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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260320T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260320T210000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260307T040905Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260307T040905Z
UID:10039325-1774029600-1774040400@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art: Opening of 'Portions\,' by Alexa Joan Givens Wajed
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for the opening reception of Portions on March 20\, 2026\, from 6 to 9 pm at Hunt Art Gallery\, Brisbane Building\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. In this new solo exhibition\, Alexa Joan Givens Wajed reflects on the quiet accumulation of a life spent nurturing others while continuing to create in the spaces that remain. \nAlexa Wajed has lovingly poured herself outward into family\, children\, partnership\, and the quiet labor of supporting others’ lives and careers. Through it all\, she has remained an artist\, her creative moments revealing little parts of herself. Intimate in scale and generous in spirit\, each piece becomes a serving\, a moment of presence\, memory\, or release\, offerings that when experienced side by side\, are revealed to be enough. \nSmall meditative abstract line works emerge through intuitive mark-making. Created without expectation\, they quiet the mind and allow a lyrical flow to take over. The process itself is healing\, an act of listening rather than directing. The lines move\, pause\, and breathe\, mirroring the internal rhythms of care\, exhaustion\, and renewal. \nLittle Parts of Me unfolds through three interwoven sections. Works on paper are created using natural dyes made from pomegranate skins\, beets\, hibiscus\, and butterfly pea flowers. Each material carries memory and intention: pomegranate skins as an echo of her father\, butterfly pea flowers for healing. Gum arabic and cloves are added to preserve the pigments\, though fading is inevitable. Like memory\, the body\, like care itself\, these materials shift\, wash away slightly\, and change over time. Nothing here is meant to remain untouched. \nVessels: baskets\, bowls\, compartments\, purses—forms designed to hold. These works reflect the human tendency to carry more than we should\, and longer than we realize. The artist asks: Why do I possess so many containers? They are all just there\, empty. What am I holding on to? They speak to unconscious accumulation: emotional labor\, responsibility\, grief\, love. They linger between fullness and release\, asking what it means\, what it feels like\, to finally empty something when we know we need to. \nSpice Drops draw directly from memory\, specifically the artist’s mother\, who loved the candy of the same name. Actual spices are incorporated into the works\, blending scent\, texture\, nostalgia\, and Wajed’s culinary background. These pieces are small but potent\, grounding sweetness in substance. \nBlack Drops shift the language. Fine line work interrupted by larger black dots. They act as punctuation marks\, moments of gravity\, silence\, and interruption\, some thoughts landing heavier than others. \nPortraits & Abstract Identities: six digital drawings that anchor the exhibition in the human figure. An exploration through black and white compositions\, punctuated with color\, where identity is fluid\, layered\, and unfinished—never one thing\, never fully named. These are not likenesses so much as rendered emotional presences\, attitudes\, characters\, fractured mental states. Each portrait is paired with a poem\, extending the image into the language and interiority of the artist. \nGesture Acquires Mass: the exhibition introduces sculptural pieces that extend Wajed’s signature line work into three dimensional space. Large cutout shapes\, manually constructed and carved using sign-making materials\, and wood\, further evolve her long standing practice in leather work and bring her meditative mark making into the physical realm with no expectations. \nThis exhibition is not about grand gestures. It is about what is possible in between—responsibilities\, difficult and beautiful moments—embracing all that she has\, she honors what can be made in portions.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-opening-of-portions-by-alexa-joan-givens-wajed/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Exhibition,Film/Cinema
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/IMG_1990.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260314T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260314T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225223Z
UID:10038869-1773482400-1773496800@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-2/2026-03-14/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260313T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260313T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038902-1773399600-1773421200@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-03-13/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260312T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260312T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038901-1773313200-1773334800@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-03-12/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260311T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260311T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038900-1773226800-1773248400@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-03-11/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260307T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260307T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225223Z
UID:10038868-1772877600-1772892000@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-2/2026-03-07/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260306T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260306T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038899-1772794800-1772816400@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-03-06/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260305T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260305T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038898-1772708400-1772730000@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-03-05/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260304T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260304T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038897-1772622000-1772643600@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-03-04/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260228T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260228T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225223Z
UID:10038867-1772272800-1772287200@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-2/2026-02-28/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260227T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260227T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038896-1772190000-1772211600@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-02-27/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260226T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260226T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038895-1772103600-1772125200@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-02-26/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260225T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260225T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038894-1772017200-1772038800@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-02-25/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260221T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260221T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225223Z
UID:10038866-1771668000-1771682400@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-2/2026-02-21/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260220T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260220T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038893-1771585200-1771606800@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-02-20/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260219T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260219T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038892-1771498800-1771520400@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-02-19/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260218T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260218T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038891-1771412400-1771434000@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-02-18/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260214T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260214T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225223Z
UID:10038865-1771063200-1771077600@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-2/2026-02-14/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260213T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260213T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038890-1770980400-1771002000@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-02-13/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260212T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260212T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038889-1770894000-1770915600@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-02-12/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260211T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260211T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038888-1770807600-1770829200@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-02-11/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260207T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260207T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225223Z
UID:10038864-1770458400-1770472800@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-2/2026-02-07/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260206T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260206T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038887-1770375600-1770397200@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-02-06/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260205T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260205T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038886-1770289200-1770310800@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-02-05/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260204T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260204T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038885-1770202800-1770224400@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-02-04/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260131T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260131T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225223Z
UID:10038863-1769853600-1769868000@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-2/2026-01-31/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260130T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260130T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038884-1769770800-1769792400@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-01-30/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260129T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260129T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038883-1769684400-1769706000@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-01-29/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260128T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260128T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225526Z
UID:10038882-1769598000-1769619600@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-3/2026-01-28/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260124T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260124T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T122748
CREATED:20260112T225223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T225223Z
UID:10038862-1769248800-1769263200@thebuffalohive.com
SUMMARY:Buffalo Art — Surrender to Mercy - Final Works by Muhammad Z. Zaman at Hunt Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Why make art when you know you are going to die? \nPerhaps this question does not make much sense to an artist. While gallery visitors may arrive with ready answers\, much of our lives are spent in quiet denial of our own ending. Nearly all of us will experience it: lying in a bed while our bodies fail or\, and maybe worse\, sitting at its edge while someone we love goes\, slowly or quickly. Muhammad Z. Zaman was given the questionable gift of knowing — not without hope — that his time was limited. Asked what to do with that time\, his response was simple and unwavering: How could I ever not make art? Surrender to Mercy is Zaman’s answer. \nPlease join us for the opening of Surrender to Mercy\, an exhibition of final works by Muhammad Z. Zaman\, opening Friday\, January 16\, 2026\, from 6–9 PM at Hunt Art Gallery\, 403 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY. The exhibition presents paintings and drawings created as Zaman faced the knowledge of his limited time\, reflecting his unwavering commitment to life\, beauty\, and human connection. The exhibition will remain on view through March 14\, 2026. \nIf you had spoken to Zaman a year ago\, after he came to understand the shape of his remaining days\, you could not help but notice the joy braided tightly with sorrow. He was living more directly with the essential: more love\, more family\, more meals shared\, more trips taken\, more art. In a moment shaped by renewed political cruelty and public fear\, Zaman’s response was simple and insistent: Keep going. As if to ask\, are you increasing the share of mercy in the world? Why weren’t you before? \nThis question sits at the heart of the exhibition. In the year leading up to his recent death on December 9\, 2025\, he worked with extraordinary clarity\, urgency\, and care—deepening both his studio practice and his vision for shared creative experience. Chemotional 2\, a community-centered project series generously funded by ASI and NYSCA\, served as a key source of inspiration for the exhibition. The project’s public engagement was carried out through publicly shared works and videos documenting the artistic process. This format supported the project’s goals of prioritizing creative connection and intimate access to the creative process\, fostering reflection on our shared humanity through illness\, grief\, and hope. \nZaman’s work solidified over a decade ago around an affirmation of life. Layered compositions rooted in public engagement\, Calligraffiti\, tensions between language\, legibility\, and meaning in sprawling English\, Bengali\, and Arabic\, inviting viewers to “read the illegible\,” encouraging curiosity\, mutual respect\, and reflection despite the impossibility of fully understanding one another. Again and again\, in moments when violence was carried out in the name of power\, slaying innocents as collateral to a nation’s war against its own shadow\, Zaman’s work—insistent\, undeniable—was to say there is beauty in the lives that we ignore\, and humanity. That innate sense of the preciousness of life takes on new dimension now. \nIn this body of work\, Zaman followed the mark on the paper day by day\, allowing color\, shape\, and gesture to map fear\, hope\, exhaustion\, determination\, and grace. Chemotional 2 lives within Surrender to Mercy as a legacy of that process—an affirmation of art as a communal\, healing act and a reflection of Zaman’s enduring commitment to connection\, mercy\, and shared humanity. \nThe works in Surrender to Mercy were all made while Zaman knew that he was going to die. Some of these were made on good days. He relocated his studio from his longtime residence at Buffalo Arts Studio to his home\, where he could paint whenever it was physically possible to do so. These paintings are evidence of will and vision. Zaman says his hand has become more assured in this time\, less careful plotting of his calligraphic script\, less time wasted in doubt and bullshit. Some works\, Zaman’s drawings made in the waiting rooms of Roswell or in hospital beds\, are the literal inscription of time lived. Taking a line for a walk\, it leads you by the hand\, out of fear into grace. \nWe would like to thank M. Delmonico Connolly for his assistance in writing this statement\, following a recent intimate interview with the artist\, and ASI and NYSCA for their support.
URL:https://thebuffalohive.com/event/buffalo-art-surrender-to-mercy-final-works-by-muhammad-z-zaman-at-hunt-gallery-2/2026-01-24/
LOCATION:Hunt Art Gallery/Beebe’s at the Gallery
CATEGORIES:Art,Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebuffalohive.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Muhammad-Zaman-working-on-his-final-artwork-No-Time-to-be-Afraid-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR