Ronald Feldman

[2] After law school Feldman worked for the corporate-law firm of Hefland, Lesser & Moriber and made partner there.

[5] In 1972, the gallery held Hannah Wilke’s debut solo exhibition "in which the artist displayed a suite of her anatomically-allusive wall-mounted sculptures.

"[4] The gallery was an early proponent of art that featured themes of women's rights, politics, the environment, and war.

In 1974, Feldman worked with Joseph Beuys, offering him gallery space, but instead creating a ten-day lecture tour titled "Energy Plan for the Western Man".

Warhol and Feldman worked together to "conceptualize and publish iconic portfolios of prints and paintings, including Ten Portraits of Jews of the Twentieth Century, Myths, Ads, and Endangered Species.

"[9] Warhol's silk screen portraits, "Ten Jews of the 20th Century" were published in 1980 and exhibited at the Jewish Museum.

[2] In the 1980s the Gallery also held exhibitions by Ida Applebroog, Ilya Kabakov, Todd Siler, Nancy Chunn, Joseph Beuys, and Eleanor Antin among others.

In 2017, Cassils "staged an exhibition in which they collected 200 gallons of urine, in a commentary on how the Trump administration had stripped transgender students of their legal right to use bathrooms that best fit their chosen gender identities.

He supported many of the VLC programming including Sustaining Democracy, debates on the National Endowment of the Arts and the "decency clause", and forums on the American electoral system.