Ed Valentin's portraits speak to a contemporary audience about what it is to be a painting while evoking a whisper about beauty and imperfection, brokenness, and resilience.
Read MoreThrough washes of color and intricate line, characters and expressive moments emerge in the work of Storm Tharp.
Read MoreTrine Søndergaard is a Danish photo-based artist. Her photographic works are marked by a precision and sensibility that co-exist with an investigation of the medium of photography itself, its boundaries and what constitutes an image.
Read MoreStefan Sagmeister is a renowned Austrian-born US based contemporary graphic designer and typographer.
Read MoreJosé Luis Puche (SPAIN, 1976) has a PhD in art history. His career as an artist took off in 2005 when he held his first solo show in his home city.
Read MoreMartín Palottini is an Argentinian artist who mainly works in drawing.
Read MoreLucy Beecher Nelson investigates the social construct of domesticity and her own sense of dislocation within that construct through portraiture and pattern.
Read More“Lavely Miller paints figures that exist in moments of emotional action.” - Art Martin, Muskegon Museum of Art
Read MoreVirtuoso painter Alex Kanevsky captures movement and time’s constant flow in canvases that resist adherence to a single moment, or even a single reading.
Read MoreYuriy Ibragimov's layered images have a rare quality: they simultaneously capture both the complexity and the clarity of life.
Read MoreHelvie's work deals directly with the act of seeing, obsessive looking, and optical ambiguity.
Read MoreJefferson Hayman is an artist whose work explores the themes of nostalgia, common symbols, and memory.
Read MoreTo Richard Haines New York City is an endless runway. When he first moved to the city to pursue illustration, he instead found a successful career as a fashion designer.
Read MoreEdmondson is a British artist.
After a 4 year stint in NY, she now lives and works in London where she has been since the early 80s.
Ellen de Meijer depicts a pervasive social behavior that she calls Kitsch – with manifestations of wealth, consumerism, and the importance of status and possessions. Kitsch is the lipstick of society.
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