PHILADELPHIA, PA.- The Village of Industry and Art (VIA) marks the 150th anniversary of the founding of the Pennsylvania Museum and School of Industrial Art (PMSIA)the institution that would later become the University of the Arts and the Philadelphia Museum of Artby hosting an exhibition and related programming within its historic buildings. On view through May 31, VIA hosts Dont Trash a Good Thing, an exhibition of recent works by local artist and UArts alum Kay Healy, curated by Paradigm Gallery + Studio, nodding to the lineage and vibrant reality of the creative community incubated on these grounds.
Steered by Scout, the Village of Industry and Art (VIA) occupies historic buildings at Broad and Pine originally developed by the Pennsylvania Museum and School of Industrial Art (PMSIA), an institution chartered in 1876 to advance industrial art and design in Philadelphia. PMSIA later gave rise to both the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the University of the Arts, with the school retaining Hamilton Hall at 320 South Broad Street until its closure in 2024. For VIA and Scout, this history is foundational: the site has long served as a home for learning, experimentation, and creative exchange. As Philadelphia enters a period of civic transformation, VIAs reopening reflects a commitment to stewarding this legacy while reactivating the space as a platform for new cultural production, connection, and public life.
This exhibition is one of the first public-facing activations at VIA, and it felt important that it honor the history of the University of the Arts while looking forward, said Lindsey Scannapieco, Managing Partner at Scout. Partnering with Kay Healy and Sara McCorriston of Paradigm Gallery + Studio, both UArts alums and leaders in the local creative scene, on a project rooted in reuse, craft, and storytelling reflects exactly what we hope VIA can bea connective space for artists and the broader creative community, right in the heart of the city.
The works in Dont Trash a Good Thing emerge directly from Kay Healys personal and artistic reckoning with loss, memory, and reusemost recently shaped by the abrupt closure of the University of the Arts, where she studied, taught, and built her life in Philadelphia. Rooted in drawing, screen printing, sewing, and fabric-based construction, Healys practice transforms everyday and discarded objects into vessels of shared experience. Her installations recreate items described in interviewsobjects from childhood homes, things lost and longed for, and artifacts tied to collective moments of crisisoffering a material language for grief, resilience, and continuity.
The announcement of the UArts closure was shocking, enraging, and deeply sad. Im still grieving the loss of this creative resource that enabled the transmission of skills and gave access to specialized equipment to students, educators, and the broader community, remarked artist Kay Healy. While working on Recycling Can, the phrase Dont trash a good thing stayed with meit captures my hope that the Village of Industry & Art can rise from this moment as a place of care, reuse, and possibility, salvaging what remains to create something meaningful for the next generation.
Central to the exhibition is a site-specific Pile, Healys fourth iteration of combining individually rendered fabric objects into a dense, chaotic mass. Developed during the pandemic, the Pile reflects the overwhelming sensory and emotional conditions of that time, mirroring the noise, anxiety, and compression of lived experience. Additional worksincluding Recycling Can, Metal Can, and a small installation of Dog Poop Bagsextend this inquiry through painstakingly crafted trash piles, drawing attention to cycles of consumption, disposal, and erasure. Installed within the former UArts Hamilton Hall, the exhibition also includes an interactive comment box developed in collaboration with fellow alum Monica Morris, inviting visitors with connections to UArts to contribute their own stories and memories.
As Philadelphia enters a year marked by overlapping anniversaries, large-scale activations, and civic transformation, VIAs reopening stands as an act of both salvage and imagination, noted Sara McCorriston of Paradigm Gallery + Studio. The exhibition and collaboration reflects a belief that what remains can be transformedthat loss can become a generative space for connection, creativity, and collective investment in the citys future.
Healys work will remain on view throughout the spring as VIA continues to activate the building with artists, creatives, and institutions through a growing slate of public programs and events.
Kay Healy investigates themes of home, displacement, and loss through her drawn, screen printed, and stuffed fabric installations.
Healy is originally from Staten Island, NY and she received a BA from Oberlin College, and MFA from the University of the Arts. She was teaching undergraduate screen printing as a Senior Lecturer at UArts when the school was abruptly shut down.
Healys projects and residencies have been supported by the Independence Foundations Fellowship in the Arts, the Leeway Foundation, Womens Studio Workshop, and the Center for Emerging Visual Artists. Healys work is in public collections at the Pennsylvania Convention Center, the West Collection, and Moore College of Art. She has had solo exhibitions at Gallery Madison Park in New York City, Gallery Septima in Tokyo, Japan, the Windgate Gallery in Fort Smith, Arkansas, the Delaware Center for Contemporary Arts, the Pittsburgh Center for the Arts, and other galleries. She has participated in residencies at KKV Print Studios in Malmö, Sweden, The Cooper Union in New York City, and Moosey Gallery in Norwich, UK.
Healy recently completed Caseys Cases, a graphic novel series for children published by Neal Porter Books, an imprint of Holiday House. She lives and works in Philadelphia.