
We are here tonight! This is me!
I think I did it again.
Are you getting this?
It’s an honor to be drawn by you.
I think I might cry.
Do you ever get lonely in there?
I think you look really cute with your hair that short.
Makes me regret my haircut that I just got.
Does That Hurt The Fish?
Does that hurt the fish? is a video performance that incorporates original game footage, centered around a mundane exchange between a regular client and an erotic worker, worried about the fish, on a paid date at an aquarium during an impending pandemic, but just before businesses are officially closed.
Coreys
Corey goes to Las Vegas to meet the other Corey.
Club
"I used to work as a photographer hired by a website to promote NYC and the Hamptons nightlife. The promoters would hire the people I worked for to send me over to their party to take photos of the people there. I would go to 2-3 different clubs a night, 4 nights a week. The range in partygoers was pretty big. During my final few months with the company, I was mainly assigned to an after-party spot on Broadway called Pangaea. At Pangaea, I photographed Ice T, Sting, among others. The job, for the most part, was really fun. I drank so much Red Bull vodka."
Finding Lana
Finding Lana is a personal documentary by Daniela Rodriguez about a fangirl’s attempt to turn a dream into reality by interviewing singer-songwriter Lana Del Rey for Superstars Only Magazine.
Meeee
A compilation of TikTok livestreams featuring streamers who rate the profile pictures of their viewers. Molly Soda joins the active chat rooms and asks for a rating, occasionally sending a virtual gift (rose, hand heart, corgi) in the hopes of getting noticed.
Oops!
Oops!, 2000, is a video performance which features the artist in collaboration with strangers she met through chance encounters.
Dahlia Bloomstone is a Puerto Rican American artist and educator. She received her MFA from Hunter College and her BA from Bard College. She attended Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in 2023 and was a 2024/2025 Elaine G. Weitzen Studio Fellow in the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program. She has recently presented with Roxy Cinema, Electronic Arts Intermix, and Rhizome. She lives and works in New York.
Conner O'Malley (born December 20, 1986; Chicago) is an American comedian, writer, actor, and social media personality.
Trevor Shimizu (born 1978) is a visual artist, known for his work as both a painter and video artist. He has produced a large body of paintings that are crudely gestural and sparse, and subtle in their compositional aesthetics if not in their subject matter. In works that are semi-autobiographical, humiliating social incidents and aberrations usually kept private are made public. Alongside his painting practice, Shimizu has produced a body of video art that emphasizes how his personal and public identities have been shaped by home video and the banality of television and media consumerism.
Daniela Rodriguez, born in Miami, FL is a multimedia artist living in NYC. Her work explores concepts of pop culture and identities molded by Hollywood and the post-internet age. She published her first independent magazine, Superstars Only, in 2021. Attempting to deviate from the echo chamber of the art world, Superstars Only aims to blur the line between insider and outsider perspectives.
Molly Soda (b. Amalia Soto, San Juan, Puerto Rico, 1989) is a New York-based artist working in performance, video, photography, and installation. Her practice blurs the line between online user and artist to explore broader shifts in culture.
Laurel Nakadate is a photographer, filmmaker, video and performance artist. For more than twenty-five years she has investigated her relationship to strangers through stories built on camera. Located through chance encounters, DNA tests, open casting calls, family histories, and unsolicited email communication, these strangers were invited by Nakadate to participate in photographs and performances that bridge the worlds of fact and fiction, documentary and constructed narrative.
Nakadate’s first feature film, “Stay the Same Never Change,” premiered at the Sundance Film festival and went on to be featured in New Directors/New Films at Lincoln Center. Her second feature film, “The Wolf Knife” was nominated for a Gotham Award and an Independent Spirit Award. Her ten-year-survey of photography, video, and performance work, “Only the Lonely,” premiered at MoMA PS1.
Nakadate’s work is in many collections including the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, LACMA, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Guggenheim Museum.
Please note: seating is limited. Box Office opens thirty minutes prior to the listed showtime. Guests may add their name to the standby list upon arrival. Online ticket sales will be honored up until 15 minutes after the scheduled showtime; at that time, any unclaimed seats will be released for in-store purchase on a first-come, first-served basis. All Sales Final.



