Storefront for Art and Architecture
Nonprofit organization presenting work at the intersection of art and architecture since 1982.

Join us in Brooklyn for a public reading on the occasion of Alex Strada’s “Public Address” on Monday, June 8, from 6–7:30 pm. This program takes place inside the project’s main installation at Columbus Park, and is in partnership with the Brooklyn Public Library.
Guest readers are artist Pablo Helguera, community organizer and educator Rob Robinson, Arash Diba of @vocalnewyork, advocate Maria Ponce Sevilla, author Samuel Stein, scholar Alexandra Délano Alonso, Eva Raison, Director of Brooklyn Public Library's Outreach Services, and architect Nandini Bagchee. The readings will be accompanied by an artist-led walkthrough of the installation.
The artworks in Public Address—handwritten and drawn accounts printed as aluminum city street signs—were created by people living and working within New York City's shelter system through log writing workshops. Written to be encountered and responded to, these anonymous entries are addressed to the NYC public, inviting reflection and collective attention.
Tap the link in our bio to register.

Tuesday, May 26, from 6:30–8 pm, we will convene our next Open Session.
Join us as Urbanist and researcher Garine Boghossian presents An Armenian Atlas / Աշխարհացոյց, an ongoing counter-mapping project that centers houshamadyans, memory books produced by Armenian Genocide survivors across diasporic centers, from Aleppo to Los Angeles. She will share a video work titled “These Ghostly Places We Call Home” as a part of the session.
Boghossian will also be joined in conversation by Lara Fresko Madra, Assistant Professor and Luma Fellow at Bard College’s Center for Curatorial Studies.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP.
1–4. Video stills from “These Ghostly Places We Call Home”

Tuesday, May 26, from 6:30–8 pm, we will convene our next Open Session.
Join us as Urbanist and researcher Garine Boghossian presents An Armenian Atlas / Աշխարհացոյց, an ongoing counter-mapping project that centers houshamadyans, memory books produced by Armenian Genocide survivors across diasporic centers, from Aleppo to Los Angeles. She will share a video work titled “These Ghostly Places We Call Home” as a part of the session.
Boghossian will also be joined in conversation by Lara Fresko Madra, Assistant Professor and Luma Fellow at Bard College’s Center for Curatorial Studies.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP.
1–4. Video stills from “These Ghostly Places We Call Home”

Tuesday, May 26, from 6:30–8 pm, we will convene our next Open Session.
Join us as Urbanist and researcher Garine Boghossian presents An Armenian Atlas / Աշխարհացոյց, an ongoing counter-mapping project that centers houshamadyans, memory books produced by Armenian Genocide survivors across diasporic centers, from Aleppo to Los Angeles. She will share a video work titled “These Ghostly Places We Call Home” as a part of the session.
Boghossian will also be joined in conversation by Lara Fresko Madra, Assistant Professor and Luma Fellow at Bard College’s Center for Curatorial Studies.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP.
1–4. Video stills from “These Ghostly Places We Call Home”

Tuesday, May 26, from 6:30–8 pm, we will convene our next Open Session.
Join us as Urbanist and researcher Garine Boghossian presents An Armenian Atlas / Աշխարհացոյց, an ongoing counter-mapping project that centers houshamadyans, memory books produced by Armenian Genocide survivors across diasporic centers, from Aleppo to Los Angeles. She will share a video work titled “These Ghostly Places We Call Home” as a part of the session.
Boghossian will also be joined in conversation by Lara Fresko Madra, Assistant Professor and Luma Fellow at Bard College’s Center for Curatorial Studies.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP.
1–4. Video stills from “These Ghostly Places We Call Home”

☀️It’s perfect weather for a visit to Alex Strada’s installation in Brooklyn’s Columbus Park, which is on view through the summer.
Whether you’re getting off the subway, are on a lunch break, reside in the area or are just passing through, stop and read notes, drawings, and other forms of testimony by those impacted by the city’s ongoing homelessness crisis. By embedding testimony within the visual and spatial codes of the city, the project amplifies voices too often excluded from public discourse while foregrounding ways in which civic infrastructures can be reimagined as platforms for listening.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more.
Photos courtesy of the artist.

☀️It’s perfect weather for a visit to Alex Strada’s installation in Brooklyn’s Columbus Park, which is on view through the summer.
Whether you’re getting off the subway, are on a lunch break, reside in the area or are just passing through, stop and read notes, drawings, and other forms of testimony by those impacted by the city’s ongoing homelessness crisis. By embedding testimony within the visual and spatial codes of the city, the project amplifies voices too often excluded from public discourse while foregrounding ways in which civic infrastructures can be reimagined as platforms for listening.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more.
Photos courtesy of the artist.

☀️It’s perfect weather for a visit to Alex Strada’s installation in Brooklyn’s Columbus Park, which is on view through the summer.
Whether you’re getting off the subway, are on a lunch break, reside in the area or are just passing through, stop and read notes, drawings, and other forms of testimony by those impacted by the city’s ongoing homelessness crisis. By embedding testimony within the visual and spatial codes of the city, the project amplifies voices too often excluded from public discourse while foregrounding ways in which civic infrastructures can be reimagined as platforms for listening.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more.
Photos courtesy of the artist.
OPEN CALL for artists, architects, researchers, filmmakers, scholars, and multidisciplinary practitioners whose work engages with our current research theme of Homelands, focusing on the political dimensions of memory.
Submit a research proposal to be presented at our 2027 Homelands Symposium and for print publication in our Homelands Reader by June 11.
The selected proposal will receive a $5,000 artist fee as well as curatorial and editorial assistance from Storefront. This project includes an anonymized review process by a jury of curators, scholars, and leading cultural practitioners.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and submit. The application will close June 11 at 11:59 pm EDT.
Design by @estudioherrera

To celebrate the arrival of "Black Fire!" by @thandiloewenson, we were recently joined by the artist and a number of invited practitioners and community participants for two evenings of listening and response.
We witnessed performances by Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu, heard generous contributions from the audience during the Open Mic, and learned about different lineages of Zimbabwean music and extraterrestrial soundscapes from Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi.
Thank you for joining us, and swipe in case you missed it!
“Black Fire!” will be on view every Wednesday–Saturday from 12–6 pm through June 27. Tap the link in our bio to learn more.
Photos by PJ Rountree.

To celebrate the arrival of "Black Fire!" by @thandiloewenson, we were recently joined by the artist and a number of invited practitioners and community participants for two evenings of listening and response.
We witnessed performances by Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu, heard generous contributions from the audience during the Open Mic, and learned about different lineages of Zimbabwean music and extraterrestrial soundscapes from Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi.
Thank you for joining us, and swipe in case you missed it!
“Black Fire!” will be on view every Wednesday–Saturday from 12–6 pm through June 27. Tap the link in our bio to learn more.
Photos by PJ Rountree.

To celebrate the arrival of "Black Fire!" by @thandiloewenson, we were recently joined by the artist and a number of invited practitioners and community participants for two evenings of listening and response.
We witnessed performances by Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu, heard generous contributions from the audience during the Open Mic, and learned about different lineages of Zimbabwean music and extraterrestrial soundscapes from Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi.
Thank you for joining us, and swipe in case you missed it!
“Black Fire!” will be on view every Wednesday–Saturday from 12–6 pm through June 27. Tap the link in our bio to learn more.
Photos by PJ Rountree.

To celebrate the arrival of "Black Fire!" by @thandiloewenson, we were recently joined by the artist and a number of invited practitioners and community participants for two evenings of listening and response.
We witnessed performances by Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu, heard generous contributions from the audience during the Open Mic, and learned about different lineages of Zimbabwean music and extraterrestrial soundscapes from Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi.
Thank you for joining us, and swipe in case you missed it!
“Black Fire!” will be on view every Wednesday–Saturday from 12–6 pm through June 27. Tap the link in our bio to learn more.
Photos by PJ Rountree.

To celebrate the arrival of "Black Fire!" by @thandiloewenson, we were recently joined by the artist and a number of invited practitioners and community participants for two evenings of listening and response.
We witnessed performances by Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu, heard generous contributions from the audience during the Open Mic, and learned about different lineages of Zimbabwean music and extraterrestrial soundscapes from Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi.
Thank you for joining us, and swipe in case you missed it!
“Black Fire!” will be on view every Wednesday–Saturday from 12–6 pm through June 27. Tap the link in our bio to learn more.
Photos by PJ Rountree.

To celebrate the arrival of "Black Fire!" by @thandiloewenson, we were recently joined by the artist and a number of invited practitioners and community participants for two evenings of listening and response.
We witnessed performances by Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu, heard generous contributions from the audience during the Open Mic, and learned about different lineages of Zimbabwean music and extraterrestrial soundscapes from Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi.
Thank you for joining us, and swipe in case you missed it!
“Black Fire!” will be on view every Wednesday–Saturday from 12–6 pm through June 27. Tap the link in our bio to learn more.
Photos by PJ Rountree.

To celebrate the arrival of "Black Fire!" by @thandiloewenson, we were recently joined by the artist and a number of invited practitioners and community participants for two evenings of listening and response.
We witnessed performances by Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu, heard generous contributions from the audience during the Open Mic, and learned about different lineages of Zimbabwean music and extraterrestrial soundscapes from Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi.
Thank you for joining us, and swipe in case you missed it!
“Black Fire!” will be on view every Wednesday–Saturday from 12–6 pm through June 27. Tap the link in our bio to learn more.
Photos by PJ Rountree.

To celebrate the arrival of "Black Fire!" by @thandiloewenson, we were recently joined by the artist and a number of invited practitioners and community participants for two evenings of listening and response.
We witnessed performances by Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu, heard generous contributions from the audience during the Open Mic, and learned about different lineages of Zimbabwean music and extraterrestrial soundscapes from Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi.
Thank you for joining us, and swipe in case you missed it!
“Black Fire!” will be on view every Wednesday–Saturday from 12–6 pm through June 27. Tap the link in our bio to learn more.
Photos by PJ Rountree.

To celebrate the arrival of "Black Fire!" by @thandiloewenson, we were recently joined by the artist and a number of invited practitioners and community participants for two evenings of listening and response.
We witnessed performances by Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu, heard generous contributions from the audience during the Open Mic, and learned about different lineages of Zimbabwean music and extraterrestrial soundscapes from Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi.
Thank you for joining us, and swipe in case you missed it!
“Black Fire!” will be on view every Wednesday–Saturday from 12–6 pm through June 27. Tap the link in our bio to learn more.
Photos by PJ Rountree.

To celebrate the arrival of "Black Fire!" by @thandiloewenson, we were recently joined by the artist and a number of invited practitioners and community participants for two evenings of listening and response.
We witnessed performances by Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu, heard generous contributions from the audience during the Open Mic, and learned about different lineages of Zimbabwean music and extraterrestrial soundscapes from Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi.
Thank you for joining us, and swipe in case you missed it!
“Black Fire!” will be on view every Wednesday–Saturday from 12–6 pm through June 27. Tap the link in our bio to learn more.
Photos by PJ Rountree.

For those currently in Venice for the Biennale, visit “Hard Teeth” the just-opened Kosovo Pavilion curated by @josesparza, our Executive Director and Chief Curator!
Kosovar artist @brilant.milazimi composes a painting installation in the newly re-opened Chiesa di Santa Maria del Pianto, with an architectural structure designed by @lanzaatelier. Across the curved horizon, Milazimi shows long lines of sinuous and ghostly figures winding through the landscape. These works point Kosovo’s longstanding concerns of displacement, stagnation, and autonomy.
Photo: Majlinda Hoxha. Courtesy of the Artist and the Pavilion of the Republic of Kosovo at the 61st Venice Biennale.

For those currently in Venice for the Biennale, visit “Hard Teeth” the just-opened Kosovo Pavilion curated by @josesparza, our Executive Director and Chief Curator!
Kosovar artist @brilant.milazimi composes a painting installation in the newly re-opened Chiesa di Santa Maria del Pianto, with an architectural structure designed by @lanzaatelier. Across the curved horizon, Milazimi shows long lines of sinuous and ghostly figures winding through the landscape. These works point Kosovo’s longstanding concerns of displacement, stagnation, and autonomy.
Photo: Majlinda Hoxha. Courtesy of the Artist and the Pavilion of the Republic of Kosovo at the 61st Venice Biennale.

Tuesday, May 26, at 6:30 pm, urbanist and researcher Garine Boghossian presents “An Armenian Atlas / Աշխարհացոյց” an ongoing counter-mapping project that centers houshamadyans, memory books produced by Armenian Genocide survivors across diasporic centers, from Aleppo to Los Angeles.
Houshamadyans often include mental maps drawn from memory and lived spatial knowledge of the homelands from which Armenians and other minoritized communities were ethnically cleansed. Boghossian, herself a third-generation survivor, overlays these mental maps onto contemporary satellite imagery, alongside personal and archival photography. Through this work, she documents Indigenous dispossession, challenges the systematic erasure central to ongoing state-led genocide denial, and recovers lost spatial histories that gesture toward reparative futures.
Following the presentation, Boghossian will be joined in conversation by Lara Fresko Madra, Assistant Professor and Luma Fellow at Bard College’s Center for Curatorial Studies.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP.

Join us tomorrow, April 30, from 6–8 pm for a performance and open mic night. Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to RSVP.

Join us tomorrow, April 30, from 6–8 pm for a performance and open mic night. Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to RSVP.

Join us tomorrow, April 28 from 6:30–8 pm for a Listening Session. Inside the new exhibition “Black Fire!,” we will explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. Each host brings distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
We are joined by scholar of African Self-Liberation Mhoze Chikowero, Grammy-nominated creator and writer, Shana L. Redmond, scholar of African American and Africana Studies, Zoé Samudzi, and Thandi Loewenson, whose exhibition creates space for the session.
This event is free and open to the public, but RSVP is strongly encouraged. Sign up at the link in our bio. 🔗
Design: @estudioherrera

Join us tomorrow, April 28 from 6:30–8 pm for a Listening Session. Inside the new exhibition “Black Fire!,” we will explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. Each host brings distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
We are joined by scholar of African Self-Liberation Mhoze Chikowero, Grammy-nominated creator and writer, Shana L. Redmond, scholar of African American and Africana Studies, Zoé Samudzi, and Thandi Loewenson, whose exhibition creates space for the session.
This event is free and open to the public, but RSVP is strongly encouraged. Sign up at the link in our bio. 🔗
Design: @estudioherrera

Join us tomorrow, April 28 from 6:30–8 pm for a Listening Session. Inside the new exhibition “Black Fire!,” we will explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. Each host brings distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
We are joined by scholar of African Self-Liberation Mhoze Chikowero, Grammy-nominated creator and writer, Shana L. Redmond, scholar of African American and Africana Studies, Zoé Samudzi, and Thandi Loewenson, whose exhibition creates space for the session.
This event is free and open to the public, but RSVP is strongly encouraged. Sign up at the link in our bio. 🔗
Design: @estudioherrera

Join us tomorrow, April 28 from 6:30–8 pm for a Listening Session. Inside the new exhibition “Black Fire!,” we will explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. Each host brings distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
We are joined by scholar of African Self-Liberation Mhoze Chikowero, Grammy-nominated creator and writer, Shana L. Redmond, scholar of African American and Africana Studies, Zoé Samudzi, and Thandi Loewenson, whose exhibition creates space for the session.
This event is free and open to the public, but RSVP is strongly encouraged. Sign up at the link in our bio. 🔗
Design: @estudioherrera

“Black Fire!” by Thandi Loewenson is now open and on view through June 27!
Tomorrow, Children ages 4–12—and their guests—are invited to a Spooky Action Workshop at the gallery from 2–4 pm. Artist and educator Niceli Portugal (@niceliportugal) will guide this program, where participants will use scrap materials and simple assembly techniques to create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. After the workshop, participants will build short shadow performances exploring the boundaries between fiction and collective narratives.
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗
Photos: @cor.zo

“Black Fire!” by Thandi Loewenson is now open and on view through June 27!
Tomorrow, Children ages 4–12—and their guests—are invited to a Spooky Action Workshop at the gallery from 2–4 pm. Artist and educator Niceli Portugal (@niceliportugal) will guide this program, where participants will use scrap materials and simple assembly techniques to create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. After the workshop, participants will build short shadow performances exploring the boundaries between fiction and collective narratives.
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗
Photos: @cor.zo

“Black Fire!” by Thandi Loewenson is now open and on view through June 27!
Tomorrow, Children ages 4–12—and their guests—are invited to a Spooky Action Workshop at the gallery from 2–4 pm. Artist and educator Niceli Portugal (@niceliportugal) will guide this program, where participants will use scrap materials and simple assembly techniques to create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. After the workshop, participants will build short shadow performances exploring the boundaries between fiction and collective narratives.
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗
Photos: @cor.zo

“Black Fire!” by Thandi Loewenson is now open and on view through June 27!
Tomorrow, Children ages 4–12—and their guests—are invited to a Spooky Action Workshop at the gallery from 2–4 pm. Artist and educator Niceli Portugal (@niceliportugal) will guide this program, where participants will use scrap materials and simple assembly techniques to create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. After the workshop, participants will build short shadow performances exploring the boundaries between fiction and collective narratives.
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗
Photos: @cor.zo

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Thank you for joining us yesterday for the opening of “Black Fire!” by architect and researcher Thandi Loewenson, during which she gave a performance on alien encounters.
More events will activate aspects of the exhibition in the coming days:
This Saturday, from 2–4 pm join us for a child-focused workshop where participants will create their own shadow puppets and bring them to life through a light projection. (Limited capacity)
Next week:
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Mhoze Chikowero, Shana L. Redmond, and Zoé Samudzi (@babywasu) (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes. The evening will open with a guided introduction before giving way to a call-and-response exchange between the hosts, who each bring distinct practices rooted in sound, memory, and speculative world-making. Part conversation, part back-to-back set, the session invites audiences into an intimate encounter with the otherworldly frequencies embedded in archival and experimental sound.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio. Thandi Loewenson and Zimbabwean author Tinashe Mushakavanhu transform the space into a site of literary production with readings, live acts of making, and copies produced in the space for one night only. The evening will spill onto the street and culminate in an open mic night of otherworldly encounters.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗

Opening this Wednesday from 6–8 pm with a performance by @thandiloewenson, “Black Fire!” presents a critical yet atmospheric examination of UFO archives tied to Zimbabwe, reflecting on what these uncanny stories of extraterrestrial encounters reveal about notions of race and the alien.
A series of events accompany this new exhibition:
🛸 4/25, 2–4 pm: Spooky Action: Child-Focused Shadow Workshop
Drawing on Black Fire!’s connection to light, shadow, and imagination, join us for a child-focused, hands-on shadow puppet workshop.
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Zoé Samudzi (@z.t.samudzi) and Mhoze Chikowero (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗
Shown here: Cynthia Hind records, Archive for the Unexplained, Sweden

Opening this Wednesday from 6–8 pm with a performance by @thandiloewenson, “Black Fire!” presents a critical yet atmospheric examination of UFO archives tied to Zimbabwe, reflecting on what these uncanny stories of extraterrestrial encounters reveal about notions of race and the alien.
A series of events accompany this new exhibition:
🛸 4/25, 2–4 pm: Spooky Action: Child-Focused Shadow Workshop
Drawing on Black Fire!’s connection to light, shadow, and imagination, join us for a child-focused, hands-on shadow puppet workshop.
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Zoé Samudzi (@z.t.samudzi) and Mhoze Chikowero (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗
Shown here: Cynthia Hind records, Archive for the Unexplained, Sweden

Opening this Wednesday from 6–8 pm with a performance by @thandiloewenson, “Black Fire!” presents a critical yet atmospheric examination of UFO archives tied to Zimbabwe, reflecting on what these uncanny stories of extraterrestrial encounters reveal about notions of race and the alien.
A series of events accompany this new exhibition:
🛸 4/25, 2–4 pm: Spooky Action: Child-Focused Shadow Workshop
Drawing on Black Fire!’s connection to light, shadow, and imagination, join us for a child-focused, hands-on shadow puppet workshop.
🔥 4/28, 6:30–8 pm: Monstrous, Malodorous, Otherworldly: Listening Session with Zoé Samudzi (@z.t.samudzi) and Mhoze Chikowero (*Limited Capacity)
Explore sonic archives and radical alternate imaginaries through vinyl, audio recordings, and soundscapes.
🎤 4/30, 6–8 pm: Darkroom: Performance and Open Mic with Tinashe Mushakavanhu (@tinsmush)
Partake in a performance and live publishing event that reframes the gallery as a darkroom studio.
Tap the link in our bio to learn more and RSVP. 🔗
Shown here: Cynthia Hind records, Archive for the Unexplained, Sweden
Instagram Story Viewer to proste narzędzie, które pozwala na ciche oglądanie i zapisywanie historii Instagram, filmów, zdjęć lub IGTV. Dzięki tej usłudze możesz pobrać zawartość i cieszyć się nią offline, kiedy chcesz. Jeśli znajdziesz coś interesującego na Instagramie, co chcesz sprawdzić później, lub chcesz oglądać historie pozostając anonimowym, nasz Viewer jest idealny dla Ciebie. Anonstories oferuje doskonałe rozwiązanie do ukrywania swojej tożsamości. Instagram po raz pierwszy uruchomił funkcję historii w sierpniu 2023 roku, która szybko została zaadoptowana przez inne platformy ze względu na jej angażujący, czasowo ograniczony format. Historie pozwalają użytkownikom dzielić się szybkimi aktualizacjami, czy to zdjęciami, filmami, czy selfie, wzbogaconymi o tekst, emotikony lub filtry, i są widoczne tylko przez 24 godziny. Ten ograniczony czas sprawia, że historie cieszą się dużym zaangażowaniem w porównaniu do zwykłych postów. W dzisiejszym świecie historie to jeden z najpopularniejszych sposobów komunikacji na mediach społecznościowych. Jednak gdy oglądasz historię, twórca może zobaczyć Twoje imię na liście oglądających, co może stanowić problem związany z prywatnością. Co jeśli chcesz przeglądać historie, nie będąc zauważonym? Tutaj Anonstories staje się przydatne. Umożliwia oglądanie publicznej zawartości Instagram bez ujawniania tożsamości. Wystarczy wpisać nazwę użytkownika profilu, który Cię interesuje, a narzędzie wyświetli ich najnowsze historie. Cechy Anonstories Viewer: - Anonimowe przeglądanie: Oglądaj historie bez pojawiania się na liście oglądających. - Brak konta: Oglądaj publiczną zawartość bez logowania się na konto Instagram. - Pobieranie zawartości: Zapisuj dowolną zawartość historii bezpośrednio na swoje urządzenie do użytku offline. - Przeglądaj najważniejsze: Dostęp do Instagram Highlights, nawet po 24 godzinach. - Monitorowanie repostów: Śledź reposty lub poziom zaangażowania w historię na prywatnych profilach. Ograniczenia: - Narzędzie działa tylko z publicznymi kontami; konta prywatne pozostają niedostępne. Korzyści: - Przyjazne dla prywatności: Oglądaj zawartość Instagram bez bycia zauważonym. - Proste i łatwe: Brak potrzeby instalacji aplikacji lub rejestracji. - Ekskluzywne narzędzia: Pobieraj i zarządzaj zawartością w sposób, którego Instagram nie oferuje.
Śledź aktualizacje na Instagramie dyskretnie, chroniąc swoją prywatność i pozostając anonimowym.
Oglądaj profile i zdjęcia anonimowo za pomocą Prywatnego Viewera.
To darmowe narzędzie pozwala oglądać historie Instagram anonimowo, zapewniając, że Twoja aktywność pozostaje ukryta przed twórcą historii.
Anonstories pozwala użytkownikom oglądać historie na Instagramie bez informowania twórcy.
Funkcjonuje płynnie na iOS, Android, Windows, macOS i nowoczesnych przeglądarkach takich jak Chrome i Safari.
Priorytetem jest bezpieczne, anonimowe przeglądanie bez konieczności logowania się.
Użytkownicy mogą oglądać publiczne historie, wpisując nazwę użytkownika – bez konieczności zakładania konta.
Pobiera zdjęcia (JPEG) i filmy (MP4) z łatwością.
Usługa jest bezpłatna.
Treści z prywatnych kont mogą być dostępne tylko dla obserwujących.
Pliki są przeznaczone do użytku osobistego lub edukacyjnego i muszą być zgodne z przepisami dotyczącymi praw autorskich.
Wpisz publiczną nazwę użytkownika, aby oglądać lub pobrać historie. Usługa generuje bezpośrednie linki do zapis