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ONGOING


ETERNAL

ELEMENTS
LESN101 + NAGO

NEXT SESSION
AUGUST 8 at 5-6:30pm


In this unique outdoor public event--taking place over 4 evenings from June thru October--audiences will experience the creation of a mural and sample-based tracks that emerge from the alchemical connection between NAGO and LESN101. These two Springfield artists compose paintings and songs alongside each other, showcasing their artistic processes in real time

In this latest iteration of their improvisational project ETERNAL, the artists draw inspiration from the classical elements of 
AIR, EARTH, FIRE, + WATER  
and demonstrate that the quality of composition is not governed by the complexity of materials, but by the strength of the cypher.

All events will take place on the public walkway behind A.P.E.’s Main Street Gallery (adjacent to the Armory St. parking lot)
LESN101 makes art to free the soul. As a Lao American visual artist, LESN101’s work blends graffiti, abstract expressionism, and portraiture to explore themes of healing, empowerment, and self-liberation. Rooted in his family's history of survival—from his mother’s escape from Laos in 1976 to his own experiences with trauma and displacement—his art channels personal struggle into transformative expression. Drawing inspiration from hip-hop and graffiti culture, LESN101 uses bold colors and dynamic forms to create emotionally resonant pieces that invite introspection, connection, and growth.
NAGO makes music for ghosts. A sample-based hip-hop musician, NAGO collages audio into introspective sonic cinemas. Rooted in his upbringing in Springfield, Massachusetts, NAGO explores themes of family, solitude, classism, racism, and generational cycles. With an emphasis on the technology he uses, NAGO blurs time by shifting between rigid, computer-led patterns and soaring, abstract passages. NAGO is heavily influenced by both the foundations and future of hip-hop, and describes his work as an “abandoned factory machine learning to play jazz.”



SESSION No. 1

WATER


JUNE 13, 2025 





In session no. 1 of this unique outdoor public event, NAGO and LESN101 explored the elemental quality of WATER. 

LESN101’s mural, created in its entirity during the session, is on view on the garage door behind A.P.E.’s 126 Main St. location. Check it out before it is transformed during the next session of ETERNAL: ELEMENTS on August 8.

CLICK HERE to experience the fluid track created by NAGO during their watery session.


This project is supported by a grant from the Northampton Arts Council, along with sustained support from Massachusetts Cultural Council and The Community Foundation of Western Massachusetts’ Valley Creates program, and Commonwealth Murals.



MAKING GROUND:

DIALOGUES
May-July


A creative, collective learning series

A.P.E.'s Making Ground: Dialogues is a series of engagements centered around collective study and reparative relationships to place. The Spring 2025 series will focus on local histories and ecologies with three gatherings led by artists whose creative practices intersect with grief and loss, embodied and communal practice, social exchange, and interspecies investigations. Embedded in the varied offerings are invitations to consider interconnection with the more than human world, land remediation in relationship to colonial trauma, and how historical and land-based studies might lead us to embodied, creative, grounded, and imaginative responses in the present toward more liberated futures.

UP NEXTJULY 6 @ 8pm • Bramble Hill Farm
Meg Foley 
Communion

REGISTER HERE
................
MAY 4 
javiera benavente 
Lay Down and Listen

MAY 18
Sara Smith
Where we go, we will have been







OFFERING 3:
COMMUNION
with Meg Foley  
July 6 at 8pm (civil twilight) 
Bramble Hill Farm

REGISTER HERE
Communion is an experiment done in community. Using our relation to geology and exploring language as a formative force, Communion unpacks how we are formed—how we are shaped by and through language, place and time. An intentional and spiraling journey through the creation story of the land we are on, the family Meg is a part of, and the sensory materials of the immediate moment of the performance, Communion asks the audience to reflect on all that has accumulated into this moment and the significance of our sensing, feeling selves in this moment, now.

Communion is one part of a larger project called Blood Baby, which includes site-responsive dance performance and Queer Parent Convenings, in addition to Touch Library, an interactive, sensory archive of the project, and Primordial, a visual installation exploring deep time and queer formation, on view in early July at A.P.E. on Main Street. Blood Baby uses multiple mediums to explore the interconnected experiences of queer and gender non-conforming parenting and family-building, highlighting gender, sexuality, community, and Earthly lineage.

Meg Foley (she/he/they) makes performance projects in pursuit of radical self-determination, crafting body-based explorations of identity, belonging, and time from a queer perspective. Drawing on choreographic formalism but continually questioning what constitutes dance performance, her research asks how identity is occupied: an all-the-time, ever-shifting self, a sacred site, a portal, a prism. She often invites audiences to engage with concepts through their own bodily experiences, using movement, design, and choreographic thinking to create containers for bodily engagement and reflection on a somatic present, on the power and location of the body itself as participant. Since 2019, she has been working with fabric, foam, and textile materials to extend performer embodiment through interactive objects and installations, affording somatic life to objects and “feeling back” on and through the body, reflecting on one’s FORM and the body’s collective interiority, shape and architecture. She lives on traditional Lenape land, in southern Lenapehoking and what is commonly known as Philadelphia, where she co-runs The Whole Shebang, a home for experiment performance in Philly, with her partner, visual artist Carmichael Jones, and is a queerdo homeschooling mama in a trans family with two kids and an elderly pit bull. Raised by a single mom in the DC area, she was a creative movement kid who found her choreographic identity on the club dance floor, in phenomenological texts, and in experiential visual art. www.megfoley.org






OFFERING 2:
WHERE WE GO, WE WILL HAVE BEEN
with Sara Smith  
May 18, 12-3pm 
33 Hawley


How is our felt experience of a place informed by knowledge of or assumptions about its history? How do layered past, present, and future moments live in, with, and around us? How might we understand ourselves as grounded in a wide expanse of space and time, and make art from that grounding?

Interdisciplinary artist, choreographer, and librarian Sara Smith will share their experiences and creative practices developed from making speculative artworks and performances from archival research. In guided experiments, we will attend to sensory experience of place, discuss the human anatomies that shape this experience, and engage with, reimagine, and remix “historical” materials connected to APE spaces. Activities will include an artist presentation, group discussion, individual writing and/or drawing, and adaptable guided exercises.

Sara Smith is a transdisciplinary choreographer and librarian. Their projects consider concepts of interconnection, practices of micro-attention, and the poetics and politics of embodied and archival research. Sara’s recent exhibition at APE, Sugar Maple Glacial Lake Station, presented works from their ongoing futurist project Inside the Breath (In Network Time). Sara has been a recipient of the Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellowship award in Choreography among other awards and honors, and lives
in Greenfield (Pocumtuck land). sarasmithprojects.com




OFFERING 1:
LAY DOWN AND LISTEN: 
COMMUNIAL PRACTICES FOR SURRENDER AND BELONGINGwith javiera benavente  
May 4, 12-3pm 
Bramble Hill Farm

What are we losing or have we lost that we want to attend to together?
What dreams and visions do we want to nourish for future generations?

We are living in times of unprecedented brokenness, loss and uncertainty.  While our losses are deeply interconnected, many of us experience them in isolation making it difficult to imagine more generative futures into being.  

Lay Down and Listen is an invitation into a communal and creative exploration in 3 parts: one part art-making, one part ritual, and one part reflection and dialogue.  The purpose is to create a slow, intimate, and sacred space that allows us to attune and attend to our losses (both personal and collective), while nourishing our capacity to dream for future generations.

javiera benavente will share a series of communal practices that invite deep, whole bodied listening and making. This is an invitation into ceremony.  It is a call to turn towards ourselves, each other, the land, and our more than human relatives for connection, guidance, and sustenance as we navigate these turbulent and troubling times.

javiera benavente is an artist, cultural organizer, facilitator, and educator dedicated to collective practice and co-creating new futures of care. Born in Santiago, Chile (Wallmapu) just months before the Unidad Popular government of Salvador Allende was overthrown by a military coup, she has been deeply impacted by the legacy and failure of this utopian political project and its aftermath throughout her life. 

javiera’s current work explores collective grief, loss, and memory; cultivating right and reciprocal relations with land and more than human relatives; and communal, embodied practices of surrender and belonging.  She is the co-curator of Chile Nunca Más: making memory, making future, an exhibit and memory making project that marks 50 years since el golpe (the military coup) in Chile and the subsequent 17 years long dictatorship.

She serves as Assistant Dean of Collaborative and Community Engaged Learning at Hampshire College where she co-chairs the Decolonization & Reciprocity Working Group. javiera lives on the ancestral homelands of the Pocomtuc, Nonotuck, and Nipmuc Peoples with her partner, daughter, and dog.



A.P.E.'s programming is made possible in part by sustained support from the Massachusetts Cultural Council and The Community Foundation of Western Massachusetts.