SPACE 776

1st floor
New York 10002 New York
United States
Phone : 9172612048
Mobile Ph. : +1 718 578 1195
Email : info@space776.com
URL : www.space776.com/

Jourdain Lee   (owner)
Dasha Bazanova   (director)
Oliver Kheem   (manager)

About

Artist and Director Jordain Jongwon Lee opened Space776 in Bushwick, Brooklyn in 2013. In 2020, the gallery relocated to its current residence at 37-39 Clinton Street on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Space776 also opened a location in Seoul, South Korea in 2020 in accordance with the gallery’s mission to promote the international exchange between local New York artists and the Korean artistic sphere.
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Marco Bras Matrix

Marco Bras’s hand-carved sculptures are an allegory to human beings and their spirit. Bras polishes the imperfection of the material, the rustic stone, to illuminate the beauty of a spiritual body. Through his creations, he transmits spiritual signs and symbols, dialogues of nature and the universe. Carving the stone is a mystic performance and a combination of ancient techniques and modern technology. 

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Marco Bras Untitled

Marco Bras’s hand-carved sculptures are an allegory to human beings and their spirit. Bras polishes the imperfection of the material, the rustic stone, to illuminate the beauty of a spiritual body. Through his creations, he transmits spiritual signs and symbols, dialogues of nature and the universe. Carving the stone is a mystic performance and a combination of ancient techniques and modern technology. 

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Marco Bras The Seed
Marco Bras’s hand-carved sculptures are an allegory to human beings and their spirit. Bras polishes the imperfection of the material, the rustic stone, to illuminate the beauty of a spiritual body. Through his creations, he transmits spiritual signs and symbols, dialogues of nature and the universe. Carving the stone is a mystic performance and a combination of ancient techniques and modern technology. 

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Kwang Young Chun Aggregation 02-N119
Chun Kwang Young's tactile, crystalline paper sculptures represent human conflict and confrontations of the past, present, and future. Both "a product of human knowledge and experience" and "a compromise with reality," the series draws on the artist's training in abstract painting as well as a specific memory that influenced his paper-working career: the medicine bundles carried by Korean apothecaries during his childhood. Chun Kwang Young sees analogies to chemistry and the human condition in the meshing and clashing of these paper parcels. Fragments of passages taken from classics of Korean and Chinese philosophy are printed on mulberry paper and dyed with tea and other natural dyes. This gives the impression that these sculptures are naturally occurring; organically beautiful yet contaminated by humanity. Chun Kwang Young is "expressing the power of our ancestors' spirit and reflecting on a painful modern society."

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Rimm Chae Mountains and islands

The mountainous landscape spanning China and Korea is an understated wonder with fundamental components that contribute to a unique regional aesthetic. Tall bulbous rocks rise stoically from the landscape, harmoniously interrupting delicate deciduous woodlands. The juxtaposition seen throughout this temperate environment continues to generate a particular exotic mystique.
With a career spanning over thirty years, Chae Rimm draws inspiration from both scenery and memory. She experiments with Eastern philosophies regarding humanity and natural cycles and explores the harmony of the two. Her new body of work, "Laquered Landscapes," from the series Mountains and Island, features a variety of mediums including painting, sculpture, and jewelry. In this body of work, fraught with intense color and simplified lines, Chae Rimm interprets natural processes of transformation expressed by mountains and islands over time. By incorporating the five colors of Korea—yellow, blue, red, white, and black—these works make reference to yin and yang harmony.

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Rimm Chae Mountains and islands

 The mountainous landscape spanning China and Korea is an understated wonder with fundamental components that contribute to a unique regional aesthetic. Tall bulbous rocks rise stoically from the landscape, harmoniously interrupting delicate deciduous woodlands. The juxtaposition seen throughout this temperate environment continues to generate a particular exotic mystique.

 With a career spanning over thirty years, Chae Rimm draws inspiration from both scenery and memory. She experiments with Eastern philosophies regarding humanity and natural cycles and explores the harmony of the two. Her new body of work, "Laquered Landscapes," from the series Mountains and Island, features a variety of mediums including painting, sculpture, and jewelry. In this body of work, fraught with intense color and simplified lines, Chae Rimm interprets natural processes of transformation expressed by mountains and islands over time. By incorporating the five colors of Korea—yellow, blue, red, white, and black—these works make reference to yin and yang harmony.

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Kwang Young Chun
Chun Kwang Young's tactile, crystalline paper sculptures represent human conflict and confrontations of the past, present, and future. Both "a product of human knowledge and experience" and "a compromise with reality," the series draws on the artist's training in abstract painting as well as a specific memory that influenced his paper-working career: the medicine bundles carried by Korean apothecaries during his childhood. Chun Kwang Young sees analogies to chemistry and the human condition in the meshing and clashing of these paper parcels. Fragments of passages taken from classics of Korean and Chinese philosophy are printed on mulberry paper and dyed with tea and other natural dyes. This gives the impression that these sculptures are naturally occurring; organically beautiful yet contaminated by humanity. Chun Kwang Young is "expressing the power of our ancestors' spirit and reflecting on a painful modern society."

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Enzo Lee Apple, Chapter |||, 2023
The apple has always been a rich source of symbolism throughout human history. As the fruit offered by the tree of knowledge from the Garden of Eden (with freewill) set into motion all of our conflicts between good and evil; it symbolized Newton's genius, Steve Jobs' creativity, Snow White's poison, William Tell’s pin-point accuracy and so much more. The simplicity of an apple becomes the cornucopia of complexity. In this "appleappleappleAppleapple" painting series by Enzo Lee, the artist expresses our uniqueness and  individuality within the crowd by describing our apple/ness.

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Enzo Lee Apple, Chapter |V, 2023

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Enzo Lee Apple, Epilogue, 2023

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Enzo Lee Apple, Chapter |, 2023

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Enzo Lee Apple, Chapter V, 2023

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Rimm Chae Mountains and islands

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Kwang Young Chun Aggregation 10-JL023, 2010

Dyed with natural ingredients such as gardenia seeds and teas, these textbooks commemorate a period of educational humanism in Korea.
 "To me, the triangular pieces wrapped in mulberry paper are basic units of information, the basic cells of a life that only exists in art, as well as in individual social events or historical facts. By attaching these pieces one by one to a two-dimensional surface, I wanted to express how basic units of information can both create harmony and conflict. This became an important milestone in my long artistic journey to express the troubles of a modern man driven to a devastated life by materialism, endless competition, conflict, and destruction. After almost twenty years, I was now able to communicate with my own gestures and words." -Chun

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Enzo Lee Apple, Chapter ||, 2023
The apple has always been a rich source of symbolism throughout human history. As the fruit offered by the tree of knowledge from the Garden of Eden (with freewill) set into motion all of our conflicts between good and evil; it symbolized Newton's genius, Steve Jobs' creativity, Snow White's poison, William Tell’s pin-point accuracy and so much more. The simplicity of an apple becomes the cornucopia of complexity. In this "appleappleappleAppleapple" painting series by Enzo Lee, the artist expresses our uniqueness and individuality within the crowd by describing our apple/ness. Enzo Lee is an artist who considers his life, itself, the artist’s medium. Lee’s artistic practice is the nurturing study of the artist’s identity and purpose in life. As such, Lee's compositions act as a journal, conveying pieces of his life and experience. He most often creates with acrylics, charcoal, and pens on canvas or cardboard. “It is a represented ideal, a statement, an emotion, a thought, a practice, a style, a love, and a state of mind of a present soul. But above all, It is simply life as an art.” - Lee says.

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Rimm Chae Au milieu de la vie

Chae Rimm draws inspiration from both scenery and memory. She experiments with Eastern philosophies regarding humanity and natural cycles and explores the harmony of the two. Her new body of work, "Laquered Landscapes," from the series Mountains and Island, features a variety of mediums including painting, sculpture, and jewelry. In this body of work, fraught with intense color and simplified lines, Chae Rimm interprets natural processes of transformation expressed by mountains and islands over time. 

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Marco Bras From the Inside Out, 2018
Marco Bras’s hand-carved sculptures are an allegory to human beings and their spirit. Bras polishes the imperfection of the material, the rustic stone, to illuminate the beauty of a spiritual body. Through his creations, he transmits spiritual signs and symbols, dialogues of nature and the universe. Carving the stone is a mystic performance and a combination of ancient techniques and modern technology. 

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About the Artist

2017 Marble, 23 x 9 x 10 in

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Marco Bras (b. Moçambique, Africa) Moved to Portugal where he studied photography, drawing, and experimental filmmaking until he fell in love with stone carving. He attended the International Sculpture Center in Portugal. Studied with masters of carving stone like Moises, Antonio Quina, Rogerio Timoteo, and Romeu Costa. Marco Bras showed his work extensively in Europe and the United States. Participated in various art fairs, and received prizes and honors for the excellence of his carving technique such as a first-place award D. Fernando II. Marco Bras established his studio in New Jersey, where he creates large-scale stone-carved sculptures.


2020
12 x 10 x 6 in

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Marco Bras (b. Moçambique, Africa) Moved to Portugal where he studied photography, drawing, and experimental filmmaking until he fell in love with stone carving. He attended the International Sculpture Center in Portugal. Studied with masters of carving stone like Moises, Antonio Quina, Rogerio Timoteo, and Romeu Costa. Marco Bras showed his work extensively in Europe and the United States. Participated in various art fairs, and received prizes and honors for the excellence of his carving technique such as a first-place award D. Fernando II. Marco Bras established his studio in New Jersey, where he creates large-scale stone-carved sculptures.


The Seed, 2020
Marble, 36 x 12 x 8 in

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Marco Bras (b. Moçambique, Africa) Moved to Portugal where he studied photography, drawing, and experimental filmmaking until he fell in love with stone carving. He attended the International Sculpture Center in Portugal. Studied with masters of carving stone like Moises, Antonio Quina, Rogerio Timoteo, and Romeu Costa. Marco Bras showed his work extensively in Europe and the United States. Participated in various art fairs, and received prizes and honors for the excellence of his carving technique such as a first-place award D. Fernando II. Marco Bras established his studio in New Jersey, where he creates large-scale stone-carved sculptures.


2002
Mixed media with Korean Mulberry Paper 64 ⅕ in x 51 3/5 / 163 x 131cm

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Kwang Young Chun: (b. 1944) studied at Hong-Ik University in Korea and received his MFA from the Philadelphia College of Art. Prior to 1995, when the artist began working with mulberry paper, he painted in a manner influenced by American and European Abstract Expressionism. Chun has been named Artist of the Year by the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art in Seoul and was awarded the Presidential Prize in the 41st Korean Culture and Art Prize by the Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism. In 2014, Chun authored Mulberry Mindscapes, a monograph articulating the breadth and diversity of his half-century-long artistic career. The artist’s works are in the collections of the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, the Seoul National University Museum of Art, and the Busan Metropolitan Art Museum, among others. He lives and works in Seoul, South Korea. At the beginning of his career, Chun was working primarily in earth tones before he started experimenting with bright colors. Aggregation 02-N119, 2002 is one of the rare examples of that, features pages from primary school textbooks, some predating the Korean War. Dyed with natural ingredients such as gardenia seeds and teas, these textbooks commemorate a period of educational humanism in Korea.


2021
Ottchil (Korean lacquer), Hemp cloth on wood
122 x 162 cm/ 48 x 63.7in

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Rimm Chae: (b. 1963) received the Leonardo Da Vinci Award in Florence, Italy. Her works of art were also accepted and exhibited at the Start Art Fair held at London’s Saatchi Gallery in 2017. She became the first Korean to win the SOLO Award at Artexpo New York. The International André Malraux Association also awarded her at the International Cultural Heritage Fair held in Paris. She has successfully held numerous solo exhibitions in Seoul, New York, and Paris. Her artwork has also been well-received at leading art fairs in Miami, Barcelona, Singapore, Cologne, Taipei, London, Brussels, and Toulouse. She exhibited at Art Miami in 2021 With a career spanning over thirty years, Chae Rimm draws inspiration from both scenery and memory. She experiments with Eastern philosophies regarding humanity and natural cycles and explores the harmony of the two. Her new body of work, "Laquered Landscapes," from the series Mountains and Island, features a variety of mediums including painting, sculpture, and jewelry. In this body of work, fraught with intense color and simplified lines, Chae Rimm interprets natural processes of transformation expressed by mountains and islands over time.


2021
Ottchil (Korean lacquer), Hemp cloth on wood
122 x 162 cm/ 48 x 63.7in

More info
x

Rimm Chae: (b. 1963) received the Leonardo Da Vinci Award in Florence, Italy. Her works of art were also accepted and exhibited at the Start Art Fair held at London’s Saatchi Gallery in 2017. She became the first Korean to win the SOLO Award at Artexpo New York. The International André Malraux Association also awarded her at the International Cultural Heritage Fair held in Paris. She has successfully held numerous solo exhibitions in Seoul, New York, and Paris. Her artwork has also been well-received at leading art fairs in Miami, Barcelona, Singapore, Cologne, Taipei, London, Brussels, and Toulouse. She exhibited at Art Miami in 2021 With a career spanning over thirty years, Chae Rimm draws inspiration from both scenery and memory. She experiments with Eastern philosophies regarding humanity and natural cycles and explores the harmony of the two. Her new body of work, "Laquered Landscapes," from the series Mountains and Island, features a variety of mediums including painting, sculpture, and jewelry. In this body of work, fraught with intense color and simplified lines, Chae Rimm interprets natural processes of transformation expressed by mountains and islands over time.


2016
Mixed media with Korean Mulberry Paper
59 2/5x 59 2/5 in / 151 x 151cm

More info
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Kwang Young Chun: (b. 1944) studied at Hong-Ik University in Korea and received his MFA from the Philadelphia College of Art. Prior to 1995, when the artist began working with mulberry paper, he painted in a manner influenced by American and European Abstract Expressionism. Chun has been named Artist of the Year by the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art in Seoul and was awarded the Presidential Prize in the 41st Korean Culture and Art Prize by the Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism. In 2014, Chun authored Mulberry Mindscapes, a monograph articulating the breadth and diversity of his half-century-long artistic career. The artist’s works are in the collections of the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, the Seoul National University Museum of Art, and the Busan Metropolitan Art Museum, among others. He lives and works in Seoul, South Korea. At the beginning of his career, Chun was working primarily in earth tones before he started experimenting with bright colors. Aggregation 02-N119, 2002 is one of the rare examples of that, features pages from primary school textbooks, some predating the Korean War. Dyed with natural ingredients such as gardenia seeds and teas, these textbooks commemorate a period of educational humanism in Korea.


Acrylic paint and oil pastel on canvas
46 x 56 in

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Enzo Lee (b.1988, South Korea) is a journal artist based in Brooklyn, New York. Enzo first started his journey as an artist by carrying a journal during his teenage years. Uncertain of the future, he started to write down his feelings, thoughts, and experiences to study himself, hoping to gain control over his life. Over time, the habit naturally evolved into something more and became not only a form of recording but also a form of expression. His own voice, the art. Enzo published his first book of essays and poems, “Bird in Space”, in 2014. Realizing that the voice shouldn’t be limited by any specific medium, he went on to study filmmaking to learn multi-dimensional aspects of art. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Filmmaking from the School of Visual Arts, and works on a permanent video journal series called “Piece of Life”. Currently, there are about 120 episodes online. Since 2020 COVID, Enzo also started to explore the medium of painting and is now expressing journals through large paintings. Enzo is pursuing to develop his philosophy and artistry of using a journal as a tool to live life itself as a form of art, the "Piece of Enzo".


Acrylic paint and oil pastel on canvas approx. 46 x 56 in

More info
x

Enzo Lee (b.1988, South Korea) is a journal artist based in Brooklyn, New York. Enzo first started his journey as an artist by carrying a journal during his teenage years. Uncertain of the future, he started to write down his feelings, thoughts, and experiences to study himself, hoping to gain control over his life. Over time, the habit naturally evolved into something more and became not only a form of recording but also a form of expression. His own voice, the art. Enzo published his first book of essays and poems, “Bird in Space”, in 2014. Realizing that the voice shouldn’t be limited by any specific medium, he went on to study filmmaking to learn multi-dimensional aspects of art. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Filmmaking from the School of Visual Arts, and works on a permanent video journal series called “Piece of Life”. Currently, there are about 120 episodes online. Since 2020 COVID, Enzo also started to explore the medium of painting and is now expressing journals through large paintings. Enzo is pursuing to develop his philosophy and artistry of using a journal as a tool to live life itself as a form of art, the "Piece of Enzo".


Acrylic and oil paint, oil pastel on canvas
46 x 56 in

More info
x

Enzo Lee (b.1988, South Korea) is a journal artist based in Brooklyn, New York. Enzo first started his journey as an artist by carrying a journal during his teenage years. Uncertain of the future, he started to write down his feelings, thoughts, and experiences to study himself, hoping to gain control over his life. Over time, the habit naturally evolved into something more and became not only a form of recording but also a form of expression. His own voice, the art. Enzo published his first book of essays and poems, “Bird in Space”, in 2014. Realizing that the voice shouldn’t be limited by any specific medium, he went on to study filmmaking to learn multi-dimensional aspects of art. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Filmmaking from the School of Visual Arts, and works on a permanent video journal series called “Piece of Life”. Currently, there are about 120 episodes online. Since 2020 COVID, Enzo also started to explore the medium of painting and is now expressing journals through large paintings. Enzo is pursuing to develop his philosophy and artistry of using a journal as a tool to live life itself as a form of art, the "Piece of Enzo".


Acrylic paint, graphite and oil pastel on canvas
46 x 56 in

More info
x

Enzo Lee (b.1988, South Korea) is a journal artist based in Brooklyn, New York. Enzo first started his journey as an artist by carrying a journal during his teenage years. Uncertain of the future, he started to write down his feelings, thoughts, and experiences to study himself, hoping to gain control over his life. Over time, the habit naturally evolved into something more and became not only a form of recording but also a form of expression. His own voice, the art. Enzo published his first book of essays and poems, “Bird in Space”, in 2014. Realizing that the voice shouldn’t be limited by any specific medium, he went on to study filmmaking to learn multi-dimensional aspects of art. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Filmmaking from the School of Visual Arts, and works on a permanent video journal series called “Piece of Life”. Currently, there are about 120 episodes online. Since 2020 COVID, Enzo also started to explore the medium of painting and is now expressing journals through large paintings. Enzo is pursuing to develop his philosophy and artistry of using a journal as a tool to live life itself as a form of art, the "Piece of Enzo".


Acrylic paint and oil pastel on canvas
46 x 56 in

More info
x

Enzo Lee (b.1988, South Korea) is a journal artist based in Brooklyn, New York. Enzo first started his journey as an artist by carrying a journal during his teenage years. Uncertain of the future, he started to write down his feelings, thoughts, and experiences to study himself, hoping to gain control over his life. Over time, the habit naturally evolved into something more and became not only a form of recording but also a form of expression. His own voice, the art. Enzo published his first book of essays and poems, “Bird in Space”, in 2014. Realizing that the voice shouldn’t be limited by any specific medium, he went on to study filmmaking to learn multi-dimensional aspects of art. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Filmmaking from the School of Visual Arts, and works on a permanent video journal series called “Piece of Life”. Currently, there are about 120 episodes online. Since 2020 COVID, Enzo also started to explore the medium of painting and is now expressing journals through large paintings. Enzo is pursuing to develop his philosophy and artistry of using a journal as a tool to live life itself as a form of art, the "Piece of Enzo".


Ottchil(Korean Lacquer),
Hemp Cloth on Wood
23.6 x 27.6 in / 60 x 70 cm

More info
x

Rimm Chae: (b. 1963) received the Leonardo Da Vinci Award in Florence, Italy. Her works of art were also accepted and exhibited at the Start Art Fair held at London’s Saatchi Gallery in 2017. She became the first Korean to win the SOLO Award at Artexpo New York. The International André Malraux Association also awarded her at the International Cultural Heritage Fair held in Paris. She has successfully held numerous solo exhibitions in Seoul, New York, and Paris. Her artwork has also been well-received at leading art fairs in Miami, Barcelona, Singapore, Cologne, Taipei, London, Brussels, and Toulouse. She exhibited at Art Miami in 2021 With a career spanning over thirty years, Chae Rimm draws inspiration from both scenery and memory. She experiments with Eastern philosophies regarding humanity and natural cycles and explores the harmony of the two. Her new body of work, "Laquered Landscapes," from the series Mountains and Island, features a variety of mediums including painting, sculpture, and jewelry. In this body of work, fraught with intense color and simplified lines, Chae Rimm interprets natural processes of transformation expressed by mountains and islands over time.


Mixed media with Korean Mulberry Paper 76.55 x 68.89 in / 175 x 140 cm

More info
x

Kwang Young Chun: (b. 1944) studied at Hong-Ik University in Korea and received his MFA from the Philadelphia College of Art. Prior to 1995, when the artist began working with mulberry paper, he painted in a manner influenced by American and European Abstract Expressionism. Chun has been named Artist of the Year by the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art in Seoul and was awarded the Presidential Prize in the 41st Korean Culture and Art Prize by the Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism. In 2014, Chun authored Mulberry Mindscapes, a monograph articulating the breadth and diversity of his half-century-long artistic career. The artist’s works are in the collections of the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, the Seoul National University Museum of Art, and the Busan Metropolitan Art Museum, among others. He lives and works in Seoul, South Korea. At the beginning of his career, Chun was working primarily in earth tones before he started experimenting with bright colors. Aggregation 02-N119, 2002 is one of the rare examples of that, features pages from primary school textbooks, some predating the Korean War. Dyed with natural ingredients such as gardenia seeds and teas, these textbooks commemorate a period of educational humanism in Korea.


Acrylic paint and oil pastel on canvas approx. 46 x 56 in

More info
x

Enzo Lee (b.1988, South Korea) is a journal artist based in Brooklyn, New York. Enzo first started his journey as an artist by carrying a journal during his teenage years. Uncertain of the future, he started to write down his feelings, thoughts, and experiences to study himself, hoping to gain control over his life. Over time, the habit naturally evolved into something more and became not only a form of recording but also a form of expression. His own voice, the art. Enzo published his first book of essays and poems, “Bird in Space”, in 2014. Realizing that the voice shouldn’t be limited by any specific medium, he went on to study filmmaking to learn multi-dimensional aspects of art. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Filmmaking from the School of Visual Arts, and works on a permanent video journal series called “Piece of Life”. Currently, there are about 120 episodes online. Since 2020 COVID, Enzo also started to explore the medium of painting and is now expressing journals through large paintings. Enzo is pursuing to develop his philosophy and artistry of using a journal as a tool to live life itself as a form of art, the "Piece of Enzo".


Au milieu de la vie, 2022
Ottchil(Korean Lacquer),
Hemp Cloth on Wood
23.6 x 27.6 in / 60 x 70 cm

More info
x

Rimm Chae: (b. 1963) received the Leonardo Da Vinci Award in Florence, Italy. Her works of art were also accepted and exhibited at the Start Art Fair held at London’s Saatchi Gallery in 2017. She became the first Korean to win the SOLO Award at Artexpo New York. The International André Malraux Association also awarded her at the International Cultural Heritage Fair held in Paris. She has successfully held numerous solo exhibitions in Seoul, New York, and Paris. Her artwork has also been well-received at leading art fairs in Miami, Barcelona, Singapore, Cologne, Taipei, London, Brussels, and Toulouse. She exhibited at Art Miami in 2021 With a career spanning over thirty years, Chae Rimm draws inspiration from both scenery and memory. She experiments with Eastern philosophies regarding humanity and natural cycles and explores the harmony of the two. Her new body of work, "Laquered Landscapes," from the series Mountains and Island, features a variety of mediums including painting, sculpture, and jewelry. In this body of work, fraught with intense color and simplified lines, Chae Rimm interprets natural processes of transformation expressed by mountains and islands over time.


Unique stone carving 16 x 10 x 10in

More info
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Marco Bras (b. Moçambique, Africa) Moved to Portugal where he studied photography, drawing, and experimental filmmaking until he fell in love with stone carving. He attended the International Sculpture Center in Portugal. Studied with masters of carving stone like Moises, Antonio Quina, Rogerio Timoteo, and Romeu Costa. Marco Bras showed his work extensively in Europe and the United States. Participated in various art fairs, and received prizes and honors for the excellence of his carving technique such as a first-place award D. Fernando II. Marco Bras established his studio in New Jersey, where he creates large-scale stone-carved sculptures.