The Center for Creative Works (CCW) and Haverford College's Cantor Fitzgerald Gallery have partnered to present LOOK HERE, a multisensory exhibition highlighting the work of neurodivergent artists. The show features six CCW artists—Kelly Brown, Cindy Gosselin, Clyde Henry, Tim Quinn, Brandon Spicer-Crawley, and Allen Yu—and is curated by Jennifer Gilbert alongside CCW artists Mary T. Bevlock and Paige Donovan. The exhibition includes accessible design elements such as braille, ASL videos, touch panels, sensory backpacks, and tours led by neurodivergent artists. Two satellite exhibitions, LOOK THERE at Haverford's VCAM gallery and LOOK EVERYWHERE at Philadelphia's Atelier Gallery, run concurrently, along with the sixth annual Creating Community Symposium, which brings together progressive art studios from across the US.
This exhibition matters because it centers the perspectives and creative practices of neurodivergent artists within a major institutional setting, challenging traditional notions of how art is experienced and who it is for. By integrating multisensory and accessibility features, LOOK HERE models a more inclusive approach to exhibition design that could influence how galleries and museums engage diverse audiences. The accompanying symposium, originally founded by California's Creative Growth Art Center, underscores a growing national movement to support progressive art studios and advocate for the intersection of art and disability.