News

November 5, 2025

Lewis Center for the Arts’ Program in Visual Arts presents Open Studios

Juniors and seniors majoring and minoring in visual arts at Princeton University will open their studios to share and discuss their works-in-progress on November 19 from 5:30 to 7:00 p.m. at 185 Nassau Street on the Princeton campus. The event is free and open to the public.

A student artist talks with two others visiting their studio.

Juniors and seniors in the Program in Visual Arts showcase their art and creative processes during the 2024 Vis Open Studios event. Photo by Zohar Lavi-Hasson

The evening of open studios will feature work by students in a wide range of media including photography, sculpture, painting, drawing, printmaking, graphic design, and film, as well as multi- and interdisciplinary work. The student artists, from the classes of 2026 and 2027, will be present to discuss their work.

“The artist’s studio is a space for works in-progress, materials, references, and collections of all sorts,” said Colleen Asper, associate director of the Program in Visual Arts. “Open Studios invites the whole community into this world of making. See where students in the Visual Arts Program make their work and how they make it; and have conversations with the artists about their work and process. All are welcome!”

Juniors occupy a community of partitioned studios on the fourth floor of the building and seniors share semi-private studios of two or three artists on the second floor.

185 Nassau Street is an accessible venue. Most studios are reachable by elevator with a small number reachable by a chair lift that can be operated independently or with staff assistance. Guests who plan to attend Open Studios and have questions on using the chair lift are invited to contact Kristy Seymour at kseymour@princeton.edu so that the staff can best plan for your visit. Guests in need of other access accommodations are invited to contact the Lewis Center at least one week in advance at lewiscenter@princeton.edu

Refreshments will be served throughout the evening.

A student filmmaker seated by a tv screen shares their work with a visitor.

At the 2024 Open Studios event then juniors, now seniors, share their work with visitors. Photo credit: Zohar Lavi-Hasson

The Program in Visual Arts at the University offers courses in painting, drawing, graphic design, photography, printmaking, sculpture, ceramics, animation, and film and video production. These studio courses emphasize direct, hands-on art making under the guidance of the faculty of practicing visual artists. In order to develop their work, students have access to state-of-the-art technical, analog, and digital labs and studios.

Juniors and seniors pursuing a major in the Practice of Art Track through the Department of Art and Archaeology or a minor in visual arts through the Lewis Center’s Program in Visual Arts have 24/7 access to their studios, an unusual resource in an undergraduate visual arts program. Throughout the year, their work is exhibited in the Lucas Gallery and Hagan Gallery at 185 Nassau, the Hurley Gallery at the Lewis Arts complex, and screened in the James Stewart Film Theater, as well in other traditional and non-traditional venues on campus.

Visit the Lewis Center website to learn more about the Program in Visual Arts and the more than 100 performances, exhibitions, readings, screenings, concerts and lectures offered each year at the Lewis Center, most of them free. Visit the Art & Archaeology website to learn more about Princeton University’s Department of Art & Archaeology.

 

Press Contact

Steve Runk
Director of Communications
609-258-5262
srunk@princeton.edu