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QUEEN ROSE ART HOUSE EXPERIMENTAL FILM & VIDEO WORKSHOP


QUEEN ROSE ART HOUSE EXPERIMENTAL FILM & VIDEO WORKSHOP


Saturdays, March 28 — April 25, 2026
11:00 AM–2:00 PM
Queen Rose Art House,
843 N Birmingham Pl, Tulsa, OK


Queen Rose Art House presents an Experimental Film and Video Workshop led by artist Kalup Linzy. This multi-week workshop invites participants to explore storytelling through moving image while working collaboratively to create a collective film project.

Drawing inspiration from Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey, participants will develop an “exquisite corpse” film—a collaborative storytelling process in which each contributor creates a segment that builds on the previous one. The final work will be presented in a Fall exhibition at Queen Rose Art House.

The workshop is designed for artists, filmmakers, and curious creatives interested in experimentation, narrative, and collaborative production.


Workshop Dates
Saturdays, March 28 – April 25
11:00 AM – 2:00 PM

Location
Queen Rose Art House

Capacity
Limited to 12 participants
First come, first served.

Special Note
The March 28 session will begin with a one-hour introductory meeting. Participants are then invited to stay for the Closing Reception and Coffee Ceremony celebrating the exhibition Brewing Dialogue by Eyakem Gulilat and Evan Clayburg (12–3 PM).

Accessibility
The venue is wheelchair accessible. Additional accessibility requests will be supported to the best of our ability.

Workshop Leader
Kalup Linzy

Questions? Email kaluplinzystudio@gmail.com


ABOUT QUEEN ROSE ART HOUSE

Founded in 2021 by interdisciplinary artist Kalup Linzy, the Queen Rose Art House is a social, but critical art space that engages with our local, national, and international art communities. Through hosting events like gatherings, performances, exhibitions, screenings, symposiums, and short-term artist residencies, the project is intended to inspire and create a safe space for artists to dwell.

ABOUT WORKSHOP LEADER

Kalup Linzy is a video and performance artist born in Clermont, Florida and raised in Stuckey, Florida. Linzy received his MFA from the University of South Florida in 2003. He also attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. Linzy has been the recipient of numerous awards including a grant from the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation, the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation fellowship, Creative Capital Foundation grant, a Jerome Foundation Fellowship, an Art Matters Grant, The Headlands Center for the Arts Alumni Awards Residency, a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in Film and Video and a BAU Institute Travel Grant.

Linzy's best-known work is a series of politically charged videos that satirize the conventions of the television soap opera. His work has been included in exhibitions Frequency at the Studio Museum in Harlem, Prospect.1 New Orleans, 30 Americans, Rubell Family Collection, MoMA PS1 Greater New York, At Home/Not At Home: Works from the Collection of Martin and Rebecca Eisenberg, Hessel Museum of Art, Bard College. His work is in the public collections at The Studio Museum in Harlem, Whitney Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Birmingham Museum of Art, The Museum of Old and New Art in Tasmania, and the Memorial Art Gallery, University of Rochester.

He has lectured at universities and colleges across the country including New York University and Harvard University.[7]

Linzy is represented by the David Castillo in Miami, Florida and The Breeder Gallery in Athens, Greece. He serves on the board of the Florida Museum of Photographic Arts in Tampa. 

In 2021, he founded the Queen Rose Art House in Tulsa.

He is a Tulsa Artist Fellowship Alumni-in-Residence.