• Gallery Hours

  • Thursday, Friday and Saturdays 12 - 5pm
    Opening Receptions 5-9pm every First Friday of the month!
    Additional viewing by appointment available.

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  • We are located within The Soda Plant on the southern side lot behind Thirty Odd Gift Shop. Our main entrance is next to our Space Man mural with an additional entrance inside the main building.

    The SPACE Gallery
    266 Pine Street Suite 105
    Burlington, VT 05401

    Email: spacegalleryvt@gmail.com
    Phone: 802-338-1162

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Member Spotlights in The ‘Outer Space Gallery’

Within the southern Soda Plant corridors dwells our newly dubbed ‘Outer Space Gallery’ where we will be hosting a rotational exhibition of our Member Artists works. These will be 2-3 month curations showcasing a larger body of work by select artists, in between main gallery exhibitions that sometimes flow into the hall spaces. We hope you enjoy seeing a larger breath of work by some of our talented Artist Members!

The Soda Plant is in the heart of the arts district at 266 Pine St. Burlington, VT. Open to the public 7 days a week typically 8am-8pm (hours vary depending on which businesses are open). You can learn more about the creative hub that is The Soda Plant HERE.

June/July Spotlight welcomes painter Alan Zola Shulman and astro photographer Jon Gazzillo. Read more about their process and body of work below!

Portraits of Zinkov: by S.P.A.C.E. Gallery Artist Member Alan Zola Shulman

I grew up in New York City, the son of a father born in Ukraine; the grandson of four grandparents from Ukraine, three of whom grew up in Zinkov. My parents firmly believed in the importance of European culture, specifically classical music and fine art. They exposed my sister and me, almost every weekend, to a major NYC art museum. Gallery after gallery, we all walked by the work of the masters from the Renaissance to those breaking new ground, defying old conventions. Those latter artists excited me. I fell in love with Van Gogh’s swirls of land and sky, Picasso’s expressive and “misplaced” eyes, De Chirico’s enigmatic city squares,
Rousseau’s primitive animals and plants, Dali’s dreamscapes, Matisse’s unpredictable palette, Magritte’s avant-garde humor, and Kandinsky’s energetic splashes of multi-colored solids and lines: I borrowed many of these influences in early home and school artwork. 
Despite picking a time-consuming career as an architect, I found mentors to spur my art interests at Illinois Institute of Technology’s School of Architecture in Nelli Bar and Paul Wieghardt, Bauhaus refugees, and with Louis Johnson, a prominent Chicago architect. They trained us with ten-second action sketching to capture motion, with hand-eye coordination tasks to sync eye and hand, and through visual training in color, texture, and composition. Again, in the mid-1980s, as a self-employed architect, I found time for painting inspiration in workshops of Peter London (“No More Secondhand Art”) and with Canadian National Gallery painter Seymour Segal. Both men encouraged us to pursue our own means of expression, to follow our unique paths spurred by challenging exercises we hadn’t ever experienced. 
During this same period, my mother handed me the “Zinkover Memorial Book” which her father had helped put together. Though I initially set the book aside, by the early 1990s my children had moved on with their lives, and I found myself seeking an understanding of my ancestors in much the same way that New Englanders do when researching their colonial forbearers. At my Bar Mitzvah, I’d met two aunts who had left Zinkov and emigrated to Argentina. Beyond that encounter, I had ignored my family’s past for most of my life. Now, I was face to face with it in that Zinkov memorial book.
Fascinated by the images it held, I began painting portraits of the people shown in these tiny black and white photos, including one of my great-grandfather, his daughter Eeteh with her husband, and their two girls. Brandeis emeritus professor Murray Sachs helped me by translating the book’s Yiddish and Hebrew text. Professor Robert Bernheim of University of Maine/Augusta provided the detailed history of the Nazis invasion of Zinkov: They forced its Jews into a ghetto, starved them, and finally rounded them up for slaughter and burial in mass graves.
Two artist residencies, one in Patzcuaro, Mexico (2001), the other at Georgia’s Hambidge Center for the Arts and Sciences (2002), were crucial to the completion of these approximately eighty portraits. Since retiring from architecture and a second career as a special educator, I’ve exhibited “Portraits of Zinkov” at Holocaust Museums, in schools, synagogues, and community gatherings. While I continue to create paintings with many other themes, “Portraits of Zinkov” has continued the remembrance of Holocaust victims my grandfather helped initiate. I consider it my most important work.

Alan’s Artist Statement:
I paint portraits, towns, cities, land/sea/cloudscapes, experience and mood abstracts, art for children, places visited and/or imagined, and historical, political, environmental or social/emotional subjects. I usually start by sketching with ink some observed reality; then modify it when I move to paint on canvas. Acrylic paint on canvas is my standard medium: Acrylics set up, mix, apply, and manipulate easily; important features, as my paintings often evolve, and even change significantly, as I work. Style variations convey my intentions via bright and/or contrasting color, a variety of brush strokes, perspective and proportion manipulation, and with memory and dream often modifying that reality. In painting my experience and its expressive possibilities, or in relating a narrative, I hope to offer the viewer an opportunity to consider his/her own journey and experiences for reflection.

You can learn more about Alan’s work on his WEBSITE

The S.P.A.C.E. Gallery Featured Member Artist: Jon Gazzillo

Jon’s Artist Statement:
Astrophotography is the art of photographing the night sky. I grew up alongside the Hubble space telescope and have always been fascinated with its images of deep space objects. About three years ago, I found out that deep space astrophotography was not only possible for amateurs but could also be done right in my backyard. Effectively capturing distant and faint deep space objects requires specialized equipment and long exposure times. 
The main components of a deep space astrophotography rig are the telescope, camera and tracking mount. The mount is the most important piece of equipment and is responsible for keeping the telescope pointed at the same object in the sky. This ensures that everything in frame remains still while taking a long exposure therefore negating any motion blur in the images. I typically image the same object for several nights, collecting as much light as possible. For dimmer objects, I use five minute exposures and take as many of those as possible throughout the night. Those exposures are then stacked together in software to combine all the data into one image file. That file is then carefully processed to create a final image.”

You can follow along with Jon’s work on instagram @vermont_astro

For purchase inquiries please contact spacegalleryvt@gmail.com

(NOW CLOSED)CALL FOR ART: ‘All The Feels’ at The S.P.A.C.E. Gallery 2025

The S.P.A.C.E. Gallery is seeking art that evokes deep emotion for our curated group exhibition titled “All the Feels”. Think love and loss, confidence and fear, humor, isolation, longing and belonging… the light and dark sides of human existence. Political, war, and climate crisis. Communities coming together or falling apart. Letting go, letting in. All artwork contains an emotional element whether it’s visually received by the viewer or it was released by the artist during creation. Submitted artwork that digs deeper in these realms will stand out during our juried process. 

Please submit artwork by filling out this form by MIDNIGHT Sunday January 26th: CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Deadline for Submissions: Sunday January 26th by MIDNIGHT.
Acceptance email:
Wed. January 29th 6pm. You will also be notified if your work was not chosen.
IF accepted, drop off dates will be:

Friday Jan 31st 12-5pm
Sat Feb 1st 12-6pm
Sun. Feb 2nd 12-3pm (FINAL DROP DATE) 

All mediums, artistic styles, ages, and skill levels are encouraged to apply to this free call. Entry fee if work is accepted is $20 per artist ($15 for current S.P.A.C.E. Gallery Members). Curious to become a member? Learn more HERE.

Details: This is a juried/curated show. You will be notified if 1 or more of your pieces make it into the exhibition. You will also be notified should your work not be selected for this show. All work will need to be finished (NOT WET!) and ready to hang with hardware securely on the wall or safely on a pedestal. No installing of hardware or framing allowed on site. All work chosen must include the artist name, title of work and email on the back of the piece for gallery purposes.

Fee: Free to submit up to 6 works. If any of your works are selected, there is an entry fee of $20 per artist, or $15 for current member artists. Payment is due upon drop off in the form of cash or venmo.

Exhibition Duration: February 7th – March 21st, 2025
Opening Reception: “First Friday” February 7th from 5-9pm and a bonus ‘First Friday’ evening on March 7th. 

Location: The S.P.A.C.E. Gallery, 266 Pine Street, in The Soda Plant in Burlington, Vermont

Please email spacegalleryvt@gmail.com with any questions. We thank you for taking the time to apply and look forward to seeing your work! 

*Image artwork by Nikki Laxar, collage on acrylic painting.

The S.P.A.C.E. Gallery: 2024 Annual Small & Large Works Exhibition Opening November 1st!

The S.P.A.C.E. Gallery is honored to celebrate the holiday shopping season by showcasing fun art in the perfect gift giving sizes! All artwork is sized under 12 inches and over 24″. Shop small and support local with works created by 130 local artists! All ready to wrap and gift to your favorite art lover or gift to yourself! Varying prices starting at $25 and up to suit all budgets.

Please join us for our Opening Reception: Friday, November 1st from 5-9pm 
Come through for light beverages and snacks. Meet the artists and other awesome people! Tell your friends. We hope to see you there!

Exhibition Duration: November 1, 2024 – January 3rd, 2024

NEW! Open hours: Thursday, Friday, Saturday 12-5pm and now Sundays from 10-3pm.
(other optional showings by appointment, reach out!)

The S.P.A.C.E. Gallery
266 Pine Street, Suite 105
Burlington, VT 05401
Right behind Thirty Odd Gift Shop. Look for our astronaut mural!
spacegalleryvt@gmail.com

Artwork in photo: Cynthia Cagle, Zarabeth Duell, Kristen Donegan, Kristin Richland, Jane Ann Kantor, Sean Crossett, Justin Atherton, Kristin McCole

Enjoy these images from last year’s Small Works Exhibition!

Call for Art : ‘All the Feels’ NOW CLOSED

Deadline for Entry: Tuesday, January 23rd, 2024 at noon (NOW CLOSED)

Art is a display of emotion; it’s a showcase of feelings brought out by the artist for it to have a physical manifestation. 

The S.P.A.C.E. Gallery is seeking art that does just that! For this curated exhibition, we encourage artists to submit works that evoke many realms of emotions. Love and loss, confidence and fear, integrity, humor, isolation, longing and belonging… the light and dark sides of human existence.

All mediums, artistic styles, ages, and skill levels are encouraged to apply to this free call. Entry fee if work is accepted is $10-15 per artist.

Please fill out this form by January 23rd: CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Details: This is a juried and curated show. You will be notified if 1 or more of your pieces make the exhibition. You will also be notified should your work not be selected for this show. Free to submit up to 5 works. If any of your works are selected, there is an entry fee of $15 per artist, or $10 for member artists. Payment is due upon drop off in the form of cash or check. All work will need to be ready to hang securely on the wall or safely on a pedestal. All work chosen must include the artist name, title of the work and an email on the back of the piece.  

*Email notifications sent on Thursday, January 25th by 8pm. Note that work will need to be ready for drop off the following four days if selected for the show. You will receive a notification should work not be selected as well. 

Exhibition Duration: February 2 – February 24, 2024
Opening Reception: “First Friday” February 2 from 5-9pm

Location: The S.P.A.C.E. Gallery, 266 Pine Street, in The Soda Plant in Burlington, Vermont

Artwork titled “Self’ by Will C. @wheelywillie

‘All the Feels’ Open Fridays & Saturdays at Space Gallery!

All the Feels’ Opening Receptions on Friday, February 18 & First Friday Art Walk March 4 from 5 – 8pm

Exhibition Duration: February 18 – March 26, 2022

‘All the Feels’ asked artists to submit work that exudes emotion; whether felt during the creation process, in the content of the piece, or when the viewer takes in some of that brooding or underlying excitement. It’s been a tough couple of years and we wanted to see how that is processed through artwork. Creation is cathartic, and can be gorgeous and/or disturbing. We all want to feel connected and artwork bridges many paths. The response was enormous, with a showing by 60 artists from Vermont and New Hampshire, exhibiting over 100 works! The pieces are incredibly diverse, with affordable price points for everyone. Support the arts and enjoy!