WORK IN PROGRESS

Un/Natural
works by Liz Harvey
June 05 - June 28, 2026

Un/Natural is an exhibition of sculptures, textile works, and works on paper that utilize layered color and jostling patterns to challenge our perceptions of what is "natural."

Harvey’s "plant hybrids from the future" combine diverse materials like fabric, wire, and plaster to disrupt notions of purity, while her textiles and prints highlight historical lesbian love as both poetry and protest. Her work harnesses maximalist color and form to point toward queer and environmental liberatory futures, exploring an unfixed, "both/and" state of being.

Key highlights of the exhibition include:

  - Strange Plants Series: Sculptures that envision sustainable future worlds where humans and plants coexist. These sculpture and textile works are envisioned as hybrids from a future world, acting as agents of change that foreground both the natural and the artificial, adaptation and bioengineering.

  - Lavender Menace Series: Monoprints focusing on negative space and indeterminacy, inspired by the 1970 "Lavender Menace" queer feminist action. “Lavender Menace” was a queer action from 1970 in which lesbians from Radicalesbians and other feminist groups staged an action -  “an organized hijacking” – of the Second Congress to Unite Women in NYC. They successfully demanded that the National Organization of Women (NOW) accept lesbians and their demands as an integral part of the women’s liberation movement. 

  - Textile Banners: Works such as Yellow Shift, Red Shift, and Blue Shift incorporate text from Emily Dickinson’s letters to Susan Gilbert, functioning as both maps and illegible letters.  These banners feature text excerpts of queer historical letters and letter-poems from poet Emily Dickinson to her beloved - and next-door neighbor, Susan Gilbert.

  - Political Works: Chain of Lies, a 300-foot paper chain documenting 365 lies from the first year of the current federal administration, and the companion zine, lies, lies, liar, which links contemporary lies about the queer community to historical precedents.