Exhibition
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Artworks
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Artists
Gideon Summerfield
Elaine Speirs
(b. 1967)

Eva Beresin
(b. 1955)

Richard Hambleton
(1952 – 2017)
Richard Hambleton was one of the most prominent and pioneering figures of the downtown New York art scene throughout the 1980's, along with his contemporaries Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat.

Liu Shuishi
(b. 1962)
Liu Shuishi (b. 1962, China) is a New York–based painter and installation artist whose work explores questions of consciousness, being, and self-reflection. Influenced by German and Abstract Expressionism as well as traditional Chinese calligraphy, his paintings feature elongated figures and abstract markings rendered in thick oil paint, combining bold, gestural brushwork with a romantic, emotionally charged palette. His practice is informed by Western philosophy, particularly the writings of Nietzsche, Kant, and Freud. Shuishi studied at the Xi’an Academy of Fine Arts in the 1980s, and a philosophical awakening in 2007 marked a turning point in his practice, shaping a visual language centered on the pursuit of absolute beauty. His work has been exhibited internationally, including at the Salon du Carrousel du Louvre and Art en Capital in Paris (2009), where he received a Silver Prize from the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts; the 56th Venice Biennale (2015); and his solo exhibitions "Thinking As Art Media" at the Today Art Museum in Beijing (2017) and "We All Exist" at the Zhuhai Museum in Zhuhai, China (2023). His works are held in notable collections including the Macao Foundation, the Chinese People’s Institute of Foreign Affairs, and the collection of former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.

Joseph Santore
(b. 1945)
Joseph Santore’s paintings speak to us of ourselves. They lift the shroud on humanity, and communicate with us on the very singular, unique nature of consciousness, and being embodied in this world.

Stephanie Monteith
(b. 1973)

Anders Scrmn Meisner
(b. 1981)
Describing his work as, “giant postcards of affection”, Meisner’s paintings are timeless in their subject matter – painted with a visual lexicon that echoes Minoan frescoes, or the walls of the exquisite structures of Pompeii.

George William Bell
(b. 1985)

Camille Tan
(b. 1990)

Frank Webster
(b. 1966)
Frank Webster is a devout chronicler of natural history. His numerous works capture the ephemeral and fragile qualities of our planet, simultaneously rendering us awestruck by their grandeur and sublime power.

Meeri Koutaniemi
Mansi Shah
Sophie Collé
Ole Aakjaer
(b. 1962)
Ole Aakjær is best known for his large-format, highly symbolic works that celebrate the power of women. The distinctive, figurative paintings rely on bold colors and iconography to convey sentiments of empathy, while simultaneously exploring the complexity and strength of their subjects.












































