54th Annual Labor Day Art Show
Spanish Ballroom at Glen Echo Park
7300 MacArthur Boulevard
Glen Echo, MD
August 30–September 1, 2025
12pm–6pm
Admission is free.
Opening reception: Friday, August 29, 2025, 7:30pm–9:00pm
Untitled (Toward the Maintenance of Art) is a collaboration with Pat Goslee, Gregory Staley, Michael O’Sullivan and Sidney Lumet. The image is a restaging of one moment in Sidney Lumet’s 1964 film The Pawnbroker that instantaneously speaks to universal grief and of our human inability to fully assuage another’s pain from trauma.
Partial proceeds of the sale of this piece will be donated to the American Film Institute.
Untitled
(Toward the Maintenance of Art)
Part of "Collab" exhibition at Touchstone Gallery, 901 New York Ave NW, Washington, DC
Through Monday, September 1, 2025, with special hours on the closing day (open 12 pm–5 pm) with complimentary beverages from 3pm–5 pm.
Gallery hours: Wednesday–Sunday, 12pm–5pm
Juried by Jarvis DuBois, Anna Kenneally, and Sergio Vazquez
Guardians
36” x 36”
acrylic and coffee
Photo by Greg Staley
Women Artists of the DMV
A Multi-Venue Survey of over 400 artists from DC, Maryland, and Virginia
Curated by F. Lennox Campello
American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center
Opening reception: Saturday, September 6, 6:00pm–9:00pm
Anchor exhibition with 63 works of art on display including work by Patricia Goslee (catalog available)
For more information, including a complete list of artists and participating venues, go to East City Arts.
For more information about Women Artists of the DMV and the curatorial process, go to the Daily Campello Art News.
re:look
See Through, acrylic and Prismacolor on paper, 22” x 30”
As if being given notes on a future healing, information about the microbiome (human, animal and environmental) is assimilated. As visualizations of energy or undercurrents of stored memories in human motor fibers, these paintings are not literal representations, but rather assigned meanings for a process; a way of stimulating healing thoughts and tapping into the waters that connects us all.
For Pat Goslee, painting is a way to deal with the chaos of the world; an act that lies between a noun and a verb; a silent form of communication. It is an arena of dreams with the power to create alternatives to the destructive currents of public discourse.