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Javier Arizmendi-Kalb

What does your art aim to say to the viewers? 

I do not try to articulate a “message” or a preconceived narrative in my work. I find this type of approach contrived and sometimes disingenuous. Instead, I try to have an honest conversation with myself: my thoughts, interests, memories, preoccupations, anxieties.  In this sense my work is deeply personal. Ironically, I also believe that only by exploring what is deeply personal, can we touch upon what is universal, and a shared human experience that will resonate with a broader audience.

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Robert van de Graaf

How much planning goes into each artwork?

 In order to create the context of the painting, I need the information of the series and collect all my materials. After I have the basic context of the series the painting ideas just pup up in my mind while working. So after having the context there is only a limited amount of time of planning per each painting. When starting the painting I have my storyboard note book, where I make notes for every individual painting, so the context also increases while working on the artwork.

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Jeong-Ah Zhang

How would you describe your style and the work you create?

As I've mentioned in answering earlier questions, my works is characterized by metaphor and implication. That means I prefer to let my work speak for itself. I think viewing art is intrinsic to the distance of their mind the viewer experiences the art, accordingly, it depends on the viewers with different point of view. So I'd like to keep it open in that way. Sometimes silence is one of the great arts of conversation.

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Tom Jean Webb

How much planning goes into each artwork?

The balance between planning and spontaneity is one I’m interested in understanding. I found my work was feeling too planned from start, middle to end. So I spend a lot of time thinking about preparing and documenting ideas, but also creating space once something has started. Basically creating a framework for movement, an idea that allows for creative response. I go on regular hikes, taking pictures of things or moments that inspire me. Trying to understand the elements that make up my work. I love making sculptures in my studio using found rocks and objects from my hikes, they might not end up as finished pieces but they allow me to understand more about what I want to achieve in my paintings.

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Rosemary Burn

What does your art aim to say to the viewers? 

My art focusses on moments;  those snippets of time from which I can find a story in the background, such as a dripping bath tap and the light carried in the ripples, a fly on the wall, the fleeting expression on a face, a nameless place. For me, these events underpin our existence; big events, highs and lows, come and go but the insignificant and fleeting remain and repeat, like a constant hum in the background. Modern life is hectic and often crazy, and my art seeks to still the mind of the viewer, and to give them an escape from their worries and frustrations.

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Altea Natau

What does your art aim to say to the viewers? 

Well, it is a message and support and hope for all LGBT+ community, as well as every other community around the globe, to help to understand the freedom of expression. I aim to show how beautiful and powerful can be any kind of love and that there can be no space for hate and mistreatment. Through colour, I aim to show passionate relationships, sensual, sexual and melancholic. All of it comes from the emotional place; it heals and soothes your soul.

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Tatyana Palchuk

What’s the essential element in your art?

It is important for me to convey to people the thoughts, emotions and feelings that I had at the moment when the idea of a new painting arose. Impulse from seeing something wonderful, catharsis created by music, from everything around us. To convey the pleasure of beauty that is all around and is in everything, big and small. From the flight of the bumblebee to the infinity of Space.

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Frank Hoeffler

Do you have an essential philosophy that guides you in your creative expression?

Art is all around us. We eat, sleep and drink art every day of our lives. Our clothes are designed by artists, our homes are imagined by architects. Nature is God’s gift of art to us. We need to see it and appreciate it every day of our lives. My goal is to bring that vision about in my paintings.

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Aida Studios / Emiko Aida

Do you have an essential philosophy that guides you in your creative expression?

Buddhism has a strong philosophical side. My philosophy is spiritual, not just Buddhism. I am open to other spiritual thoughts and sciences, which are searching for invisible phenomena, unified field and oneness. I am trying to join in the search.

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Jaana Kivi

What does your art aim to say to the viewers? 

I want my artworks to evoke an invitation. That the viewer might feel some strange attraction, some energy that can be sensed, that fascinates, but perhaps cannot immediately be understood. I believe that the power of change is a part of life, the idea of metamorphosis is continuing. Through my art I want to embrace the beginning of something new. I also hope that viewers can feel the invitation to discover their dark side, feel the fascination to explore it and own it. That’s why the stories I want to tell always include a seed of change.

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Altaf Al Alli

The artist's discovery was a pure chance to display work at the high school art fair in 1998, the first with the general public, which added strong views about the artist and her not-easy-on-eyes artwork.

The fast track toward a complete change from watercolours to acrylics in 2001, inspired by the late Jonas Gerard acrylic artist, was the point of no return.

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Lincoln Howard

Do you have an essential philosophy that guides you in your creative expression?

My philosophy has always been to create exciting images that push boundaries. I’m always looking to push the boundaries of abstraction through techniques or different materials. I like to include glow-in-the-dark paint, mirrors, glass, glitter and found objects. The different objects I use to create more texture and add to the feeling, history and story of the painting. I find that’s more interesting to me and hopefully also to the viewers.

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Aurelio Gaiga

Please tell us more about your background and how you began creating art?

After high school, I began to read art magazines and visit exhibitions, mainly in Verona galleries.
At the time of school, I loved comics and drew a lot. However, despite being fascinated by painting and the profession of painting, I was almost in awe of it. After seeing an exhibition on Paul Klee at Palazzo Forti in Verona in 1995, I began my first timid experiments in painting.

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Michael Kaphengst "THE LINEARIST"

What does your art want to say to the viewer?

I believe it is not possible to evade a linear process. To me, the consumer world is not POP as it is in Pop art, but a linear process that we are exposed to every day, and that leads to the most impossible.

(Most surreal) everyday situations. Basically, I don't want to dictate what the viewer must think, each of my works of art speaks for itself and the viewer should let his imagination run free when looking at my works of art. Regardless of my initial intention for a painting, my experience is that everyone sees things differently.

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Li Ning

Spirituality and metaphysics themes are prevalent in many of your works. Can you explain where this interest comes from?

I was inspired by Alessandro Botticelli and Leonardo Da Vinci, as their works transmit a sense of poetic, mysterious and metaphysical meanings beyond the physical forms. The more I study those works, the more details I discover, and the more I am dragged in. I realized that figurative paintings could transcend figurative forms to explore so much more possibilities, not just imitating what we see. A good painting tells its audiences not only to look and enjoy, but also to feel and discover.

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Ty Bishop

How would you describe FOA and how the idea to create it came to your mind?

FOA exists to shine a light on emerging artists through printed books. There's so much great work being made today by undiscovered artists, and our goal is to show their work to the world. I originally got the idea for FOA a year after I graduated from art school. I heard a museum director say that there were no opportunities outside of an academic context, and that statement resonated with me.

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Eugenio Re Rebaudengo

How would you describe ARTUNER and how the idea to create it came to your mind?

At ARTUNER we focus on identifying talented artists and nurturing their careers. In order to achieve this goal, we have developed an innovative ‘hybrid’ art platform that stages curated selling exhibitions, both online and through an ambitious programme of pop-up international shows.

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Unit London

How would you describe the program and vision of your gallery?

The celebration of original and culturally relevant artistry. All galleries are essentially agents for artists, we like to think we acknowledge this rather than sneer at it: we promote our artists by using the most up-to-date technology and digital marketing methods. Our 'vision’ is to connect more people with contemporary art and recalibrate a relationship that has been showing cracks since the turn of the century; we would like to open galleries abroad and show that you don’t have to be a ‘mega gallery’ to have multiple sites and reach multiple audiences.

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Angeliki Kim Jonsson

Emerging art is a tricky thing. How are you able to identify potential?

Emerging art is a tricky thing and it can be quite difficult to identify potential, so as it is important to follow your passion and what is aesthetically pleasing to you. I think it’s great to have professional help when you’re looking to acquire art. From someone, who can lead you and do the research (which is time consuming) but really essential. Research really is everything. You need to stay up to date on the very latest in the art world but not only, the scope of your research should be much wider than that, as art is often used as a communication tool to what is happening in society it is equally important to stay updated on the global, socio-political situation, (and not to mention the financial.)

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TAX Collection

What do you think of today's art market? How has it changed in last 5 years?

Today's art market is extremely interesting, especially with all of the massive changes over the past few years. When we first started out, not many galleries were really receptive to working with us, as people generally did not value Instagram and its massive influence in art. Really, the only gallery who took a chance on us in the beginning was Guy Hepner, as he was working with a slew of Instagram curators for exciting shows when the platform was still relatively new. Since then, I think galleries have caught on that whether they like it or not, Instagram and the internet are an important tool.

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