Current Exhibitions

Trend Coffee & Tea House

Selected works from the Brooklyn archive are currently on display at Trend Coffee & Tea House in Montclair, New Jersey.

The exhibition features photographs created throughout Brooklyn during the late 1980s and early 1990s, documenting disappearing architecture, industrial spaces, streets, monuments, cemeteries, and urban transformation.

Originally preserved as slides for more than three decades, the archive is now being digitized, exhibited, and shared publicly once again.

SORRFS

SWASLU's
OYSTER RIVER ROAD
FARM STORE

Brooklyn Postcards is a collection of images photographed throughout Brooklyn during the late 1980s and early 1990s. Presented as a series of 20 postcard-sized works, the exhibit captures everyday streets, storefronts, architecture, and changing neighborhoods during a period of transition and memory.

Currently installed in a creative space in Maine, the series reflects themes of urban history, atmosphere, disappearance, and the emotional texture of place. The postcard format itself echoes the idea of preserving moments and fragments of a city that continues to evolve over time.

SORRFS --- Swaslu's Oyster River Road Farm Store, Thomaston, Maine

Highlighted Local

Clifton, NJ Shop

This postcard image of the Pratt Institute flagpole in Brooklyn is part of the Brooklyn Postcards series, photographed during the late 1980s and early 1990s.

The piece is currently displayed locally by a shop owner with a personal connection to Pratt, creating another layer of shared history and memory connected to the image itself.

The photograph reflects the atmosphere and architectural character of Brooklyn during that era, while also serving as a quiet tribute to one of the borough’s longstanding creative institutions.

Past Exhibitions

5th Avenue Street Fair, Brooklyn, NY

Brooklyn Postcards was exhibited at the 5th Avenue Street Fair in Brooklyn alongside Eric Richmond, featuring a collection of postcard-sized photographic works captured throughout Brooklyn during the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Displayed in the neighborhood where many of the images were originally created, the exhibit invited viewers to reconnect with the streets, architecture, storefronts, and atmosphere of a changing Brooklyn.

The series reflects themes of memory, urban transformation, and the preservation of everyday moments through photography.