painter

Pietro Cavalcanti

Pietro Cavalcanti - Timestamp

Born in Brazil and now living in Portugal, Pietro Cavalcanti describes his practice as a form of attention. A drawer, researcher, teacher, and lifelong observer, he approaches art as a way of tuning into rhythms that already exist within us. His drawings, calligraphic forms, and organic figures emerge not from rigid planning but from a […]

Kevin Umaña

Kevin Umaña - Timestamp

Kevin Umaña did not plan on becoming the artist he is today. His path moved through architecture school, printmaking, photography, graffiti, ceramics, construction jobs, and years of uncertainty before arriving at the hybrid ceramic paintings he is now known for. For Umaña, the work developed less from a single vision and more from persistence, experimentation,

Shuyao Huang

Shuyao Huang - Timestamp

Born in China and now based in New York City, Shuyao Huang approaches painting less as a pursuit of outcomes and more as a daily necessity. What began as an ambition to study fashion design shifted after arriving in New York, where teachers encouraged her toward fine art. At Pratt Institute, Huang developed both a

Mason Dowling

Mason Dowling - Timestamp

Mason Dowling approaches painting like a risk. Not in theory, but in practice, where each move has the potential to undo everything that came before it. There is no fixed image he is working toward, no clean endpoint. The work is built through a series of decisions that could just as easily collapse the painting

Noel W. Anderson

Noel Anderson - Timestamp

There’s a moment in talking to Noel W. Anderson where everything shifts from art as object to art as something closer to confession. Not performance, not presentation, but release. For him, making work isn’t about building toward a career milestone or chasing validation. It’s about leaving something behind so it doesn’t follow you. Something you

Adrien Manso

Adrien Manso - Timestamp

Adrien Manso describes making art as an impulse you follow without overthinking, the same way you would eat when you are hungry or swim when you want to swim. This intuitive rhythm defines his entire practice, moving fluidly between drawing, painting, design, and craft without hierarchy. Born and raised in the southwest of France, Manso’s

Madjeen Isaac

Madjeen Isaac - Timestamp

There’s a belief in Madjeen Isaac’s work that the world, as it exists, is not fixed. That it can be reimagined, reassembled, and cared for differently. Her paintings don’t just depict environments; they propose them. Born, raised, and based in Brooklyn, Isaac builds immersive, layered scenes that draw from her Haitian American identity, her upbringing

Amy Bravo

Amy Bravo - Timestamp

Amy Bravo’s work unfolds as a raw, layered exploration of emotion, memory, and identity. An ever-evolving practice rooted in intuition, material history, and lived experience. Raised between Queens and New Jersey, Bravo draws deeply from her upbringing, where domestic spaces, family objects, and cultural inheritance shaped her earliest understanding of creativity. Her work today still

Björn Heyn

Björn Heyn - Timestamp

Björn Heyn does not describe his studio as a workplace. He calls it a playground. For him, that distinction matters. Being an artist, he explains, means holding on to a particular state of mind that can easily disappear in adulthood. Bills arrive, emails pile up, the mailbox fills with responsibilities that feel far removed from

Hugo Winder-Lind

Hugo Winder-Lind - Timestamp

Hugo Winder-Lind does not talk about art as if it is something that can be solved. In fact, he begins from the opposite position. The expectation that someone else might hold the answers, or that there might be a place to go where everything becomes clear, is something he has long since abandoned. The reality,