum in Kansas City as part of the award exhibition. He also participated in the Delta Triennial at the Arkansas Museum of Fine Art in Little Rock, AR and Art Cologne in Cologne, Germany with Sakhile & Me Gallery in 2024.

____


Andrew Pequeño

Artist Statement

As a Mexican American interdisciplinary artist, my practice investigates the intersection of trauma, cultural identity, and regional specificity — particularly how these forces shape the social and psychic landscapes of the South and Southwest United States. My work is grounded in narrative, drawing from personal memory, inherited histories, and familial mythologies to create visual languages that are both intimate and expansive.

Through drawing, installation, and material experimentation, I construct images and objects that occupy a space between the sacred and the everyday. Infused with spiritual symbolism and folkloric references, these works engage the ongoing effects of settler colonialism — its disruption of culture, language, and belonging — and the generational reverberations it leaves behind.

I am interested in what happens at the edges of identity: at cultural and physical borders, where displacement and assimilation collide. My work asks how home is remembered or reimagined, and what it means to carry both loss and resilience across generations.

Bio

Andrew Pequeño is a Mexican American interdisciplinary artist whose work investigates themes of displacement, cultural memory, and the shifting nature of identity. Born in San Antonio, Texas, and now based in Detroit, Mcilvaine explores how home, language, culture, and even one’s name can be fractured or redefined through migration, settler colonialism, and generational movement. His practice is rooted in the personal, drawing from familial narratives to examine the psychological terrain of loss, resilience, and belonging.

Pequeño earned his BA in Studio Art from the University of Missouri – Kansas City and later received his MFA in Painting and Drawing from Washington University in St. Louis. His work spans drawing, sculpture, and installation, often incorporating symbolic materials such as sand, Mexican iconography, and consumer objects like Nikes to navigate the layered complexities of personal and cultural transformation.

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 37
  • 38
  • 39
  • 40
  • 41
  • …
  • 251
  • Next Page »

© 2026 Crossroads Community Association

Neighborhood Tourist Development Fund
Crossroads Community Association

Site design & development by

Lagom Design