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ArtMuse NextGen Artist Radar

 
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Artmuse NextGen

Artist Radar

Meet the artists our eyes are on now!

The work of these artists is priced between $250 and $15,000— perfect for the aspiring collector or a veteran looking to electrify an existing collection with fresh voices and exciting talent.

Email samantharkohl@gmail.com to inquire about the artists below or for additional help collecting!


FEATURED ARTIST:

Andie Dinkin

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Meet Andie Dinkin. The Los Angeles born, RISD-trained, New York-based artist creates candle-lit worlds filled with bacchanalia, celebration, food, wine and love. Dinkin’s detailed paintings and drawings continue to unfold with each look: there are countless vignettes to discover in these elegant scenes of Dionysian decadence.

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Looking at Dinkin’s work, one is reminded of both Toulouse-Lautrec for her masterful crowd scenes and Chagall for her ability to create a human pictorial universe with warmth and tenderness.

Dinkin’s work is perfect for our time: as we enter a Roaring Twenties of our own, these intensely-alive works are imbued with a profound, sensitive and intimate sense of joie-de-vivre.

Get in touch to learn more about Andie's work and visit her work in person! The Hollywood bistro Gigi’s commissioned Dinkin to create an incredible mural that takes up their walls and ceiling. The Fort Greene eatery Evelina has also commissioned Dinkin to take on a site-specific project, more details to come.

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Pictured: Ghosts at Marie Antoinette’s Puppet Show (above); Pool Party (middle); detail from the artist’s mural at Gigi’s, Los Angeles (below) all courtesy of the artist

ARTISTS ON OUR RADAR

Meg Lionel Murphy

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Meg Lionel Murphy (b. 1992), born and based in Wisconsin, depicts a vibrant, fantasy world where violence transforms women into heroic giants, flipping the nature of trauma on its head.

These works are a part of Lionel Murphy’s own survival and means of healing from past traumas as she depicts a world where women have become so large that their trauma can no longer be silenced or ignored. In-so-doing, these paintings act as “good luck charms" and “talismans of growth” to the artist and her viewers.

Be in touch with us about Meg's work

Pictured: Fire, 2021 (above); Lilly, 2021 (below) courtesy of The Untitled Space

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Eric Hibit

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Eric Hibit (b. 1976, Rochester, NY) is one of the many exciting artists to come out of Yale’s MFA program. Hibit’s work is colorful, textured and imbued with humor and joy: the artist says, “being gay means celebrating my way of looking at the world and rendering it with all the care, love, perversity, splendor, and joy that I can muster.”

Engaging with the legacies of still life and representational painting, Hibit often imbues playful suggestiveness into his work as he does a sensuous interplay between textures, materials, colors and patterns.

Be in touch with us about Eric's work

Pictured: Blue Pearls of Corn, 2019 (above) courtesy of Dinner Gallery

Frances Goodman

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Frances Goodman (b. 1975, Johannesburg, South Africa) works with historically feminine materials, such as acrylic nails, false eye-lashes, sequins and jewelry, to create playful, intelligent works that explore the relationships between “femininity, costuming, and role-playing.”

Goodman’s newest body of work takes up make-up and makeovers as their subject matter, tracing make-up’s lineage from niche subcultures and drag to the mainstream, ever-present in our Instagram and TikTok feeds. Many of these new works are made entirely out of sequins, exhibiting exquisite and mesmerizing detail.

Be in touch with us about Frances' work

Pictured: Mmmm, 2021 & detail | courtesy of Richard Tattinger Gallery

Alicia Adamerovich

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Brooklyn-based Alicia Adamerovich (b. 1989, Latrobe, PA) creates surrealist masterpieces that explore the psychological effects environments can have on us.

In Adamerovich’s work, time, space and objects appear to converge and anthropomorphize with humor and a feminist understanding. The larger paintings absorb us, and we peer further into Adamerovich’s smaller pastel works enveloped by a beautiful wooden frame.

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Be in touch with us about Alicia's work

Pictured: Roommate with a View, 2020 (above); Good Pain, 2021 courtesy of the artist (below)

Yulia Iosilzon

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Yulia Iosilzon (b. 1992) was born in Moscow and spent her formative years in Israel before moving to London for art school, where she is still based today.

Yulia’s lyrical, emotive paintings on ceramics and silks picture the artist’s vision of paradise, informed by Greek and Roman mythology, children’s stories, theater design and nature. Her latest body of work incorporates a fresh and light color palette and lyrical brushwork that makes the soul sing.

Be in touch with us about Yulia's work

Pictured: Last Season’s Petals, 2021 courtesy of Carvalho Park

Igor Hosnedl

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Berlin-based artist Igor Hosnedl creates fantasies (most recently based off of childhood fairy tales) whose narratives unfold pictorially, in nonlinear ways.

With both his larger paintings and smaller works on paper, Hosnedl’s transports his viewers into a familiar yet surreal world as rich stories emerge from ornament. These works activates one’s subconscious through Hosnedl’s convergence of spatial planes and dreamy pigments the artist mixes himself.

Be in touch with us about Igor’s work

Pictured: Wise Reptile, 2021 courtesy of hunt kastner

For more information on ArtMuse NextGen, please contact Samantha Kohl, samantharkohl@gmail.com

Written by Samantha Kohl. Samantha Kohl is spearheading ArtMuse NextGen and is here to introduce you to the most exciting artists and comes to us with a background at Hauser & Wirth, Andrew Kreps Gallery, Judd Foundation and Christie’s.

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