IN FULL BLOOM: Group Exhibition at The Untitled Space, Curated by Indira Cesarine

Janet Pulcho

The Untitled Space is pleased to present “IN FULL BLOOM,” a group exhibition curated by Indira Cesarine featuring 34 women artists whose work engages floral and botanical motifs as a lens for transformation, embodiment, and power. Spanning painting, sculpture, photography, mixed media, installation, and performance, the exhibition reclaims the flower and landscape from its traditional associations with decoration and passivity, reframing it as a site of agency, inquiry, and radical transformation.

Across diverse practices and visual languages, the artists in this exhibition explore the bloom as both subject and metaphor; one that exists at the intersection of the personal and the cultural. Botanical forms emerge as extensions of the body, carriers of memory, and reflections of psychological landscapes. In these works, flowers and organic forms are not static objects of beauty, but active agents, unfolding, dissolving, and regenerating in cycles that mirror lived experience.

The exhibition brings together a wide range of approaches, from abstract and gestural interpretations of organic form to surreal and figurative compositions in which florals inhabit dreamlike or psychologically charged environments. Sculptural, installation, and performance-based works expand these ideas into physical space, inviting viewers into immersive encounters with growth, tension, fragility, and transformation.

By recontextualizing imagery historically coded as feminine, IN FULL BLOOM considers how the language of florals operates as a powerful visual and conceptual tool, one that speaks to resilience, sensuality, resistance, and self-definition. What has long been dismissed as decorative is instead revealed as complex, embodied, and deeply symbolic. In this context, the flower becomes not only a symbol of beauty, but a form of presence: unapologetic, expansive, and fully alive.

“Floral imagery has long been associated with beauty, femininity, and decoration, but beneath that surface lies a far more complex visual language. From the coded messages of Victorian floriography to the sensual works of pioneering artists such as Georgia O’Keeffe, floral imagery is deeply intertwined with symbolic representation. Often used to communicate emotions that are difficult to express directly, florals have historically served as a vehicle for complex, layered meaning.

IN FULL BLOOM challenges the idea of the flower as passive and fragile, instead positioning the botanical as a site of agency where narratives of identity and transformation unfold. The exhibition brings together a wide range of female-identifying artists who engage botanical imagery in deeply personal and unexpected ways, expanding its meaning beyond tradition and investigating the politics of flowers through the intimate, the personal, and the universal.”

Indira Cesarine, Curator

Indira Cesarine

Alonsa Guevara


ARTISTS

Abby Elise Oravec, Alison Pasquini, Alonsa Guevara, Angela Wei, Annika Connor, Caitlin McCormack, Dolly Faibyshev, Ekaterina Popova, Elena Chestnykh, Fahren Feingold, Heather Monks, Heather V McLeod, Helena Calmfors, Hyunsuk Erickson, Indira Cesarine, Janet Pulcho, Joanna Pilarczyk, Kat Toronto aka Miss Meatface, Kate Tova, Katie Cercone, Katie Commodore, Katty Huertas, Leah Schrager, Lisa Petker Mintz, Logan White, Mia Brownell, Natalie Wood, Orly Cogan, Rachel Marks, Sarah Brent, Sarah Nicole, Susan Klein, Tabitha Whitley, Tania Shcheglova aka Synchrotania.

ADDITIONAL EVENTS

Tribeca Gallery Night

May 15, 2026, 6 pm - 8 pm

For press inquiries, please contact: info@untitled-space.com

For more information about the exhibition, visit www.untitled-space.com

Orly Cogan

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Issue #56: The 2026 Create! Magazine Women's Edition