Elisha Enfield
Elisha Enfield’s evocative paintings draw from the rich history of human rituals, blending themes of fire, funerary rites, and remembrance. In her works, she examines how we navigate grief, celebrate life, and honor those who are no longer with us. Featured in the Land and Longing virtual exhibition, Enfield’s paintings invite viewers to reflect on the interplay of memory and myth in the human experience.
Nora Wiley-Schwartz
Brooklyn-born artist Nora Wiley-Schwartz blends personal memories with artistic exploration, focusing on nostalgia and domesticity in her paintings. With works that evoke a sense of quiet reflection, Wiley-Schwartz invites viewers to appreciate the beauty in everyday life. Featured in the "Land and Longing" exhibition, her latest work draws from landscapes tied to her childhood and artistic retreats, bridging the gap between urban life and natural environments.
Gillian Wainwright
Painter Gillian Wainwright shares insight into her latest body of work, created over four years within the ever-changing microcosm of her backyard. Influenced by light, season, and her love for working from life, Wainwright's paintings have shifted from realism to gestural abstraction. Now on view as part of the Land and Longing exhibition, her work speaks to the intimate connection between observation, memory, and place.
Kendra Dandy
Kendra Dandy’s vibrant artwork mixes humor and deep emotion, using the cheetah as a personal symbol of her feelings and experiences. Her playful, mood-driven creations challenge the conventions of self-expression, inviting viewers to connect with their own emotions. Featured in collaborations with major brands like Marc Jacobs and Vans, Kendra’s unique style blends vintage design, nature, and post-impressionist art, creating a dynamic conversation in every piece.
Bella Wattles
Step into the imaginative world of Bella Wattles, a self-taught artist whose maximalist still life paintings transform everyday objects into playful, symbolic characters. Inspired by nostalgia, storytelling, and the drama of stage lighting, Wattles creates emotional vignettes that blur the line between the ordinary and the fantastical. Her compositions invite viewers to rediscover wonder in the unexpected.
Lauren E. Peters
Lauren E. Peters’ work delves into the performance and construction of identity through the lens of self-portraiture. Drawing from both historical and personal influences, her art explores gender, the notion of “costumes” as armor, and the complex navigation of self-definition. In this feature, we explore how Peters combines vibrant colors and rich symbolism to challenge traditional narratives and invite a new visual language that exists beyond societal binaries. Explore her journey and upcoming work in the issue 51 of Create! Magazine.
Moyan Wang
In her multifaceted works, Moyan Wang combines ceramics, painting, and sculpture to create powerful metaphors for unspoken stories tied to China's collective memory and the experience of diaspora. As an MFA student at UNC-Chapel Hill, Wang explores the intersections of personal and societal trauma, evoking a deep sense of history through rich, culturally significant materials. Her work speaks to themes of gender, immigration, surveillance, and the weight of silence, as she creates a layered narrative of resistance and resilience.
Jennifer Cronin
Jennifer Cronin’s work reveals a unique perspective on the mundane, finding magic in the overlooked corners of everyday life. Her latest collection, supported by prestigious grants from the Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation and Chicago DCASE, invites viewers to discover the extraordinary in ordinary moments. Delve into her artistic journey and how her paintings transform the mundane into something magical.
Sally Blair
Chicago-based painter Sally Blair creates large-scale oil paintings that explore the intersection of the micro and macro. Her intricate, brightly colored compositions are rooted in themes of geometry, science, and the sublime. With a background shaped by the landscapes of New Mexico and West Texas, Blair brings a unique perspective to contemporary abstraction, evoking the grandeur of unseen worlds.
Maria Natalie Schmidt
Chester-based fine artist Maria Natalie brings fresh energy to classical portraiture through her Unfinished Finished series—vivid oil paintings that capture women in bold, incomplete states. Balancing traditional techniques with striking contemporary color palettes, her work draws attention to both subject and process, offering a modern take on timeless composition.
Aya Ogasawara
Aya Ogasawara, a Tokyo-born painter now based in New York, creates strikingly surreal compositions that blend Northern Renaissance influence with a minimalist Japanese aesthetic. In her series Memory and Mirage, Ogasawara explores themes of femininity, growth, and the sublime, crafting dreamlike tableaus that reinterpret religious iconography through the lens of adolescence and personal myth.
Betsy Walton
Betsy Walton is a Portland-based painter and illustrator whose layered, luminous compositions investigate the spiritual dimensions of life through color, form, and intuition. Influenced by nature, science, and personal growth, Walton's practice draws viewers into imagined spaces where wonder, balance, and inner dialogue take shape. In this feature, we explore the ideas behind her creative process and her ever-evolving visual language.
Taylor Pierce
In the "Land and Longing" exhibition, Taylor Pierce’s landscapes explore not just the beauty of the desert but the stories it holds within. Through her work, she brings forward the resilience and history of the land, asking what it has witnessed across time. With each painting, Pierce invites viewers to consider their own connection to nature and the powerful link between the past and present.
Guy Nelson
Guy Nelson’s acrylic paintings delve into the intricate relationships between humans and the environment, focusing on themes of self-preservation, community, and the beauty of natural spaces. In his work for the "Land and Longing" exhibition, Nelson captures the atmospheric glow and mystery of forests and outdoor settings, inviting viewers to slow down and engage with the layers of meaning within each piece.
Cary Hulbert
In the Land and Longing exhibition, New York-based artist Cary Hulbert presents fantastical worlds where flora and fauna blur, spirit animals roam, and imagination takes root. Her layered paintings—rich with color, transparency, and meaning—invite viewers to linger and uncover the subtle, shape-shifting beauty that dwells within her dreamlike terrains.
Lindsay Mueller
Painter Lindsay Mueller transforms her encounters with nature into sculptural works that blend material, memory, and emotion. With surfaces built from plaster and paint, her landscapes reference parks, roadsides, and the layered history of shared spaces. Now featured in Create! Magazine’s Land and Longing virtual exhibition, Mueller’s work asks: how real is this space—and where does it rupture?
Dana Oldfather
Dana Oldfather’s paintings radiate with vulnerability, tension, and dreamy psychedelia. Known for her expressive, emotionally charged landscapes, Oldfather brings a deeply personal lens to the natural world, using it as a portal to explore fear, impermanence, and wonder. Featured in Create! Magazine’s Land and Longing exhibition, her work invites viewers into a space where the inner and outer worlds collide in vibrant, unsettling beauty.
Nicki Ault
Canadian painter Nicki Ault creates luminous, heartfelt landscapes that express her deep connection to the natural world and her own emotional experience of it. Ault, whose work is featured in the exhibition Land and Longing, shares how discovering her identity as a Highly Sensitive Person and Empath helped her understand the profound love and belonging she finds in nature—and how this understanding fuels her practice. Through rich, light-filled brushwork, she crafts visual love letters to the boreal forests, prairie skies, and northern lakes of Saskatchewan.
Tracy Kerdman
Tracy Kerdman is a Las Vegas-based painter whose work explores femininity, the body, and the symbolic weight of still life. Merging vintage influences with contemporary insight, her detailed oil paintings capture quiet moments rich with emotional depth and narrative possibility. Featured in New American Paintings and a recipient of the 2018 Spring Hopper Prize, Kerdman continues to refine a style that is both evocative and precise.
Elizabeth Coffey
Richmond-based artist Elizabeth Coffey brings together oil painting, domestic textiles, and stenciled text to explore the complexities of female identity. Her work, deeply influenced by a background in graphic design and early experiences with sewing, challenges the divide between fine art and craft. In this powerful artist statement, Coffey shares how lace curtains, typography, and portraiture become layered symbols of the seen and unseen.