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Brandon Hodges is a multi-disciplinary artist based out of Oakland, California. He expresses himself through drawing, painting, and by making collages out of trash found on the streets of his neighborhood and elsewhere. He currently lives with his dog (a pug named Kita) and two cats (Mazzy & Maya). When he’s not creating, you can find him reading, going to festivals & shows, camping, hiking, at the beach, or spending time with friends and family.
Cora Jane Glasser is a third generation New Yorker. She holds a degree from Queens College and attended the Arts Students League. Glasser completed a commission for the production of permanent artwork onto architectural glass for a building in Queens, and created a monumental installation for a group exhibition. Her work has been shown in numerous solo and group shows nationally and internationally, and is held in private, corporate and municipal collections. Glasser works from her studio in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
Jocelyn Benford is an abstract painter who works primarily in watercolors with mixed media elements. She is inspired by the interplay of colors, shapes, and uneven lines, and loves the fluid, unpredictable nature of watercolor paints. Jocelyn works very intuitively: she always has a starting point - a particular color combination or focal point - but then goes wherever inspiration leads her.
Natalie Lanese’s paintings, collages, and installations are recognized for their punchy color palette and layered patterns. She has exhibited her work nationally and internationally, notably at MOCA Tucson, the Akron Art Museum, and the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum. She has attended residencies at Yaddo, the Vermont Studio Center, and Sim Residency in Reykjavik, and is a recipient of the Ohio Arts Council’s Individual Excellence Award. Ms. Lanese earned an MFA degree from Pratt Institute, and lives and works in Cleveland, Ohio.
Born in Paris, France, Valérie Hallier came to NYC with a Fulbright Scholarship and graduated from SVA in Computer Arts. She has been shown internationally including in the US and in Europe. Residencies include LMCC Swing Space, Pioneer Works, NARS Foundation, Trestle Art Space in Brooklyn, Harvestworks, West Harlem Art Fund, 4Heads on Governors Island and ESKFF Foundation, Mina Contemporary in New Jersey. Hallier was recently the recipient of a Contemporary Art Foundation grant and a MAAF (NYSCA & WaveFarm) grant.
Chelsie Sunde is an artist who lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. She holds a BA in Art from Gonzaga University and is an MFA candidate at Brooklyn College. She has shown her work at Revelation Gallery in New York City and the Gonzaga University Art Space in Spokane, WA. She paints to magnify simple moments from her own life, prompting viewers to reconsider the mundane. Viewers are invited into the worship of mystery and are asked to acknowledge the boundaries of human relationships, as well as their sublime joys.
Ana Maria Farina was born and raised in Brazil and is now based in the Hudson Valley, New York. She attended Columbia University and SUNY New Paltz for her graduate studies, and in 2018 she was awarded a fellowship to the NYFA Immigrant Artist Mentoring Program. Farina’s work has been featured in many spaces throughout New York such as the SPRING/BREAK Art Fair, the Wassaic Project, the Garrison Art Center, the Dorsky Museum, Paradice Palase, Susan Eley Fine Art, among others. Farina is the 2021 recipient of the College Art Association Fellowship in Visual Arts.
Neil Shapiro is a Director of Photography and Fine Arts Photographer. As Director of Photography, Neil has photographed many iconic national TV commercials. He has worked on over 2000 commercials, 10 short films, 50 music videos, and 2 motion pictures. When Covid caused a work stoppage, Neil channeled his creative energy towards photography. He recently signed with the Agora Gallery in New York and will have his first exhibition in 2024. Neil interestingly is an autodidact and never attended art school.
Jennifer Levine is an experienced arts educator with a background in both administration and teaching. She is the founder of “Paint-a-Prayer” - a mural arts education program and a teaching artist with Arts Westchester. Her art residencies in schools combine murals,and mindfulness. She received her Master’s in Fine Arts at Suny, New Paltz in May, 2023. She was teacher for 25 years and the Director of Education at 4 schools: Temple ShoIom, a Reform synagogue in Scotch Plains, Kane Street Synagogue in Brooklyn, NY, Temple Bnai Abraham in Oakland, Ca and Temple Emanu-El in Closter, NJ.
Joseph's work creates seams by coupling non-objective imagery with written texts such as dates, names, and various words and phrases. The back and forth between the two elements pose an ambiguous field of opportunities for the viewer to exist. Urgency and chance are ever-present in the works as is the dirt on the road to conclusion.
Jacki Davis is a multidisciplinary artist based in New York City. Jacki has lived and worked between Los Angeles and New York, across art direction, creative writing, and costume/set design. Her work embodies concepts of the natural world and often refers to ancient philosophies of indigenous cultures, directly linked to her heritage. She creates works on paper, artist books, paintings, photography, ceramic, performance and installation. Recent works in her decades long US currency collage series approach subject matter related to environmental conservation, and the study of the earth’s animal realm as a spiritual guide. Recent acrylic paintings explore interpretations of energy frequency and quantum theory through forms visualized in meditation. Jacki has exhibited in New York, Los Angeles, Santa Fe, NM, Houston, TX and Miami Beach, Fl.
Ryan Zogheb graduated from New York University in May 2022, earning his Bachelor’s of Fine Arts with a major in studio art, concentrating in painting and graphic design. Ryan lives and works out of his studio in East Village in New York City. Since graduating, Ryan has had his work featured in four gallery exhibitions and has most recently completed a residency at Carrie Able Gallery in Brooklyn, and at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan.
As a self described mostly straight Asian male, Chunbum Park, also known as Chun, explores gender fluidity and his fictive femme expression through art. Varying in texture and level of abstraction, the feminine figures of his work drift in and out of otherworldly color palettes. The exaggerated anatomy of his work in shrinking yet sexualized poses subvert the pathways of dominance that the oppression of queer people, women, and poc have made. Chun believes that the vulnerability in beauty and self-expression takes greater courage.
John Cox is an abstract painter based in Croton-on-Hudson. NY. He earned his Bachelors of Fine Art in Painting in May 2002 from the Maryland Institute College of Art. Afterwards, John moved to New York City where he attended Hunter College and earned a Masters of Fine Art with a concentration in painting in May of 2006. His work embraces technological glitches by employing machine customized tools to translate experienced digital disorder into gestural marks that imprecisely mimic wave patterns.
Marta is redefining abstract expressionism on her own terms. Her works are fun and experimental, spanning mediums and combining techniques such as painting, printmaking, digital art, and more. The bold, vibrant colors and focus on abstracted images come from an intuitive exploration of the interactions of colors, shapes, and textures in our world. Her works take the viewer to abstract worlds and imaginary lands. Originally from Warsaw, Poland, but since 2020, she is based in Summit, NJ. Marta discovered her passion for art in 2016 and since then she has studied art in art schools in Poland, the UK, and the US. Marta's artworks were exhibited during group shows in Europe and the US. Collectors of her work are also located on both continents. Apart from being an artist, Marta is also an intercultural trainer and coach
Janice La Motta is a visual artist who has balanced a forty year career as a practicing artist while serving in the positions of museum curator, gallerist, artistic director and most recently as executive director of a nonprofit art organization. She has exhibited her work in numerous solo and group exhibitions throughout the country. A native of New Jersey, La Motta is a BFA graduate of the Hartford Art School, CT. She lives and works in Ulster County, New York.
Mari Sarai is a Japanese Art photographer who has worked in New York, London, and Tokyo. MARI was born in Nara, Japan. She studied photography and English at Santa Monica College in Los Angeles when she was a teenager. After beginning her career as a photojournalist in New York, Mari moved back to Japan and transitioned to fashion photography. After 6 years fashion photographer's carrier in Tokyo, she relocated to London where she became a well-established fashion photographer, shooting for magazines such as i-D, Harper's Bazaar UK and Dazed & Confused. in 2014, she moved back to New York to seek her American dream with her family. Her work appearing in the likes of Interview Magazine and Vogue Japan, shooting likes of Adele, Scarlett Johansson, and in late Amy Winehouse.
James Ehling is an abstract collage artist who was born in Syracuse, New York and who currently lives and works in Framingham, Massachusetts. He received a BFA from Tufts University and a Studio Art Diploma from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. James works with acrylic, fabric and colored tissue paper to create complex and colorful compositions that give the eye just enough information to start drawing conclusions but not enough information to be completely certain what's it's seeing. James has work in private collections in Stockholm, Copenhagen, San Francisco and throughout New England.
Shadia Sabagh is an artist originally from Colombia who currently resides in Miami, Florida. She has a deep appreciation for nature and her work primarily revolves around capturing the intricate beauty of flora and fauna. Her art is characterized by its minimal, detail-oriented approach and abstract forms. Shadia's preferred medium is a combination of acrylic markers and paints, which she uses to create stunning works of art. Her freehand technique allows her to express herself in a fluid and natural manner, resulting in unique and captivating pieces.
New York City, 2000, I created fabric, 3D movable sculptures, showed them with artist group Skewville. The sculptures proved difficult for transport and storage, I began working on flat art pieces instead using fabric as the medium still. My work showed in various galleries and adding art to the streets as nom de plume Pufferella. I founded and curated Orchard Street Art Gallery and Factory Fresh. Recently my work has evolved, adding ink and paint to create “Sewn Paintings”.
Taiss Ghuliani is a painter living and working in Brooklyn, New York. She explores the emotional and psychological qualities of the everyday spaces around her and is interested in the meditative potential of color. She earned a BFA from SUNY Purchase in May 2020.
Roberto Alejandro Godinez is a Mexican artist born in San Francisco, based out of Brooklyn. A third wave impressionist oil painter, his work is the product of a life of artistry and creation. The motifs of his heavily textured and vibrant paintings are memories and emotions. He captures the complexities of these feelings and celebrates their beauty on canvas. They are a documentation of his thoughts, as well as a reflection of the healing that takes place during their creation.
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.
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.
MacDonald graduated with a BFA from Emily Carr University in Vancouver, BC, Canada. She has exhibited her meticulously crafted work throughout North America. A recipient of the Queen’s Art Fund New Work Grant (2019), MacDonald recently completed a 4heads residency on Governors Island, New York (2022). Based in New York, MacDonald creates compelling pieces characterized by dark humor, social satire, and an obsessive attention to detail. Her intimately scaled artworks belong in private collections throughout Canada and the U.S.
"I had a Museum show at the Islip Museum called Print Up Ladies. I was in the company of my life long idols such as Murray, Frankenthaler, Swoon, Yuskagave, and Bontecou to name a few. I have shown at St. Joseph’s College, MacArthur Airport, and Alfred Loen Gallery, as well as the Painting Center in Chelsea, and the Omni Gallery in Uniondale. I have exhibited at the Hecksher Museum Biennial, M. David and Company, Denise Bibro and George Billis Gallery."
What do a juicy fillet of salmon and a body half-submerged in bath water have in common? Through soft-colored, naturalistic paintings, Amy explores the beauty of female bodies in everyday life - the beauty of vulnerable, soft flesh itself safe from the glare of cameras and gloss of magazine pages.
Randall Stoltzfus learned to cross-stitch, garden, and paint houses from his Mennonite family in rural Virginia before graduating with highest distinction from UVA in 1993. After completing his MFA at American University in Washington, DC he moved to New York. Now he works in a studio in Brooklyn, where he makes art about light from multitudes of hand-painted circles. His 16th solo show, Widening, opened at Blank Space in New York City in the fall of 2019.
An anastomosis is a connection- an opening of tubes, vessels, branches, often used to define surgical steps. It’s also used to define Yana Ushakova’s latest body of work. In her figures she reshapes those bodily pathways in a way that bypasses the male gaze. Inspired by her chemotherapy experience, the painted forms embody survival, restructuring, and growth.
Chancy Glance is the creative efforts of artist couple Cydney & Craig DeBastiani. Based in Morgantown, WV, these self-taught artists rely on intuition and spirit in their process. Creating work individually and collaboratively, Chancy Glance strives to invoke serenity and happiness through their work. They utilize mediums such as acrylic paint, watercolors, ink, graphite, clay, and other mixed media to deliver ever-changing and evolving works of art. Along with being artists, they are also musicians, photographers, actors, animators, and nature lovers.
Seeing Lauren's large unstretched canvas as it hangs in the golden hour light is a poetic experience. As she brings out the canvases one by one and unrolls them, you can tell that she has a story to tell for each and every one. Then the shadows and ripples of the canvas blends in with the scribbles and stains of watercolor, the intensity of golden hour blurring outlines of objects. Also notice how she leaves graphite sketches underneath the paint. They are residues of time, the same way Lauren's paintings are footprints of memories and impressions.
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.
Justin Shull was born in Newport, New Hampshire in 1982 and currently lives and works in Traverse City, Michigan. Justin received a BA in Studio Art from Dartmouth College and a MFA in Visual Arts from Rutgers. His work has been exhibited and collected nationally, and he has won several national awards from the Joan Mitchell Foundation, the College Art Association, and the International Sculpture Center.
If something were to capture the essence of an everlasting battle between Godzilla vs Megazord vs set to Tame Impala, it would be Andrew Chan’s work. His style is graphic and bold: like an indie comic dipped in encaustic wax, his artworks evoke nostalgia and pop culture references in a satirical take on consumerism.
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.
Linda Lee Nicholas is a multidisciplinary artist who lives and works in New York. Her practice engages non-traditional processes in mixed media that speaks about nature, and the environment. Linda has a BFA from the School of Visual Arts, NYC and an MFA from Brooklyn College.
Theresa Bloise (born in Boston) received her BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design where she studied for a year in Rome as part of RISD’s European Honors Program. She has shown her work at Ortega y Gasset, Paradice Palase, the Bronx Museum of the Arts, Smack Mellon, Kentler International Drawing Space, PS122 Gallery and Governor’s Island.
Nikki was a musician most of his life. In 2014, he decided to teach himself painting by diving in headfirst with the approach of learning by doing. Embracing the unknown and trusting his intuition, he has been producing many works both haunting and decorative.
Born in 1984, Linden spent her youth in the urban Sonoran desert of Phoenix, Arizona before moving to Southern California to obtain her BA in Studio Art. She's since lived and worked across Europe, Asia, and Oceania. Linden's work has been published and exhibited internationally. She has participated in residencies at La Filature des Calquières (France), Tiapapata Art Centre (Samoa), Cowwarr Art Space (Australia), and Tenjinyama Art Studio (Japan). She currently lives in Mount Holly, Vermont.
Gail Winbury’s work has been seen in museum and gallery exhibitions throughout the States, Germany, London, UK, Athens, Greece, and Italy. Winbury has had multiple one and two-person exhibitions including, 73 See Gallery, Montclair, NJ, The Frechard Gallery, Pittsburgh, Pa., The College of Morris, Randolph NJ, and The Henrich Heine Haus, Germany, among others.
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.
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.
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.
Sarah Dineen holds a BFA from Montserrat College of Art and an MFA from the School of Visual Arts in New York. She has exhibited internationally and has been featured in art publications including Hyperallergic and New American Paintings.
An oscillator is a circuit that produces a repeated alternating waveform by converting electronic signals. Simply put, they generate and convey information, a theme that Brittany Kieler explores the limits of in her art as she delves into the inherent mysticism of human history. Electronics (or anything having to do with oscillators themselves) don't appear in her work at all, but her wavy line art is reminiscent of what one sounds like... if that oscillator became sentient and tried to teach philosophy. Waveform next to waveform, her black and white lithographic lines meld into organic shapes that are almost familiar (and some that are not).
Michelle Selwa is an artist and Brooklyn native currently based in New York City. Her work explores the ways technology affects our relationship with images and memory, and the anxiety of archiving images from rapidly degrading mediums.
Evan works from his studio in East Williamsburg, the back wall neatly lined with tools and the slightly sour smell of wood in the air. Considering his sculpture and design background, his command of unusual materials like soot residue, concrete, and spray doesn’t come as a surprise. But you may be surprised when his minimal, even digital looking, compositions start to unfold in poetic layers-- “bracing practice” indeed.
Christina's mixed-media works are engaged in a perpetual struggle to burst out of whatever shape that holds them together. A philosopher once said that any artwork is a battle between material and content - this cannot be truer when Christina uses fabric like khakis, linen, and yarn that usually function to clothe and decorate our bodies but in her works given freedom to emanate energy on their own. In a sense, her approach seems like a rebellion against the way we in the modern times tend to bend nature as an object of our own use. When given the smallest crevice, nature will re-emerge in its full majestic force.
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.
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