All in art

Raul de Nieves

Inspired by the tribal cultures in New Guinea, De Nieves constructs a world where, like the river that indiscriminately gives and takes life, death is greeted with aplomb and full acceptance.

Ludmilla Cerveny

Ludmilla Cerveny builds images. Not drawings, neither photographs, the artist plays with the vocabulary and the specificities of each technique to create her own formal and aesthetic language.

Johannes Vogl

Vogl’s works border on the brink of chaos, but hold us in a suspension of a specific moment that questions the temporality of this—is this the preliminary, the after, or are we in media res?

Johan Deckmann

Copenhagen-based artist Johan Deckmann’s art is made up of text-heavy work that teeters on a visual narrative of sorts. Initially a psychotherapist, Deckmann’s work consists of fictional book covers with ironic and thought-provoking text tinted with dark humor.

Anton Reva

Reva’s constant experimentation of new processing of capturing and editing photos both with analog and digital photography results in an intermediary between old and new.

Ben Elliot

Ben Elliot is a self-taught artist born and currently based in Paris whose work revolves around contemporary youth culture, technology, and the organic relationship between the two.

Radomir Damnjan

Radomir Damnjan was born in 1935 in Mostar, Kingdom of Yugoslavia. He attended the Academy of Fine Arts in Belgrade and continued his studies as a Fulbright Scholar in Los Angeles and New York from 1971–1972.

Charlotte Barry

Through her practice, Charlotte Barry proposes us a reflection on sculpture, through her installations and drawings; the artist works in terms of masses and voids each spaces she uses as a support to her work.

Isamu Noguchi

Isamu Noguchi’s work reflects the ideas and ethos of Wabi-Sabi, which implies a beauty in the imperfect and instability of the natural. His work goes beyond function and asks us to interact with his work in different ways.