On view during NCECA 2026, PLAYGROUND DETROIT is proud to host AFTERLIGHT (March 24-28th), a group exhibition, organized by curators and participating artists, Wade MacDonald and Kyle Triplett.

Afterlight examines light, darkness, and shadow through illuminated ceramic-based works, evoking memory and reflection while inviting viewers to embrace the poetic duality between illumination and obscurity.
Artists: Ling Chun, Emily Duke, Vincent Frimpong, Future Retrieval, Salvador Jiménez Flores, Wade MacDonald, Jesse Ring, Iren Tete, Colleen Toledano, Kyle Triplett
‘Afterlight’ refers to the final traces of light visible in the sky after sunset—a fleeting, liminal phenomenon that invites contemplation. This transitional moment between day and night evokes a sense of recollection of the impermanence and transitory nature of the human condition.


The exhibition brings together a diverse group of ceramic artists who will present artworks that implement the elements of clay and light to explore the material, perceptual, and conceptual dimensions of luminosity and shadow. These artists engage with ideas of transformation, perception, and presence through interdisciplinary practices that push the boundaries of contemporary ceramic art.
Ceramic works in the exhibition will incorporate light sources—ranging from LED and neon to incandescent bulbs and video projection—not merely to illuminate surfaces, but to activate the surrounding space and create layered narratives. In these pieces, light becomes an essential material, inseparable from the form it reveals and interacts with. The artists extend the medium of ceramics into new territories, expanding its sensory potential and reframing how we encounter and understand objects and environments.

The City of Detroit, host of the 2026 NCECA Conference, adds a powerful contextual dimension to the exhibition. Long known as a symbol of American industrial might, Detroit has also endured deep economic collapse, systemic racial inequities, and widespread urban decay. Yet in recent years, the city has become a vital site of creative renewal—where artists, community organizers, and cultural workers are reshaping Detroit’s story through grassroots innovation and resilience. Within this framework, Afterlight emerges as a poetic metaphor for the city itself: still echoing the glow of its industrial legacy while also radiating the emerging light of a new and evolving future.
The works presented in Afterlight are not limited to representations of light or dark; rather, they explore how these forces shape emotion, memory, and the experience of time. From illuminated clay sculptures and immersive installations to meditative explorations of shadow, each piece will examine what it means to see and to be seen in transitional states.
The exhibition asks viewers to consider how light—whether fading, flickering, or pulsing—affects our understanding of the world and ourselves. Collectively, the works form a plethora of perspectives that challenge visual expectations, celebrate material experimentation, and offer a deeper, more nuanced meditation on the human condition in a collective moment of societal flux.


OPENING RECEPTION
Friday, March 27th, 6-10PM
On View Tuesday, March 24th-Saturday, March 28th
2845 Gratiot Avenue, Detroit, MI
ON VIEW
Tuesday-Friday, March 27th, 10-5PM
Saturday, March 28th 12P-5PM
Tours are available during the week via NCECA, please contact them directly for additional information.
Thank you to our sponsored, Little Saints




