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Eriko Hattori (they/them) is a Pittsburgh-based artist. Hattori uses imagery, symbolism, and folklore to investigate the tension between their queer identity and Japanese heritage. With a rotating set of avatars, these icons act as anchors for conversations about perversion, desire, and the fetishism of bodies. They also serve as ways to honor women yokai and demons in Japanese folklore.
Warner Ball is a Michigan-based artist and graduate of Albion College, where he graduated with a focus in photography. Warner is a curator, as well as an artist, and enjoys coordinating meaningful collections of work that explore important topics like climate and identity. He employs a number of media, including photography and sculpture, to explore queerness and domesticity, the major conceptual foundation of his work for the past few years.
Quynn Douglas Dale was born in Springfield, MA and received their BA from Grinnell College with time at Sorbonne Université in Paris, France. Their work has been exhibited with Fiber Art Now, The American Craft Council, PBS, NPR, The Sebastopol Center for the Arts California, The Galesburg Civic Art Center, North Dakota Museum of Art, 21c Museum Hotel, Arrowmont School of Arts & Crafts, Duane Reed Gallery and the World Trade Center in Manhattan. They currently work in St. Louis, MO.
Tyler Sorgman is interested in exploring how the landscape can act as a symbol for the psychological. Sorgman’s recent work includes imagery of plant growth, mountain ranges, storms, and forest fires. A solitary home is often set into these imagined spaces. The scenes Sorgman creates are meant to feel both playful yet perilous; dreamy yet uneasy. Throughout Sorgman’s body of work, there is a play between flatness, depth, and the simplification of complex forms. He builds up layers of paint through repetitive marks and symbols, and sees their accumulation as a reflection of his thoughts, feelings, and anxieties at the time of each individual work’s creation.
Amy Turner is a self-taught artist born and raised in Los Angeles, creating fine art, commercial design and commission pieces around the world. Amy works in mixed media, diving into new textures, palettes and forms of construction and fabrication.
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.
Cole Puetz is an American artist based in Tucson, Arizona. His depictions of the modern queer experience offer an access point into the subconscious mind of both artist and viewer. Objects and symbols within his work leave vague imprints of familiarity as if existing within a memory. Sharp divergences in style and specificity form a detailed collage of dynamic, powerfully charged imagery. Each buried, unseen detail unlocks a new door, revealing private, concealed thoughts and desires. Puetz’s creative practice is a form of inner contemplation and subconscious realization. Internal conflicts existing in the present moment of the creation process are transformed into emblematic visual stories that bring the artist and viewer on a journey of self discovery. Each fragment having separate connotations that merge to form a larger, complex narrative.
Genevieve Antonello is a contemporary abstract expressionist painter based in the vibrant art community of Northeast Minneapolis, Minnesota. Genevieve’s abstract compositions challenge observers to uncover their own emotional landscapes. “You, the viewer, are as important as the work itself. Your perspective brings meaning to the work,” she explains. The work becomes a collaborative process changing with each observer emphasizing the power of perspective and the mutual influence between creator and viewer.
Koi King is a differently abled non-binary Multi-media Artist. Koi is a self taught artist- never having the opportunity to study art in a traditional setting, Koi turned to the world and their experiences to teach them. Koi’s art has been spread across the world. From London, to Paris and Brazil displayed in homes of like minded thinkers.
Ler Chang is an artist focusing on representational art. Growing up in China, with experience working in the animation industry, Ler is especially good at figures, anatomy, and body movement. Different cultures, educational environments, and multiple industries involved all helped build Ler’s artworks visually enjoyable and conceptually meaningful. Ler’s works focus more on common issues, creating surreal scenes with storytelling. Ler takes art as a powerful tool to influence people’s minds, and even change the world.
Hillary Hany is an abstract finger-painting artist based in Mansfield, Connecticut. A creative since childhood, her artistry shifted in her late twenties after enduring several trying life events. Her work embodies expressionism through vivid colors, layered textures, dynamic figures, and emotion-driven themes. She finds inspiration in Jackson Pollock, Vincent Van Gogh, and her own transformative healing through self-expression. She has exhibited her pieces in galleries across Hartford, Connecticut, earning recognition for an award-winning piece, ‘Crawling Out of Darkness: A Universal Effort.’
Dobee Snowber holds a BA in Intellectual History/Feminist Studies from Kirkland College and a BFA in Printmaking /Painting from the Maine College of Art, Portland, Maine. She has participated in several residencies including at the Vermont Studio School and Penland Art Center. She has shown extensively in various venues including galleries, museums, group collaborations and solo exhibits and is part of several private collections in the US and abroad. She is currently represented by SHOH Gallery, Berkeley, CA and Mary Praytor Gallery, Greenville, SC. Dobee is currently working as a Mixed media artist, making time whenever possible to create. She has lived in the Bay area for over 25 years. Prior to that she lived in Santa Fe and various and sundry places east of the Rockies, including Maine, NY, Washington DC and New Jersey.
Hana Yoshikawa (b. 2002) is a painter currently based in Brooklyn, New York. She received her BA at Bard College in 2024. Hana has attended the Yale Norfolk School of Art, an artist residency in Norfolk, CT, and has studied painting and drawing at the New York Studio School.
If you’ve ever seen a sunflower that’s seemed to mutate and stretch in all directions (gardeners call it fasciation), you’ll recognise that odd, abstract beauty in nature that shines in Raúl Ortiz’s paintings. Raúl’s paintings strip away sections to reveal even more colorfully patterned silhouettes. Though his earlier works took the shape of natural subjects like flowers, more indistinct shapes take center stage, playing with repetition as well as vivid color.
Kelly McGovern is an artist working in photography, collage, installation, performance and video. She has exhibited nationally and internationally in New York, Philadelphia, Washington DC, Portland Oregon, Rome, London, Edinburgh and Cluj-Napoca, Romania. Her work has been published in periodicals in Portland, New York, Philadelphia, Montreal, Amsterdam and London. Kelly received her BFA from Moore College of Art and Design in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and her MFA from Pacific Northwest College of Art in Portland, Oregon. She currently teaches in Philadelphia.
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.
Katasi is a multidisciplinary visual artist whose practice spans digital art rooted in analog collage and large-scale abstract paintings. Katasi is also a UX design lead at Google and a UX instructor at the School of Visual Arts (SVA), where she teaches through the lens of Inclusive Design. Her overall practice across both fields is a continuous effort to honor individual narratives and create space for all voices in both the physical and digital spaces.
Lori Larusso is an American visual artist working with themes of domesticity and foodways. Her body of work encompasses paintings and installations that explore issues of class, gender, and anthropocentrism, and how these practices both reflect and shape culture. Larusso’s work is exhibited widely in the US and is included in various public and private collections. She has been awarded numerous residency fellowships, and awards.Larusso earned an MFA from MICA and a BFA from the University of Cincinnati’s DAAP..
Cynthia Sumner graduated from the San Francisco Art Institute in sculpture, and has exhibited work on both the East and West Coasts, as well as in Louisiana. Her artistic journey began in childhood and has evolved through an experimentation with materials and deep a curiosity. While living in New Orleans, she developed a thriving children’s art program using recycled materials and hosted grant-funded art workshops for teachers. There, she collaborated on site-specific installations and collaborative projects before returning to California and shifting towards two-dimensional work. In addition to her artistic pursuits, she stays actively engaged with the local arts community through volunteering and mentoring. She's previously worked as an arts educator for various organizations both in New Orleans and the Bay Area and founded a co-working artist space, Art Scene Studio in Fort Bragg. Fostering creativity and community is an extension of her belief in our interconnection and that each one of us matters.
Monica Carrier (b. 1978 Philadelphia, PA) has exhibited widely including solo exhibitions at A.I.R. Gallery and Thomas Hunter Project Space in NYC and FjellerupIBund & Grund in Denmark. She has been awarded fellowships, residencies and grants from Hunter College, A.I.R. Gallery and Arts@Renaissance. She regularly curates, most recently at PeepSpace, a contemporary gallery that she founded in 2020. Carrier holds a BFA from Tyler School of Art and an MFA from Hunter College.
She infuses her lifelong love of myths and stories and uprooted background into her paintings. Leaning into the mysterious, her work explores existential dread and beautiful imperfection.
Nicholas Franklin is a self-taught abstract artist based in Kansas City, MO, and the visionary behind Perfect Piece Studios. His dynamic compositions capture the essence of movement through fluid acrylics, mixed media, and vibrant hues. Franklin’s work explores the balance between spontaneity and purpose, inviting viewers into an immersive experience. His art, exhibited in galleries across the U.S., reflects perseverance, energy, and the power of storytelling through abstraction.
Francisco Donoso is a Florida-based transnational artist, curator, and educator originally from Ecuador. A DACA recipient, he’s exhibited widely, including at El Museo del Barrio and The Bronx Museum. He was a 2025 New Voices artist at The Print Center New York and curated Obsesión! Labor as Pleasure at apexart NYC (Sept 5–Oct 25, 2025). He was a Van Lier Fellow and completed notable residencies at LMCC, Wave Hill and Stony Brook University. Donoso's work is held in major public and private collections.
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