Exhibition at The Painting Center, New York

Terrill is delighted to have been selected as one of the artists in the group exhibition, Turned and Turning Still, on view at the The Painting Center, New York from June 24 – July 19, 2025.

Curated by Kellie Lehr, Jamie Powell, and Lisa Petker Mintz, Turned and Turning Still features artwork that embraces movement, change, and material experimentation. This exhibition celebrates the ever-evolving nature of artmaking—where creation is rarely linear, and change is constant.

Turned and Turning Still

Exhibition Dates: June 24 - July 19, 2025

Opening Reception : Thursday, June 26, 2025, 5-8pm

Closing Reception: Saturday, July 19, 4 - 6 pm

The Painting Center is pleased to present the exhibition Turned and Turning Still, curated by Kellie Lehr, Jamie Powell, and Lisa Petker Mintz. The exhibition will be on view from June 24 - July 19, 2025, and will be featured on Artsy. Turned and Turning Still invites work that embraces movement, change, and material experimentation. Making art is seldom a linear process; as artists, we simultaneously reflect on the past and envision the future, acting as catalysts for transformation through evolving techniques, shifting mediums, and the tension between the static and the shifting. Art creation is never still; it is stretched, pulled, layered, erased, and reimagined—an ongoing process of transformation. Image-making and image-breaking converge as artists construct and deconstruct visual or conceptual elements, exploring the emergence of new ideas and the disintegration of old ones.

This exhibition celebrates the dynamic nature of creative practice and the experimental spirit of materials, whether traditional or nontraditional. Artists such as Marcel Duchamp, who reshaped everyday objects into art that questioned permanence, and Yayoi Kusama, whose infinite repetitions challenge the boundaries between stasis and motion, exemplify this transformative spirit. Eva Hesse's fragile sculptures resist permanence, while Jasper Johns' layered surfaces carry the imprints of time. Julie Mehretu's dynamic use of layering suggests histories and geographies in flux, and Oscar Muñoz's ephemeral portraits dissolve, challenging the idea of fixed identities. Sam Gilliam's free-flowing drips expand the painting into space, while El Anatsui's shimmering metal tapestries embody the tension between decay and regeneration. Turned and Turning Still invites work that honors transformation and material experimentation, exploring the act of becoming, where materials, techniques, and subjects are always in motion and always turning still.



Group Exhibition: As it Unfolds

As it Unfolds
Curated by Fitsum Shebeshe
NADA Online Exhibition (newartdealers.org)
March 13 – April 15, 2025

Terrill’s work is included in the group exhibition, As It Unfolds, which explores human transformation as a continuous and evolving process shaped by the interplay of time, memory, and experience. This exhibition brings together a diverse group of artists whose works delve into the multifaceted processes of becoming—whether personal, collective, or imagined—manifesting through various narratives and forms. Rather than presenting change as a fixed state or linear progression, it considers transformation an open-ended continuum, influenced by historical contexts, possibilities, and inherent uncertainties. Thus, transformation is perceived not as a final destination but as a dynamic interplay of emergence, dissolution, and renewal.

Through mediums such as painting, photography, sculpture, and digital media, the participating artists investigate the nuanced boundaries between permanence and impermanence. Some engage with archival materials and historical narratives, illustrating how the past resonates within the present and informs speculative futures. Others employ abstraction, utilizing texture, repetition, and fragmentation to convey the fluidity of time and the ephemeral nature of existence. Each piece offers a distinct perspective on transformation, highlighting deeply personal aspects while connecting to broader cultural and historical contexts.

As It Unfold
s navigates the liminal space where past and future converge, presence and absence intertwine, and the familiar transitions into the unknown. Reflecting on transformation as a continuous, evolving process, the exhibition fosters an ongoing dialogue that extends into the broader spectrum of everyday life.



Art Collective: Mutual Friends

Art Collective: Mutual Friends

In 2020, Amanda Suarez (Photographer), Jared Lee Katzman (Artificial Intelligence Researcher and Software Engineer), and Terrill Warrenburg (Artist) founded Mutual Friends, a Brooklyn-based art collective that is focused on the intersection of art, technology, and humanity. The group works on collaborative projects in many formats, exploring the interaction of neural networks/ AI programming with raw human conversations and emotions.

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