Charlie Caulfield (they/them) b. 1999, Wheatridge, Colorado.

Charlie Caulfield has exhibited in shows across America, including at The Wing Luke Museum in Seattle and the d’Art Center in Norfolk. Additionally, their work has been featured on TIME.com, My Modern Met, and Nextshark. Caulfield has two children, currently resides in Brooklyn, New York, and is pursuing their BFA at The Cooper Union. 

Works: The Wild Beasts of the New Earth, New Body, Family Portrait

Dannika Pamonag (he/they) b. 1997, Elmhurst, New York.

Dannika Pamonag is a non-binary queer-identifying Filipino artist born and raised in Jackson Heights, New York. They completed their BFA at the School of Visual Arts, majoring in Photography & Video. They are a multifaced artist with a multi-disciplinary process that combines fragments of the digital world and the abstract world of the alternative processes to create a map of their brain. Their current work explores the fragments of their queer, trans body through the creation of their universe and emotionally charged mementos. They take inspiration from their digital footprint as a trans boy in their kink-savory, meme-fueled, cute internet playground. Their practice is highly concerned with the genderless texture of their internet world and how they can embody it in real life and re-imagine themselves as a shapeshifter. They visually narrate their range of emotions through sexual exploration and critical self-introspection by combining alternative darkroom processes such as chemigrams, cyanotype, gum bichromate printing, risograph printing, and nude self-portraiture.  

Work: Flipside

Ella Erwin (she/he/they) b.1999, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.

Ella Kay Erwin (EK) is an agender mixed-media artist based in Brooklyn, New York. Ella’s work centers on the human form and geometric patterning. They often employ bold, high-contrast colors and include handwritten elements in large-scale pieces. They invite you to touch their work, to feel the texture of each piece.

Works: Brain Corridors, Dear Diary

Hee Eun Chung (they/them) b. 1999, Seoul, South Korea.

Hee Eun Chung is a multi-media fine art artist with a focus on image-making and holds a Bachelor's degree from Parsons, The New School in Photography. They have been studying photography for 6 years and have worked with music artists, models, and fashion designers, thus proving their versatility in photo making. Most of Hee Eun's intimate work deals with personal experiences growing up and brings authenticity to their photographs. They try to replicate that authentic feeling in any project that they are a part of and invite the audience to participate.

Work: Queerean Jesus

Jules Magnus (they/them) b. 1998, Chicago, Illinois.

Jules Magnus is a formally trained mixed media artist, whose paintings focus on light refractions in space through the relationship of blue and yellow. Jules explores their experience growing up as a transmasculine and queer child in the suburban midwest, and the in-between spaces they inhabited in youth. Like being underwater and watching the sun shine in; sometimes taking those contents, crumbling it up into a ball, and then slicing it in half. Jules incorporates circles, spirals, flesh, and plant structures to create a depth of feeling and space. Their paintings attempt to isolate the viewer, so that they can discover a corner or pocket that makes them feel at home. 

Work: Blue #0

Photo by Chris Edwards, courtesy of McColl Center

Photo by Chris Edwards, courtesy of McColl Center

K Sarrantonio (they/them) b. 1986, New Paltz, New York.

K Sarrantonio uses experimental printmaking processes to represent aspects of queer domesticity and contemplate the gendering of the body. Born in the Hudson Valley, K lives and works in Brooklyn. They received an MFA from Rhode Island School of Design and a BA from Hampshire College. They have attended residencies at Vermont Studio Center, Crosstown Arts, Kimmel Harding Nelson Center, McColl Center and Women’s Studio Workshop. Recent exhibitions include a solo exhibition at Ely Center of Contemporary Art and group exhibitions at Field Projects Gallery, Torpedo Factory Art Center, 440 Gallery, Goodyear Arts and Silvermine Gallery. 

Work: Weekday Evenings

Luke Lunsford (they/them) b. 1993, Washington, D.C.

Luke Lunsford is an artist raised in the Maryland suburbs of D.C., currently living and working in Nyack, NY. Luke received their undergraduate degree in Fine Arts at School of Visual Arts in NYC, and was influenced by visionary faculty such as Judith Linhares, Lynda Benglis, and Sue Williams. Luke has exhibited consistently in the NYC area for nearly a decade and was a resident artist at the residency Art House San Clemente in 2022.

Work: We Meet Again

Mickey Parkhill (they/them) b. 2000, New York.

Mickey Parkhill is a New York City born and based artist. They work with a range of mediums, including drawing, sculpture, and screen printing. They are currently a digital art student at Brooklyn College.

Work: Untitled

Summer Surgent-Gough (they/them) b. 1999, Hamilton, New York.

Summer (they/them) is a New York based photographer using their lens to explore their queerness and New York City’s queer underground. Their visual introspections are ever-evolving, circulating around themes of voyeurism, transness, and belonging. Their work has been exhibited in Westbeth Gallery and, now, Eleventh Hour Art. Summer currently works as a gallery assistant and resides in Brooklyn, New York.

Work: to be submerged in these transcendental waters, vision of a dance floor memory (in red)

Traci Johnson (they/them) b. 1998, Brooklyn, New York.

Traci Johnson was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York. Johnson specializes in textile design, installation, and sculpture. Johnson has shown at numerous galleries including Art Port Kingston, Sweet Lorraine Gallery, Micheal David & Co, Museum at FIT, and F.I.T. Art & Design Gallery. Johnson is a Fashion Institute of Technology graduate majoring in Fine Arts with a minor in Art History. Their concepts are driven by mental health, art, and fashion as therapy subcultures. Johnson creates a healing space for themselves and others within their work, essentially a safe space. They are deeply affected by traumas and how the human mind, soul, and body can be soothed by a moment. As they discover ways to comfort themself, their art emulates a calm, euphoric space. Johnson also brings themselves into the painting hoping to bring a sense of euphoria and vibration within the colors of their craft. They also have a deep emotion towards nature and the world; nature flows organically using every opportunity to grow and branch out into beautiful tendrils worldwide. Its mark is known calmly and fluidly which is an adaptation seen in their paintings. Johnson feels grateful to be able to express themselves through this outlet and will continue to display their art for the world to see.

Work: As I Lay

Xhiba (she/ they) b. 1997, Santa Monica, California.

Xhiba is a multidisciplinary artist specializing in oil painting. Xhiba exhibited first in North Carolina in 2019 at SECCA, and since 2020 has held five exhibitions in New York narrating an ever chancing interest in the sense world around us.

Work: Emergence

Carter Shocket (he/ him) b. 1995, North Carolina.

Carter Shocket is a fiber, textile, and installation artist born and raised in North Carolina currently living and working in Brooklyn, New York. His work has been shown with Eleventh Hour Art, Lobo Gallery, Ice Cream Social Art, The Brooklyn Waterfront Artist Coalition, among others. Shocket is the co-curator of The Thinning Veil and plans to continue organizing projects that bring together the trans and non-binary artist community in New York.

Work: Moon River