Tony Toscani’s Giants Face the Crushing Weight of the World
Once deciding art was his calling, Toscani embraced abstract ideas about portraiture and how he could make this discipline entirely his own.
Read More Matthew Palladino Breaks the Mold of Artistic Expression
He rearranges casts and colors either virtually or in reality to create masterpieces exploring contemporary themes of the body and technology.
Read More Sam McKinniss Recollects Celebrities in Their Golden Age at JTT
With his most recent show at JTT in the Lower East Side, Sam McKinnis explores figuration painting by memorializing iconic celebrity subjects.
Read More Miles Jaffe Introduces Neopop Wall Sculptures
And, yes, it's just as cool as it sounds. Miles Jaffe creates enormous tubes of paint and they're "dripping" everywhere.
Read More The Impenetrable Stare of Cinga Samson
They're self-portraits, where Samson hopes to share his own journey and have others resonate with that, but the empty gray eyes imply an anonymous impenetrability.
Read More Yves Tessier Tackles Antiquity in Modernism
His simplistic use of line and color depicts figures in everyday settings. This, he says, represents a direct way to view his world.
Read More Kate Gottgens Plays with Fragmentation and Disjointedness
Kate Gottgens paints scenes that have an ephemeral nature, almost as if they could change at any moment and the scene beyond would continue to play out in its own world.
Read More Jennifer Guidi Invites You on A Spiritual Journey At Gagosian
Abstraction is Guidi's ideal form of expression, and each of these works is backed with such emotion that the mere shapes are all you need in order to make sense of her message.
Read More Daisy Dodd-Noble Presents A Whimsical Environmentalism
Exploring the larger topic of environmentalism, her surrealist scenes give way to an alternate reality.
Read More The Characters in Ding Shilun’s Works are Regarded as Impossible Miracles
Ding Shilun (b. 1998) lives and works between London and Guangzhou. Shilun harnesses his heritage, current events and a global history of art to create large and detailed pictorial works depicting the absurdity of daily life. His unique concurrence of the mythological, the historical and the everyday allow the emergence of an imaginary world with…
Read More Nai-Jen Yang Evokes a Sense of Magic and Serenity
Nai-Jen Yang (b.1996 Taipei, Taiwan) studied at the Royal College of Art in London. To Yang, it’s about the process as she sees painting as a way to collect, preserve, and/or pack up fleeting moments in life. Instead of the final image she made on the surface of the canvas, it’s the experience she had…
Read More Cedric Rivrain
Cédric Rivrain (b. 1977, Limoges) is a french artist who lives and works in Paris. He began drawing at the age of 18, and started his career working as an illustrator for publications such as Dazed & Confused, Vogue, etc., and in fashion studios as a designer and illustrator, notably for Martine Sitbon, Hermès and…
Read More Ji Woo Kim Explores Themes of Identity in the Context of Race and Ethnicity
New York-based artist Ji Woo Kim explores themes of identity in the context of race and ethnicity while questioning the concept of home in relation to her own background as a first-generation immigrant. Through her work, she examines resulting factors such as cultural identification and social dynamics, as well as their effects on one’s growth…
Read More HyeGyeong Choi’s Paintings are Deeply Rooted in Romanticism and Womanhood
HyeGyeong Choi (b. 1986, Seoul, South Korea) lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. As a Korean woman, Choi has set out to defy what’s accepted in Korean culture, by incorporating body image, identity, gender and sexuality in her paintings. Drawing inspiration from nature and landscape, Choi has complimented her subject matter with magical and bright…
Read More Finding New Meaning in Kristy M Chan’s Paintings
Kristy M Chan (b.1997, Hong Kong) currently lives between London and Hong Kong. Her densely built-up oil paintings combine narratives of migration and displacement, all while depicting her unique style and use of vibrant colors. Tell us a little bit about yourself. Where are you from originally and when did art first enter your life?…
Read More Michael Hilsman’s Paintings Hint at the Relationship between the Physical and Metaphysical
Michael Hilsman’s work integrates and expands upon the formats of classical painting, in particular the genres of portraiture and still life. Through incorporating elements at once ambiguous and curiously emblematic—plants, shells, and feathers, pieces of clothing, body parts—Hilsman has developed a visual vocabulary that oscillates between naturalism and expressionism. His paintings hint at the artistic…
Read More Dylan Solomon Kraus is Curious about the Universe
Dylan Solomon Kraus (b. 1987 in Ohio, US) is an artist who lives and works between Berlin and New York, creating paintings using rich color and symbolism to channel his curiosity about the universe. Solomon Kraus compares the symbols that recur throughout his work to the pictorial language of hieroglyphs. The repetition of images in…
Read More Leonard Baby’s Work Deals with Femininity, Androgyny, Identity, and Feelings of Otherness
Leonard Baby is a New York-based painter whose work deals with femininity, androgyny, identity, and feelings of otherness. These concepts are presented with light, primary color, and subject matter reminiscent of the sheltered and privileged world in which Baby was raised. Baby’s paintings are inspired primarily by European cinema, oftentimes alluding to the fact that…
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