Press Release (Cycle XIII)
Rick Lowe, Leasho Johnson, Jeff Way, Hugo McCloud, Michael Igwe, & Carolyn Oberst
November 9th - March 8th, 2025
Storage
52 Walker Street
4th Floor
Tribeca, New York 10013
Exhibition Checklist
Storage is pleased to present Press Release (Cycle XIII), a group exhibition featuring the works of Michael Igwe (b. 1994), Leasho Johnson (b. 1984), Rick Lowe (b. 1961), Hugo McCloud (b. 1980), Carolyn Oberst (b. 1946),and Jeff Way (b. 1942). Blending abstraction and figuration, this exhibition brings together a diverse assemblage of voices that collectively explore the multifaceted nature of identity, culture, and social observation. Press Release (Cycle XIII) will be on view from November 9th, 2024 through March 8th, 2025 at Storage.





Rick Lowe, Leasho Johnson, Jeff Way, Hugo McCloud, Michael Igwe, & Carolyn Oberst
November 9th - March 8, 2025
Storage
52 Walker Street
4th Floor
Tribeca, New York 10013
Storage is pleased to present Press Release (Cycle XIII), a group exhibition featuring the works of Rick Lowe (b. 1961), Leasho Johnson (b. 1984), Jeff Way (b. 1942), Hugo McCloud (b. 1980), Michael Igwe (b. 1994), and Carolyn Oberst (b. 1946). Blending abstraction and figuration, this exhibition brings together a diverse assemblage of voices that collectively explore the multifaceted nature of identity, culture, and social observation. Press Release (Cycle XIII) will be on view from November 9th, 2024 through February 2025 at Storage.
The works in Press Release (Cycle XIII) engage with personal and shared experiences, offering a rich tapestry of perspectives that reflect the complexities of contemporary identity. Each artist employs a unique take on narrative, social critique, and material exploration.
Rick Lowe’s interdisciplinary practice maps the connections between culture and community, revealing how these elements influence and inform one another. In tandem, Hugo McCloud’s focus on materiality challenges viewers to consider the intersections of class, race, and identity through the lens of the environment and economy, emphasizing how our surroundings shape our experiences.
Michael Igwe’s storytelling, deeply rooted in folklore, offers a framework through which to explore personal and communal identities. In contrast, Leasho Johnson’s sharp commentary on post-colonial culture prompts critical reflections on the visible and invisible aspects of identity formation.
Carolyn Oberst balances lived experiences with imagined worlds, encouraging reflection on the boundaries between reality and perception. Meanwhile, Jeff Way’s exploration of shamanism and meditation introduces a spiritual perspective, inviting contemplation on the relationship between the personal and the collective.
Together the artists of Press Release (Cycle XIII) create a rich conversation that not only underscores the diversity of contemporary identity but also invites viewers to engage with the inevitable questions arising from their interconnected narratives. The shared contexts of these varied backgrounds reveal universal themes that transcend geographical boundaries, emphasizing the mutual human experiences that connect us all.
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Opening Reception
Saturday, November 9th from 6-8pmStorage Tribeca
52 Walker St, 4th Fl, New York, NY 10013 -
Rick Lowe (b. 1961) is a visual artist and community activist, known for his collaborative projects rooted in social justice. His practice combines painting, drawing, and installation with initiatives that engage communities in dialogue about equity and urban transformation. Lowe is the founder of Project Row Houses, a long-running cultural initiative in Houston’s Third Ward, which has served as a model for community-driven art projects nationwide. Lowe’s work has been exhibited in major institutions, including the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles. He was named a MacArthur Fellow in 2014 and continues to teach at the University of Houston.
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Leasho Johnson (b.1984) is a visual artist working primarily in painting, installation and sculpture. He was born in Montego-Bay but raised in Sheffield, a small town on the outskirts of Negril Jamaica. His work reflects his experiences growing up as a Black, queer man within Jamaican Dancehall street culture. Johnson's art explores the intersection of identity, post-colonial narratives, and the black queer body, often blending painting and drawing to challenge stereotypes and cultural perceptions. His characters navigate the edges of visibility, aiming to disrupt historical and political expectations. Johnson’s work has been exhibited internationally, and he continues to expand his exploration of black mythologies and the autonomy of the black body in contemporary art.
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Jeff Way (b. 1942) has lived and worked in the Tribeca neighborhood of New York City since 1969. After his arrival in New York, Way was featured in the Whitney Museum of American Art at their 1973 Biennial curated by Marcia Tucker, and again the following year in a solo exhibition. Since then, Way’s work has been included in various exhibitions at the Contemporary Arts Museum (Houston, TX), the New Museum of Contemporary Art (New York, NY), the Institute of Contemporary Art (Philadelphia, PA), as well as other museums and galleries. Way’s works have been added to the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum through a gift by Larry Aldrich, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Denver Art Museum, the New Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Cincinnati Art Museum.
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Hugo McCloud (b. 1980) is a self-taught artist whose practice blends industrial materials like plastic and roofing materials with traditional painting techniques. Through his work, McCloud addresses issues of labor, geopolitics, and the environment, transforming everyday materials into powerful visual statements. His recent work explores class and environmental impact, using thousands of plastic bags to create large-scale compositions. McCloud's work has been exhibited in solo exhibitions at The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum and Fondazione 107, and his work is held in the collections of the Brooklyn Museum, the Detroit Institute of Arts, and the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture. He lives and works in Los Angeles, California.
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Michael Igwe (b. 1994, Lagos, Nigeria) works with painting. His work explores the fluidity of the human form and inner life. Drawing on his personal experiences and Nigerian heritage, Igwe’s paintings are a meditation on selfhood, often referencing the nonlinear storytelling tradition of "Iko-Nke Annang." His process emphasizes experimentation and primal gestures, allowing each piece to serve as a reflection on form, subjectivity, and transcendence. Igwe’s work has been exhibited in solo and group exhibitions across Africa, Europe, and the United States. He holds a BFA from the University of Benin and is currently pursuing an MFA at Columbia University School of the Arts. Igwe has been awarded several grants and fellowships, including The Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation Grant and a fellowship at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture.
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Carolyn Oberst (b. 1946) is a visual artist whose colorful work is influenced by the different, yet interconnected worlds around her. Whether it is the current, contemporary world, the world she creates for herself in her studio, or her internal world of dreams, intuitions, and memory, these aspects infuse her work. Oberst is an interdisciplinary artist, working across painting, drawing, mixed media, wood relief, and video animation. Currently, Oberst’s focus has returned to the directness of oil paint on canvas. Drawing is an important part of her process, as it provides the foundation from which her image making always begins.
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Storage is an artist-run gallery founded by Onyedika Chuke on the ideals of community, discovery, and connoisseurship. With locations in Tribeca and with a viewing room on the Bowery, Storage acts as an archive of makers that work in a range of materials and come from a wide demographic background. Half of the roster is dedicated to reinvigorating the careers of artists of historical prominence, while the other half focuses on nurturing rising artists. With a strong focus on art by women and people of color, Chuke guides Storage’s nontraditional approach to community building, commerce, and mutual aid. Furthermore, Storage hosts Application Readiness Technique (ART), a mentorship program for young artists and arts professionals.
Then & Now: 1970–2024
Jeff Way
September 6th - Extended through November 2nd, 2024
Storage
52 Walker Street
4th Floor
Tribeca, New York 10013
Exhibition Checklist
Storage is pleased to present Then & Now: 1970–2024, a solo exhibition by Jeff Way (b. 1942). Then & Now: 1970–2024 traces the evolution of Jeff Way’s abstract work from the past to the present. Deeply focused on engagement with grid abstraction and spiritualism, Way distills qualities from West Coast and East Coast abstractionists alike. His work occupies a unique position alongside Agnes Martin, Mark Rothko, McArthur Binion, and Jack Whitten, who similarly share a profound connection to the exploration of geometric forms, grids, and their metaphysical implications.








Jeff Way
September 6th - Extended through November 2nd, 2024
Storage
52 Walker Street
4th Floor
Tribeca, New York 10013
Storage is pleased to present Then & Now: 1970–2024, a solo exhibition by Jeff Way (b. 1942). Then & Now: 1970–2024 traces the evolution of Jeff Way’s abstract work from the past to the present. Deeply focused on engagement with grid abstraction and spiritualism, Way distills qualities from West Coast and East Coast abstractionists alike. His work occupies a unique position alongside Agnes Martin, Mark Rothko, McArthur Binion, and Jack Whitten, who similarly share a profound connection to the exploration of geometric forms, grids, and their metaphysical implications.
Jeff Way has lived and worked in Tribeca, New York City, for over fifty years. He gained significant recognition in 1973 when Marcia Tucker selected his work for the Whitney Museum’s first official Biennial, which was followed by his solo exhibition at the museum in 1974. Way’s work Ivy’s Gas, gifted by Larry Aldrich, remains part of their permanent collection.
Now, Storage is pleased to feature Way’s new and historical works that illuminate duality and abstraction of the grid. The exhibition displays a striking contrast between flatness and depth in Way’s paintings and the processes he uses to achieve them. Way's abstract practice is deeply rooted in the grid, a motif he explored in the late 1960s, beginning with his Chalk Line Painting series. These early works are constructed using raw pigment snapped onto the canvas in single lines, layering to form dimensional shapes. This series reflects techniques he has honed, reducing painting to its most elemental form.
In his most recent series, Eccentric Squares, Way returns to his exploration of the grid but introduces newer elements that highlight a dynamic and unconventional approach. These paintings, composed again with his distinctive lines, use intersecting colors to create bold, de-centered squares. The result is an immediate dichotomy between the flatness of the surface and the depth of colors and forms within the constructed grid. Way likens his colored lines to musical notes—a fundamental unit of sensory communication—through which he creates harmony, dissonance, and rhythm.
Unlike the rigid, centered grids of his predecessors, Way’s grids are eccentric and fluid, offering a fresh perspective on abstract painting within the downtown New York art scene of the 1960s and beyond. By decentralizing the linear and geometric forms canonized by artists like Piet Mondrian and Sol Lewitt, Way’s work challenges conventional expectations and invites viewers to reconsider the role of grids in abstract compositions. His paintings emerge as living, breathing elements that carry the weight of decades of artistic research and experimentation.
Then & Now: 1970–2024 opens on September 6th and is extended through November 2nd, 2024. The exhibition is held at Storage, located on the fourth floor of 52 Walker Street, Tribeca, NY. This exhibition reaffirms Storage's mission to honor the legacies of intergenerational artists like Jeff Way, whose work continues to inspire and challenge the boundaries of contemporary art.
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Opening Reception
6-8pm
Friday, September 6th, 2024
Storage, 52 Walker St, 4th Fl, New York, NY 10013Dieter Buchhart & Jeff Way In Conversation
5-7pm
Saturday, October 26th, 2024
Storage, 52 Walker St, 4th Fl, New York, NY 10013 -
Jeff Way (b. 1942) has lived and worked in the Tribeca neighborhood of New York City since 1969. After his arrival in New York, Way was featured in the Whitney Museum of American Art at their 1973 Biennial curated by Marcia Tucker, and again the following year in a solo exhibition. Since then, Way’s work has been included in various exhibitions at the Contemporary Arts Museum (Houston, TX), the New Museum of Contemporary Art (New York, NY), the Institute of Contemporary Art (Philadelphia, PA), as well as other museums and galleries. Way’s works have been added to the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum through a gift by Larry Aldrich, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Denver Art Museum, the New Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Cincinnati Art Museum.
Way began his Chalk Line Painting series in the late 1960s to explore the use of the grid through pigment and acrylic medium. These paintings are constructed using raw pigment snapped onto the canvas in single lines that layer together to form dimensional shapes. He returns to his use of the grid in his most recent series of paintings, Eccentric Squares. Composed again with his distinctive lines, Way uses intersecting color to create a sequence of bold, de-centered squares. The paintings present an immediate dichotomy between the flatness of the surface and the depth of colors and forms on the constructed grid.
Exhibition Press
Press Release (Cycle VI)
Jeff Way & Carolyn Oberst
September 27th - October 18th, 2023
Storage
52 Walker Street
4th Floor
Tribeca, New York 10013
Exhibition Checklist
Press Release (Cycle VI) marks the first year of Storage at 52 Walker Street in Tribeca. Archival and recent works by Jeff Way (b. 1942) and Carolyn Oberst (b. 1946) are curated to examine modalities of labor and transcendence within the historical canon of painting. The exhibition also explores 50+ years of camaraderie between Oberst and Way, who have cohabited in their Walker St loft since the 1970s, but have found disparate modes of artistic exploration.








Jeff Way & Carolyn Oberst
September 27th - October 18th, 2023
Storage
52 Walker Street
4th Floor
Tribeca, New York 10013
On this occasion, we celebrate the ambitious, communal, and build-it-yourself nature of the founding of Storage with Press Release (Cycle VI), a presentation by Jeff Way (b. 1942) and Carolyn Oberst (b. 1946), two Tribeca-based artists who share a similar ethos.
In Press Release (Cycle VI), archival and recent works by Jeff Way and Carolyn Oberst are curated to examine modalities of labor and transcendence within the historical canon of painting. The exhibition also explores 50+ years of camaraderie between Oberst and Way, who have cohabited in their Walker St loft since the 1970s, but have found disparate modes of artistic exploration. Similar in the practices of Oberst and Way are references to a blue-collar ideology of making, as they both experiment with the notion of the ‘frame’. Oberst restores discarded frames before painting in and on them, while Way utilizes the explosive gesture of a chalk line tool, often found in carpenters’ work boxes.
Press Release (Cycle VI) demonstrates Storage’s commitment to centering archival and contemporary works by intergenerational artists pushing the boundaries of artistic traditions. As we celebrate one year since our gallery's opening at 52 Walker St. in September 2022, Storage has held an ongoing, inaugural survey exhibition called Press Release with an organic rotation of artworks.
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Opening Reception
6-8pm
Friday, September 27thArtists Talk
6-8pm
Wednesday, October 11thTribeca-based artists Jeff Way (b. 1942) and Carolyn Oberst (b. 1946) led by Charlotte Meyer, Director of the Rema Hort Mann Foundation will be discussing the history of Downtown New York art scene 1960’s-2000’s. Notions of space making, economics, and intellectual movements would be explored as we celebrate our 1-Year Anniversary in Tribeca.
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Jeff Way (b. 1942) has lived and worked in the Tribeca neighborhood of New York City since 1969. After his arrival in New York, Way was featured in the Whitney Museum of American Art at their 1973 Biennial curated by Marcia Tucker, and again the following year in a solo exhibition. Since then, Way’s work has been included in various exhibitions at the Contemporary Arts Museum (Houston, TX), the New Museum of Contemporary Art (New York, NY), the Institute of Contemporary Art (Philadelphia, PA), as well as other museums and galleries. Way’s works have been added to the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum through a gift by Larry Aldrich, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Denver Art Museum, the New Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Cincinnati Art Museum.
Way began his Chalk Line Painting series in the late 1960s to explore the use of the grid through pigment and acrylic medium. These paintings are constructed using raw pigment snapped onto the canvas in single lines that layer together to form dimensional shapes. He returns to his use of the grid in his most recent series of paintings, Eccentric Squares. Composed again with his distinctive lines, Way uses intersecting color to create a sequence of bold, de-centered squares. The paintings present an immediate dichotomy between the flatness of the surface and the depth of colors and forms on the constructed grid.
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Carolyn Oberst (b. 1946) is a visual artist whose colorful work is influenced by the different, yet interconnected worlds around her. Whether it is the current, contemporary world, the world she creates for herself in her studio, or her internal world of dreams, intuitions, and memory, these aspects infuse her work. Oberst is an interdisciplinary artist, working across painting, drawing, mixed media, wood relief, and video animation. Currently, Oberst’s focus has returned to the directness of oil paint on canvas. Drawing is an important part of her process, as it provides the foundation from which her image making always begins.
Press Release (Cycle III)
Angela Dufresne, Baxter Koziol, Adam Lupton, Pol Morton, Brandon Morris, Carolyn Oberst, Louisa Owen, & Jeff Way
April 21st - June 22nd, 2023
Storage
52 Walker Street
4th Floor
Tribeca, New York 10013
Exhibition Checklist
Press Release (Cycle III) exists as an ongoing essay where works are used to reposition and examine notions of pressure & release, thereby challenging perceptions of the body and space through painting, sculpture & performance.
Some works presented explore historically normative notions of physical space. Other works play on aspects of queer space through edits on museological tropes. The artists investigate the beauty, fragility, and resilience of the body, considering the space within and around it. They make mundane spaces alienating by accommodating the body's architecture and they rework exterior space, extending the traditions of the trompe-l'œil garden and abstracting our surrounding landscape within the gallery.




Angela Dufresne, Baxter Koziol, Adam Lupton, Pol Morton, Brandon Morris, Carolyn Oberst, Louisa Owen, & Jeff Way
April 21st - June 22nd, 2023
Storage
52 Walker Street
4th Floor
Tribeca, New York 10013
Storage’s inaugural survey exhibition began in September 2022 & continues with Press Release (Cycle III), a reception for an incoming group of artists: Angela Dufresne, Baxter Koziol, Adam Lupton, Pol Morton, Brandon Morris, Carolyn Oberst, Louisa Owen, & Jeff Way. The exhibition exists as an ongoing essay where works are used to reposition and examine notions of pressure & release. For Press Release (Cycle III), we challenge perceptions of the body and space through painting, sculpture & performance.
Some works presented explore historically normative notions of physical space. Other works play on aspects of queer space through edits on museological tropes. The artists investigate the beauty, fragility, and resilience of the body, considering the space within and around it. They make mundane spaces alienating by accommodating the body's architecture and they rework exterior space, extending the traditions of the trompe-l'œil garden and abstracting our surrounding landscape within the gallery.
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Opening Reception
6-8pm
Friday, April 21st
Press Release (Cycle II)
Angela Dufresne, Adam Lupton, Baxter Koziol, Eli Ping, Jeff Way, Louisa Owen, Kim Hoeckele, Morgan Canavan, & Brandon Morris
February 3rd - April 19th, 2023
Storage
52 Walker Street
4th Floor
Tribeca, New York 10013
Exhibition Checklist
In Press Release (Cycle II), the absence of the body is central in activating the performativity of an artwork. Physical qualities of the works may allude to the precarious circumstance of creating a body using obscure language. This language is one that allows emotions to exist within the realm of non-empirical standards, pushing the limit of existence.












Angela Dufresne, Adam Lupton, Baxter Koziol, Eli Ping, Jeff Way, Louisa Owen, Kim Hoeckele, Morgan Canavan, & Brandon Morris
February 3rd - April 19th, 2023
Storage
52 Walker Street
4th Floor
Tribeca, New York 10013
Storage’s inaugural survey exhibition began in September 2022 & continues with a reception for a new group of artists Angela Dufresne, Adam Lupton, Baxter Koziol, Eli Ping, Jeff Way, Louisa Owen, Kim Hoeckele, Morgan Canavan, and Brandon Morris.
The rotational group exhibition unfolds over time, adding works through a curated model. This iteration of the exhibition presents explorations of the body in protest, violence, loving acts, & camaraderie–all the while considering programming that explores notions of power & the suppression of words.
The absence of the body is central in activating the performativity of the works, giving attention to tangible reverberations of the artists’ practices. In the exhibition, physical qualities of the works may allude to the precarious circumstance of creating a body using obscure language. This language is one that allows emotions to exist within the realm of non-empirical standards, pushing the limit of existence.
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Opening Reception
6-8pm
Friday, February 3rd