Crossroads School, Sam Francis Gallery
01/15/2026
The Sam Francis Gallery at Crossroads School for Arts & Sciences Presents
“elevate Elevate ELEVATE!”
A Middle School Winter Project
Exhibition Duration: Jan. 15-28, 2026 (reservation link in bio)
This Middle School art exhibition, “elevate Elevate ELEVATE!”, brings together student work from Ceramics, Photography and Studio Art classes around a shared theme that asks students to look upward, outward and inward. Introduced at the start of the school year and revisited again at the beginning of the new year, elevate Elevate ELEVATE! serves as both a creative prompt and a reminder to uplift one another, to amplify personal voices and to imagine ideas that move beyond limitations.
Across all three disciplines, students interpreted “elevate” through both metaphor and form. Ceramic artists created sculptural works that explore symbols of rising and growth, incorporating emblems such as wings, ladders and ascending structures. Photography students approached the theme through a more experimental lens, creating cyanotype works that feature suspended cast silhouettes printed onto fabric. By placing their own bodies into the work, students explored ideas of presence and elevation—both literal and emotional. Studio Art students translated “elevate” into kinetic and conceptual form by working directly on kites. These works extend beyond the wall, embodying the idea of elevation as something active and expansive. Whether imagined soaring in the sky or displayed in space, the kites symbolize students’ ideas taking flight—rising above, moving forward and reaching beyond.
Elevate is not only a theme, but a shared intention—one that encourages students to lift their voices, support one another and approach their creative practice with confidence and imagination.
reception today (12/8/25) at 3:30pm at the sam francis gallery! we better see you there!
02/12/2025
Fragmented Memories: Manifestations of an Obscured Nostalgia
A Student-Organized Exhibition
Exhibition Duration: Feb. 12-28, 2025
Reception: Wednesday, Feb. 12 // 3:30-5:30 p.m.
Artists: Jeff Beall, Elizabeth Gorcey P’25, Joanne Hayakawa, JPW3, Richard C. Miller
Organized by Curatorial Art students: Ava Grossi, Avery Jones, Celeste Molina, Ruby Schur, Siân Smith
Fragmented Memories: Manifestations of an Obscured Nostalgia is intertwined throughout with the essence of nostalgia. To evoke the feeling of fragmented memory is to validate the inability to envision a memory as a whole. As time passes, memories become obscured—this is inevitable, yet our desire to preserve the past manifests itself as a voracious need for romanticized experiences that become altered through ever evolving perception. The reception does not require an RSVP. During normal gallery hours, please make a reservation in advance. Link in bio. Visitors must check in with security.
10/23/2024
The Sam Francis Gallery at Crossroads School for Arts & Sciences Presents
UNFOLDING ARCHIVES
The exhibition features work by 2024-25 Artist-in-Residence Jenny Yurshansky
Exhibition: Oct. 23-Nov. 14
Artist Reception and Workshop: Wednesday, Oct. 30, 3:30-5:30 p.m.
The reception does not require an RSVP. During regular gallery hours, please make a reservation in advance using this link: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeaRfOm5QeRgh0Ha1J-FcPGmoMWIZOYdxKWegGovc78bjRU3Q/viewform?usp=send_form
SANTA MONICA, CALIF. (Oct. 14, 2024)—Jenny Yurshansky is the 2024-25 artist-in-residence at Sam Francis Gallery. Her history of being a refugee deeply informs her artistic practice. Through a research-based approach, she explores the trauma of displacement, interrogating notions of belonging and otherness within the frames of landscape, historical documents, and social constructs. Formally, this manifests as absence, loss, and erasure. Her long-term projects form intertwined narratives and span the mediums of sculpture, photography, installation, and writing.
Yurshansky’s residency, “Unfolding Archives,” is a collection of work anchored by Unfolded Narratives, a 100-foot-long quilted tapestry art installation created during community workshops with over 300 participants for the past two years at the Wende Museum, Heart of Los Angeles, 18th Street Art Center, Roxbury Park Community Center, Camp Gesher, Chapman University, USC Roski School for Arts, Westridge School, Shalhevet School, De Toledo High School and Milken School. During the opening reception, Crossroads will host a similar workshop for visitors to work with Yurshansky, encouraging them to explore their family origin stories by creating paper fortune tellers. The session is an opportunity to focus on the complexity of what it means to think about home, origin, and place, especially in the context of one’s family history. How are the patterns that reveal themselves in our family dynamics indicators of larger socio-historical patterns that we can identify or contextualize ourselves within? How can this be understood in the framework of immigration and displacement? These workshops are a means of experiencing how our stories are manifold and interwoven. As such, they offer us paths for understanding our individual histories and places of origin and how that impacts our sense of belonging and identity.
Crossroads Visual Arts students will have the opportunity to collaborate with Jenny during her classroom visits this winter by using her work, “The Fugitive Archive”, as the catalyst for their work. Yurshansky’s photographic lightbox piece resembles an airport x-ray, revealing a collection of personal objects made precious due to their emotional significance rather than their monetary value. They become the physical manifestation of generational memory. A selection of student work will be showcased in the student project exhibition in January.
Another component of “Unfolding Archives” is “Generation Loss”, a listening station with audio interviews of workshop participants describing their objects through storytelling. These interviews were recorded by Jenny and are archived as records on X-ray film, also known as “bone records” in the Soviet Union. Crossroads community members will have the opportunity to participate in the growing series, which will later be displayed in her solo exhibition, What We Carry, at the Skirball Cultural Center in October 2026. All participants will be credited as co-creators in the artwork. More information will be provided during the exhibition.
“Rinsing the Bones” is currently on display at The Wende Museum in Culver City in affiliation with Getty PST-ART.
“My reason for creating this work is to manifest a deeper understanding and point of connection from which all who participate and visit will carry their experience forward, making them part of a paradigm shift in future discussions they participate in. My work is iterative for this reason, generative and expansive in a way that includes the voices and experiences of participants and visitors so that our stories go beyond the space of the exhibition and their impact is carried out into those we interact with in our lives… I hope that we all find ourselves in constructive interference as we overlap rather than collide, centering our care for one another as we gently intersect.” – Jenny Yurshansky
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