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6:00 PM-8:00 PM

Rose Jaffe | Vessel: To Hold and be Held

Exhibition Opening|Vernissage and Conversation with the Artist Rose Jaffe

  • Goethe-Institut Washington, Washington, DC

  • Language English
  • Price Free of charge

Portrait of Rose Jaffe with purple hair and colorful line drawings on a dark, abstract background. © Rose Jaffe

Portrait of Rose Jaffe with purple hair next to an abstract print featuring a vessel shape and organic lines. © Rose Jaffe

Join us for the opening reception of "Vessel: To Hold and be Held", a new exhibition by Washington, DC-based artist Rose Jaffe

In "Vessel: To Hold and be Held", Rose Jaffe explores the body and mind as containers—investigating what we carry, what we release, and the invisible expectations placed upon us. These transatlantic works evolved from a 2018 Berlin residency. It was there, immersed for six months in the city’s creative landscape, with visits to the international artistic hubs of Leipzig and Hamburg, that Jaffe began exploring collective consciousness and producing work inspired by overlapping body forms.

The visual language matured as the artist worked between Mexico and Washington, DC. These woodblock and monotype prints draw on organic forms — flowers, roots, leaves — as symbols of cycles of holding and letting go. During a residency in Mexico, Rose incorporated found materials from local markets — corn husks, netting, sponges — weaving the textures of place directly into the work. “Nature, as always, serves as both language and mirror: its forms remind us that to be a vessel is not only to contain, but to be shaped, softened, and transformed by what we carry.” (Rose Jaffe)

The exhibition opens on May 28, 2026, from 6:00 to 8:00 PM at the Goethe-Institut Washington.
The works will remain on view through July 23, 2026.

About the Artist

Rose Jaffe

Artist

Rose Jaffe is an interdisciplinary artist whose practice spans printmaking, sculpture, painting, and illustration. Best known for her mural work — with over 50 created nationally and internationally, including more than 40 across the DC metro area — Rose brings vibrant, layered compositions to walls, paper, and public spaces alike. Her work is rooted in a deep connection to nature, community, and storytelling. Through color, form, and organic imagery, she explores shared human experience and the ties that bind us to each other and to the living world around us. Rose's work has been featured in The Washington Post, The Washington City Paper, CNN, and NBC, among others. She believes in art as a force for joy, connection, and meaningful social change.