Artists
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Salvador Dali
Dalí's artistic repertoire included painting, graphic arts, film, sculpture, design and photography, at times in collaboration with other artists. He also wrote fiction, poetry, autobiography, essays and criticism. -
Andy Warhol
Warhol (1928-1987) was an US painter, film-maker and author, and a leading figure in the Pop Art movement. -
Pablo Picasso
Pablo Picasso (b. 1881, Spain) is considered to be one of the most famous painters in the twentieth century. In addition to painting, Picasso was also a printmaker, ceramicist, stage designer, poet and playwright. -
Dominika Koncewicz
Dominika Koncewicz is a London based artist. In the daylight, Dominika works as a data analyst, while evenings are reserved for her soul urges. -
Emsky
Ema is an emerging self-taught Slovak artist who goes by the alias, Emsky. She specialises in mixed media, working between London and Barcelona. -
Greta Gurnaite
Greta Gurnaite uses art as means of self-expression. With years of experimentation, she discovered abstract perfectionism as an ideal medium to reach the minds and hearts of others. -
Bea Bonafini
Bea is a London-based Italian artist, working across painting, drawing, sculpture, textiles and installations. -
Lorein
Lorein believes her paintings are a powerful catalyst for positive change in the world. -
Nadya Lambreva
Her artwork highlights her love for the human eye, the female features and the devine feminine. It’s a combination of color, texture and symbolism. -
Reda Pakstyte
Reda Pakstyte is a photographer who has travelled the world and lived in places such as Milan and Hong Kong and is currently settled in London. -
Lenka Rayn H.
She works mainly in portraiture and documentary. Her portraiture is strongly inspired by pictorialism and 17th and 18th century paintings. -
Zvonimir Matich
Zvonimir doesn't represent the things he paints, he lives them. He is more interested in suggesting, in creating attention that moves the spirit. -
Konrad Wyrebek
Wyrebek’s large-format abstract paintings examine the relationship of mark-makings between the emotional artist's hand and rational technology. -
William Krasnal
William Krasnal’s paintings and drawings are full of colourful contemporary edits of realistic and historical painting. Everything he paints originates from specific situations, events, images and views, from books, from the Internet, from newspapers, from the street and events from 20th century history. -
Charles Howard-Keyes
Charles Howard-Keyes (b. London, 1987) is an artist and architect based in Berlin, Germany. Charles' intrigue in the urban and metropolis is mostly captured through his photography. -
Agnese Graudina
Agnese Graudina is a London based artist, designer, and poet specializing in Indian contemporary art, ceramics, and writing. -
Aisha Christison
Christison’s dreamlike spaces of the canvas are collaged and fragmented. At times the figures and symbols give way to psychological landscapes and still lives, in others the thematics and motifs of the Baroque are woven into theatrical tableau. -
Ketna Patel
Ketna Patel is a highly prolific British-Indian multi media POP Artist, often referred to as Asia’s answer to Andy Warhol. -
Max Jamali
Max Jamali is a Luxury Artist based in Toronto, with an award-winning background in fashion photography, with his art work showcased in Toronto, Miami, L.A. and Dubai. -
Elizabeth Orjaliza
Elisabeth is an aspiring artist from the Philippines who wants to help the charities supporting those who suffer from Covid-19 through her arts. -
Rufus
Rufus works in multiple styles which enable him to record everyday experiences in new ways. He paints a diary of his interests and influences, from songs and books to conversations and walks with people. -
Nadav Drukker
Nadav Drukker is a Theoretical Physics Professor based at Kings College London. He creates unusual vessels or pots in clay as a means to communicate his research to a wider audience. -
Sanjay Sundram
Sanjay works with traditional media such as watercolours and oils, but frequently creates Augmented reality works and installations too. -
Oliver Jeffers
Humour and curiosity are underlying themes throughout Oliver's practice. While he does seriously explore the ways in which the human mind understands its world, the execution of his work often involves some sort of comic relief. -
Jennifer Mehigan
Initially trained in graphic design and art education, her work spans multiple platforms, entangling 3D modelling, stock objects and images, text, textiles, video, painting, sound, scent, and installation. -
Michaela Yearwood-Dan
Yearwood-Dan's works tend to explore themes of class, culture/race, gender and nature, as well as love, loss and reflection. -
Artful Skecha
Artful Skecha (Randeep Singh Sohal) is a London based artist whose art is used as a platform to express himself freely and network with people from around the world. Vision is one of the purest forms of connection and it’s this underlying element that motivates his work. -
Mike Ballard
Signage is a recurring theme within his work, in his paintings and sculptures, Ballard aims to bring our attention to the visual noise that influences a fundamental experience of the everyday urban environment. -
Anna Freeman Bentley
Her work has been included in prestigious prizes and institutional exhibitions such as the East London Painting Prize, the Prague Biennale and the Bloomberg New Contemporaries. -
Gurpreet Kaur
Gurpreet is inspired by nature with a spiritual foundation. She is best known for her bespoke watercolour floral art. -
Hannah Rose Thomas
Hannah painted portraits of refugees she had met in Jordan, to show the people behind the global crisis, whose personal stories are often shrouded by statistics. -
Ilga Leimanis
Montreal-born Ilga Leimanis is a Peckham-based visual artist working in drawing and painting, with an interest in identity and society. -
Lara Julian
Born and raised in Siberia, Lara Julian had a successful career in the banking industry before dedicating herself to painting full time from 2009. -
Nathan Eastwood
Eastwood draws inspiration from the Kitchen Sink Painters of the 1950s – his minimal, monochromatic enamel paintings aim to reflect his social realities and are allegories for our everyday existence. -
Lydia Blakeley
Blakeley uses paint to reflect the present, which is saturated with snapshots of hyper-reality, and by using the medium as a response to popular culture. -
Kate Dunn
Kate uses painting to look at how we interact; concerned with the potential to be passive in the age of information overload, she paints to fight her own passivity. -
Hannah Murgatroyd
Her images move through seasons, mise-en-scène and emotions, led by a cast of male and female protagonists who spring from a personal vision of the figure as told through the history of art, popular culture and a life lived. -
Scarlett Bowman
Bowman is known to morph her abstract reliefs by playfully rearranging them, effectively undermining notions of archiving. -
George Rouy
George Rouy’s dancing and fighting figures curl and contort into the confines of the canvas boundary. Rather than showing an explicit narrative, the seductive rendering of form and shape in his works takes on metaphorical significance. -
Anousha Payne
Modernist forms echo in the ceramics of Anousha Payne, but an understanding of them as a 20th Century schema is limiting. -
Chica Seal
Working in painting and sculpture, Chica draws on the female perspective from mythology, medieval folklore and storytelling often referencing Art History; taking inspiration from literature, and recorded writings of female lives from the past. -
Lucas Dupuy
Lucas Dupuy (b. London, 1992) is an artist based in London. Dupuy’s practice explores the relationship between language and dyslexia. He investigates his past experiences with learning to read and write. -
Ben Edmunds
Tugging at contemporary manifestations of mythology and systems of belief, his work is chiefly characterised by its combining the “holy”, almost archaic, formal modes of Modernist Abstract Expressionism, colour field painting and Minimalism, with the highly stylised and contemporary accents of extreme sports and fashion. -
Jonathan Kelly
Kelly draws on the earliest art, the Palaeolithic, as it looks beyond today’s complexities to more universal concerns of life, death and sexuality. -
Rae Hicks
Rae Hicks takes the forms that most often appear in ornamental pictures, as well as those canonised by the historically established categories of ‘still life’ and ‘landscape’. -
Sola Olulode
Sola Olulode (b. 1996) lives and works in South London. Olulode's paintings are nuanced and tender visions of intimacy and community.