Threshold
My photograph Threshold has been accepted into the Juried Artists Council ACE 2026 exhibition, themed “Timeless Traditions – Modern Context.” The work is a photograph produced as a dye-infused aluminum print and centers on a small ritual object that has passed through multiple generations of my family. The subject of the photograph is a mezuzah.
This mezuzah hung on the doorframe of my great-grandfather’s home in Ukraine. Its history before that is unknown. What is known is where it traveled afterward. It made its way with my family to an apartment in the Bronx, New York. From there, it was installed on the doorframe of a house in La Habra, California, and later on the doorframe of an apartment in Hollywood. Today, generations later, it occupies a place in my home.
Based on its size, weight, material, and decorative style, the mezuzah appears to be a late 19th to early 20th century Eastern European domestic mezuzah, likely dating from circa 1890–1915, within Jewish communities of late Imperial Russia or the Austro-Hungarian Empire. It was not made as a ceremonial or decorative object, but as an everyday household item, intended to be used, reinstalled, and lived with.
A mezuzah is affixed to the doorposts of Jewish homes and contains a handwritten parchment with verses from the Shema, instructing the Jewish people to keep these words present in daily life. This mezuzah survived not because it was preserved as an artifact, but because it continued to serve that original purpose. It passed through doorways, migrations, and decades in which many homes, families, and traditions did not survive. It is an everyday threshold object that endured movement, displacement, and resettlement, which makes Threshold a precise and intentional title.
Today is International Holocaust Remembrance Day, a day dedicated to remembering the six million Jews murdered during the Holocaust and the destruction of Jewish life across Europe. For many families, entire histories were erased. For others, fragments endured, sometimes in the form of objects that continued to be carried, installed, and used.
Threshold reflects that endurance. Shown in a contemporary exhibition context and produced using modern photographic processes as a dye-infused aluminum print, the mezuzah remains what it has always been: a marker of continuity at the doorway, quietly present across time.
Threshold will be on view at The Artists Center, a museum-quality exhibition facility in Palm Desert operated by the Artists Council. The Juried Artists Council ACE 2026 exhibition opens with a reception on February 5, from 5–7 pm, and runs through March 1. The Artists Center is located at 72-567 Highway 111, Palm Desert, California 92260. You are invited to attend the opening reception and to visit the exhibition during its run. Please join us. Thank You!
See “Dakota In White” at the Artists Center
Dakota stands nude, wrapped in fabric that catches the daylight just enough to trace the lines of her body. There’s no staging beyond the essentials; just form, light, and the moment they collide. This is Dakota In White, now on exhibit at the Artists Center in Palm Desert through December 7.
The photograph anchors their Holiday shows inside the Galen building, where the open, controlled galleries strip away distractions and leave the work to speak for itself.
Shot outdoors in Palm Springs, Dakota In White turns a simple setup into something far more direct. The fabric, the light, the shape, nothing ornamental, nothing softened. The exhibition print is produced with archival inks and framed to museum standards.
Open Now Through December 7 — Regular Hours
Wednesday–Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Additional Holiday Weekend Hours
These dates extend access beyond the weekly schedule:
Thanksgiving Weekend:
FRI, NOV 28
SAT, NOV 29
SUN, NOV 30
(Closed WED, NOV 26 & THURS, NOV 27)
New Year’s Weekend:
FRI, DEC 26
SAT, DEC 27
SUN, DEC 28
(Closed WED, DEC 31 & THURS, JAN 1)
Location
The Artists Center at the Galen
72567 Highway 111, Palm Desert, CA 92260
artistscouncil.com
“Dakota In White” at the Artists Council
I currently have Dakota In White on exhibit at the Artists Council in Palm Desert, on view through December 7th. This award-winning photograph is included in the current show.
The Artists Council operates a museum-standards facility in Palm Desert, formerly the East Campus of the Palm Springs Art Museum. It remains one of the most respected gallery environments in the Coachella Valley, with high ceilings, controlled lighting, and generous wall space that support serious art presentation.
Dakota In White was photographed outdoors in Palm Springs. Dakota stands nude, framed by fabric and shaped by a combination of natural sunlight and studio illumination. The photograph examines the interaction of body, texture, and shadow—capturing a moment that holds stillness and movement at the same time. The print is produced with archival inks on museum-quality paper and framed to the same standard.
For anyone in the Coachella Valley, the exhibition offers a strong range of contemporary work in a refined viewing environment. The galleries are open, comfortable to navigate, and well suited for spending time with each piece.
Exhibition Information
On view through: December 7, 2025
Location: Artists Council Gallery
45140 Towne Centre Way, Palm Desert, CA 92260
Gallery Hours: Tuesday–Sunday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Website: https://artistscouncil.com
Uncensored and Hanging: “You Looked”
“You Looked.” Now fully unwrapped. And fully on display.
This nearly five-foot-tall framed photograph, titled You Looked, is now hanging under exhibition lighting at the Artists Center at the Galen in Palm Desert—a museum-quality venue that once served as the east campus of the Palm Springs Art Museum.
She’s nude except for heels, a wig, and a sheer apron pretending to conceal. The pot is decorative at best. You’ve already looked between her legs—everyone does. That flicker of curiosity, the not-quite-permissible glance, is part of the design. The image doesn’t seduce. It waits, quietly watching what you choose to see.
Part of the Through the Lens exhibition, on view through May 25. 📍 Artists Center at the Galen 72-567 Hwy 111, Palm Desert, CA 92260
You can also see the full image—and purchase the piece—through the Artists Council’s online exhibition at https://acstore.artistscouncil.com/products/e124-045-01 But if you can, come see it in person. It holds the wall. Thanks!
You Looked – Now Come See It for Real!
“You Looked.”
Now fully unwrapped. And fully on display.
This nearly five-foot-tall framed photograph, titled You Looked, is now hanging under exhibition lighting at the Artists Center at the Galen in Palm Desert—a museum-quality space that once served as the east campus of the Palm Springs Art Museum.
She’s nude except for heels, a wig, and a sheer apron pretending to conceal. The pot is decorative at best. You’ve already looked between her legs—everyone does. That flicker of curiosity, the not-quite-permissible glance, is part of the design. The image doesn’t seduce. It waits, quietly watching what you choose to see.
Part of Through the Lens, on view April 30 through May 25.
Reception is tonight, May 1, 5–7pm—free and open to the public.
Artists Center at the Galen
72-567 Hwy 111, Palm Desert, CA 92260
Come see it on the wall, fully lit and uncensored.
And decide where your eyes will go.
“You Looked” At Through the Lens
“You Looked.”
That’s the title.
Reception: May 1, 5–7pm (free and open to the public). 72-567 Hwy 111, Palm Desert CA
She’s nude except for heels, a wig, and a sheer apron pretending to conceal. The pot is decorative at best. You’ve already looked between her legs—everyone does. That flicker of curiosity, the not-quite-permissible glance, is part of the design. The image doesn’t seduce. It waits, quietly watching what you choose to see.
This is a photograph—42×52 inches, framed archival pigment print, artist’s proof. Premiering at the Artists Center at the Galen in Palm Desert—a museum-quality exhibition space that once served as the east campus of the Palm Springs Art Museum—through the Through the Lens photography exhibition, April 30–May 25. I invite you to stand in front of it. Decide where your eyes will go.







