The Bakery Atlanta is thrilled to present Fragments And: An Installation of Work by Lynne Huffer in partnership with Emory’s Center for Ethics and Emory’s Ethics and the Arts Program on view Wednesday, September 17th through Sunday, October 5th at The Supermarket.
On Sunday, September 21st, from 7pm to 8:30pm, join us at The Supermarket for an evening of collage and a conversation between Huffer and David Haskell on writing and art in the face of extinction. Haskell is an interlocutor, biologist, writer, two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist, and author of several books including The Forest Unseen, The Songs of Trees, Thirteen Ways to Smell a Tree, and Sounds Wild and Broken. The audience will be invited to make collaged fragments as they listen to the conversation.
Lynne Huffer is a philosopher, writer, teacher, collagist, and book artist interested in formal experimentation. She is the Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Philosophy at Emory University and the author of six books including most recently These Survivals: Autobiography of an Extinction (Duke University Press, 2025), an experimental, hybrid-style collage book composed of fragments of text and original artwork on the theme of mass species extinction. In addition to academic essays on feminism, queer theory, ethics, and the Anthropocene, she has published personal essays, creative nonfiction, and experimental writing. Her artwork is held by Bryn Mawr College special collections and the Center for the Book in New York. She regularly offers workshops and collaborative opportunities at universities, colleges, and community art venues. For more information about Huffer’s work, see her personal website thoughtcollage.net.
Huffer’s gallery installation Fragments And was conceived as a living collage, inviting viewers into an experimental, collaborative, immersive practice. Created as an installation for survival, Fragments And accompanies Huffer’s hybrid-style collage book, These Survivals: Autobiography of an Extinction, available for purchase at the exhibit. Fragments And displays Huffer’s experiments in analog collage around the theme of extinction and the clash of intimate time with geological time. When thinking of extinction, we fall into a sense of planetary time; the feeling that all is both individual and collective, inviting solitary practices amidst communal life. In that spirit, the exhibit invites its viewers to contribute to the installation by making their own fragments to add to the lines. The goal of this parallel play is to harness the childlike energy of analog collage, opening up new possibilities for self-reflection, friendship, and even solidarity.
In drawing on the aesthetic of fragmentation, Huffer attempts to push the limits of our perception and our thinking in a mode she calls “thought collage.” Huffer is especially interested in bringing attention to the substrate onto which a collage is pasted. She revels in the multiple meanings of substrate: paper, canvas, aluminum, cloth, wood, stone, brick, an old book to be altered, a notebook, the side of a building, the earth, or in this case, lines crisscrossing an interior space. In working with substrates in our collaging practice, we also rework the ground of our thinking. Working with fragments allows those who experience these installations for survival to access new ways of living in the face of ecological crisis, political turmoil, and an increasingly devastated planet.
Find Us:
1) The Supermarket’s main entrance is located at 638 N Highland Ave NE. Our door is between Big Softie and Colette Bakeshop leading you down a hallway and a staircase. See a helpful map here and watch our reel on Instagram here!
2) Our secondary entrance is through a residential courtyard. Enter through the black metal gate on the side of the Otto's building from the parking lot (at N. Highland and Blue Ridge). Be quiet when leaving events this way after dark as this is a residential courtyard. Note this entrance has a few stairs.
3) Need no stairs? We got you! Signage is in the works but, in the meantime, please call to be escorted to our back entrance. (404) 458-1738.
Nearby Parking and Prices:
- Limited Parking spots in front of The Shops at Otto's on N. Highland Ave. Must register with ParkMobile. Free for 1 hr before 6pm. Paid after 6pm. (Zone# 3241)
- Small lot beside Otto’s Apartment Hotel at N. Highland and Blue Ridge. Must register with ParkMobile. (Zone# 3240). Do not park in 'resident only' spots.
- Public lot at N. Highland and Ponce (behind and in front of Plaza Theatre). "Scan to Pay" signs. Mon-Sat: 7am-10pm. Free for 15 min. $5 for 1hr, +$1 for each added.
- Six story deck at 675 N. Highland Ave. $5-$6 for up to 2hr, +$1 for each hr added. $14 daily max.