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Katie Niewodowski is a Florida native who has lived and worked in the NYC metropolitan area since 2003. A proud resident of Jersey City, she teaches Fine Art at Hudson County Community College, Stevens Institute of Technology, and Montclair State University. She absolutely delights in making portraits for people to cherish as personal relics.Katie also teaches yoga and continues to expand her body of work inspired by cells and the natural universe.
Til Will is a Brooklyn based multidisciplinary artist and producer. He is the co founder and director of the label Y3S Recordings, which released four EPs and organized three live shows in 2021. Will is also the founder of Open House, a curatorial project space that hosted exhibitions and published criticism as well as artist interviews online from 2015-2018. He participated as a curator in Spring Break Art Show in 2017 and 2018. In October of 2018, he was given a residency at Utopia 126 in Barcelona. In 2019 he was featured in an interview with Art of Choice.
Kevin is an abstract painter and collage artist utilizing techniques that emphasize the process of painting through making the artist’s movement and layering of material visible in the work. Color, shape and line are visual cues employed to spark memories and experiences that the artist hopes can relay a common shared experience with the viewer. An upstate New York native, Kevin resides and creates art in Middlesex County, Massachusetts.
Joe Piscopia builds 3D shapes with 2D mediums. Informed by strongly contrasted lighting, Joe’s gradations bring every object, concept, or pattern to life in abstract forms. Shapes and colors document moments of thought and emotion in Joe’s life. Starting with a thought, a bird, or a single word, he intuitively explores from there into a realm of soft geometry.
Max Manning is an artist and educator who currently lives and works in Houston, Texas. He earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts in Two Dimensional Studies from Bowling Green State University in 2011 and his Master of Fine Arts from the University of Cincinnati in 2014. Max has exhibited work nationally and internationally and is currently represented by TW Fine Art in Brisbane, Australia.
Evan Peltzman is a painter who has been living and working in New York City since 2010. He is currently an MFA candidate at the School of Visual Arts in New York, graduating in 2026. Born and raised in California’s San Francisco Bay Area during the 1980’s and 90’s, Evan was heavily influenced by the artwork and aesthetic of the local skateboarding, live music and graffiti of the times. San Francisco’s DIY culture of the early 90’s inspired him to get creative with his materials, exhibition venues and studio spaces. This approach to art making continues to follow him today as he builds all of his own wood panels, canvas stretchers and frames in order to use unorthodox materials and make odd-sized work.
Expressive and vulnerable, Molly’s paintings read like an unpredictably eloquent dream journal. A cloudy haze of bright colors are expertly synthesized to evoke memories of a time and place which feel familiar, though ultimately unknown. As a skilled colorist, Molly creates abstract moments of nostalgia and sentimentality. Molly’s pieces are made up of experiences, both lived and imagined. She is able to capture small moments and transfer them onto canvas.
Anthony Smith received a B.A. in Fine Arts from Amherst College (1999) and an M.F.A. in Painting from the University of Michigan (2001). Smith also studied wood-block printmaking in Kyoto, Japan at Kyoto Seika University in 2001. He has been reviewed in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Boston Globe, The Detroit Free Press, The Ann Arbor News and the Artist’s Magazine.
John Richey is a New York based visual artist who works between Brooklyn, NY and the Hudson Valley. His cross-disciplinary practice is process-driven and incorporates cyanotype, handmade video animations, and immersive installations using themes and images borrowed from various personal collections. He holds multiple degrees, has exhibited domestically and abroad, and was profiled in Artforum Internationals “Best of 2004”. Richey has held professional titles in New York at Marian Goodman Gallery, Greene Naftali Gallery, the Keith Haring Foundation, and Pace Gallery.
Raised near the rolling shores of Chesapeake Bay, Kristin’s perspective was strongly shaped by the visual clash of industry and nature in and around the bustling American port town of Baltimore. Descended from a long line of artists and craftsmen, Kristin has a family history in highly tactile expressions of creativity. Her grandfather was a furniture maker; her mother is a painter. Family influences in materials and craftsmanship helped fuel Kristin’s interest in textiles—both natural and synthetic textures and patterns. As a result of this interest, in addition to her fine arts work, Kristin obtained her Bachelor of Science in Fashion Design and Illustration at Virginia Tech University. Kristin has traveled and studied extensively in Europe, Africa, and the United States where she honed her eye and trademark ability to create visual texture with a rich, adventurous color palette and expressive techniques.
Gwyneth Leech is a New York City based artist. Her paintings of high-rise construction express the optimism and anxiety of rapid change in the urban environment. She has been featured in solo and group shows throughout the United States and Great Britain and is the subject of a multi-award-winning documentary, The Monolith. Her paintings are in numerous private and construction industry corporate collections. She holds degrees from the University of Pennsylvania and Edinburgh College of Art in Scotland.
There is a sense of history in Shira's paintings. They are built up patiently like the hands of potters that their surfaces resemble, but left to be scratched and marked by some unknown force. Even the central objects are pressed into the thick layer of venetian plaster instead of sitting on top. In a world of polished surfaces, Shira's use of materials restores the power of time.
Speaking of the subtle ways environment affects a painter’s color choices, Beth’s choices scream East Coast. From the thick of acrylic paint emerges Beth’s impression of landscapes, styles alternating between abstract waves and naturalistic scenery.
Jessica Simorte completed her MFA with an emphasis in painting at the University of Cincinnati’s College of Design, Architecture, Art, and Planning in 2014. She is currently living in Texas where she leads Sam Houston State University’s WASH program. She has shown regionally, nationally and internationally and has been included in numerous publications including New American Paintings, Art Maze Mag, and Maake Magazine.
Robert Melzmuf is a painter based in the United States whose works have been exhibited nationally and in France. Identifying as a painterly color field abstract artist, he strives for beauty and elegance in his artistic practice. Melzmuf is uninterested in strategies, chance, or theories, rather, when he creates, he commits to looking and making decisions based on what he sees.
Marco DaSilva is a Brazilian-American artist whose symbol-based works explore hybridity through the intersections of painting and craft. His graphic style of making combines painting and collaging of objects, textures and mediums. His works use bright bold colors that investigate ritual and storytelling through a queer lens. He creates his own mythology in the process, providing a richly saturated landscape of his own world to the viewer.
Although Ketta has worked in New York for a while now, the bleeding and blooming of colors in her oil paintings resemble the way water changes everything around it - perhaps the expanses of water that surround her home country Cyprus. Their ambient effect resembles memories as much as it does landscapes, ever moving and receding towards oblivion.
Morgan Hale is a Brooklyn based artist and weaver. She has a background in textile art and has been weaving since 2012. Morgan has exhibited in New York City, San Francisco, Boston, Tucson, through virtual galleries and was a recent recipient of a City Artist Corps Grant. In 2021 she wrote, illustrated and self-published a beginner’s weaving guide titled Weaving Untangled. Morgan teaches one-on-one weaving classes which take students through the process outlined in her book.
New York based artist Jade Chan was born and raised in Amsterdam and is of Chinese heritage. She earned her BFA in Fine Arts from the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York in 2010. Jade has worked in fashion, graphic and web design prior to full-time commitment as an artist. Chan has lived and worked in Amsterdam, London and Hong Kong before settling in New York. She now works from a studio in Long Island City.
Every one of Rita’s artworks captures a unique feeling in a specific moment in time that she hopes to share with the viewer. Whether via abstraction or an impressionistic landscape inspired by the works of Claude Monet, Rita’s heavily textured oil paintings express a warm feeling of soulfulness and her loose brushstrokes leave the works open for spiritual interpretation.
Alise Loebelsohn is an artist that got her start working as a mural and billboard painter in NYC.. She has transitioned into fine art by using her vast knowledge of materials to become a successful fine artist. She studied at Pratt Institute with a BFA in painting and the Art Students League. She has had several one person shows and her works are in numerous collections. She continues to expand her market by creating handmade scarves and works in glass.
Nora Chavooshian studied sculpture at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and the San Francisco Art Institute. After graduating the Art Institute in 1974, she moved to Los Angeles. While continuing her artistry as a sculptor, she worked as an award-winning stage designer, designing sculptural sets. She progressed into the area of film production design, designing several films for director John Sayles, sculptural set pieces for director Martin Scorsese, videos for Bruce Springsteen and Madonna, as well as many other films and videos.
Hanna Brody lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. She graduated with a BA in Studio Art and Psychology from Lewis and Clark College in 2016. Her paintings embody friends, family, loved ones, herself, and those who surround her. She paints to evoke a sense of intimacy and understanding towards her subject’s emotions and psychological states. She uses layers of water based and oil paint to obscure and transform elements of her paintings, sometimes including multiple integrated angles to create a seemingly whole portrait. Through portraiture she explores themes of alienation and isolation as well as empathy and collective emotion. She has been a member of NYC Crit Club since 2018 and will be participating in a residency program with Dear Artists Projects this coming April.
Dominick Hiddo is a self-taught visual artist born and raised in Flatbush, Brooklyn, New York. His work challenges the perception of all that we know and understand. While drawing inspiration from mysticism, religion, and cultural traditions of the world, he explores the concepts of enlightenment, death and the after-life, reincarnation, and the complexities of the human experience in all its constructs. He is directly inspired by the works of Joan Mitchell, Hilma af Klint, Kandinsky, Chagall, the Russian Avant-garde, and Asian Art. He currently serves on the Kingston Arts Commission. And he lives and works out of his studio in Kingston, NY
In a space that contains elements of our universe ranging from cellular to cosmic, simple geometric shapes serve as characters or markers. The paintings begin with a series of subconscious gestural and perhaps chaotic elements. Geometric lines and shapes engage with the with the organic elements recalling games, systems of measure or other organizational devices that are used to understand, explore, invent or entertain. In so doing, the artist attempts to find comfort and sense in this world and our place within it.
What if we saw nature not as distinguishable things like trees, mountains, and soil, but as a cloud of influences that surround us? Harkening back to her memories growing up in nature and a personal interest in Ecofeminism, Johanna's method of printmaking is in itself a dialogue with nature. In cyanotypes, the intentional outlines of base drawings intermingle with spontaneous factors like the angle, brightness, and hue of sunlight - even the canvas it is printed on is candidly frayed at the edges. In her other prints also, watercolor-like effects make even the ground appear buoyant.
Rachel Burgess' works appear on Curina courtesy of Susan Eley Fine Arts.
Fred Bendheim is a contemporary artist working in Brooklyn, NY. Fred attended the University of California, Davis, and graduated from Pomona College, with a B.A. cum laude. He has lived and worked in Brooklyn, NY since 1983, maintaining a studio in Sunset Park. He is a teaching artist at The Art Student’s League, and other schools in NYC. Both a painter and sculptor, Fred has had numerous one-person shows, and his works are in collections world-wide: The Museum of Arts and Design, The Montclair Art Museum, The Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art, The National Museum of Costa Rica, The Neiman-Marcus Collection, and others.
Shyun's minimalism does the maximum in bringing out the intensity of shapes and colors. What seem like stable forms - rectangles, tubes, and lines - never sit quietly on the ground. Shyun tips these shapes on their corner, drops them over a shadow, and slices just a little of their edges like soft cheese, capturing the brief moment where the stability of geometry meets the imagination of our eyes.
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