PMT Gallery
Christine Rebhuhn
Rebhuhn's artworks may seem insignificant at first glance, but they captivate by revealing the absurdity and hilarity in the ordinary. The artist transforms the mundane, inviting viewers to see the world through a new, thought-provoking lens. By stripping away clutter and exposing everyday structures, the work prompts us to question our assumptions. Rebhuhn's artistic vision challenges our perceptions of the familiar. The artist has received honors such as the Vermont Studio Center Alumni Fellowship, National Endowment for the Arts, and Cranbrook Academy of Art Merit Scholarship.
Marcia Grostein
Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, Hara Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo, Museum of Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro, and also spread in other different galleries. She was the first Brazilian artist whose work was purchased from a high museum like the Metropolitan Museum.
Michael Wolf
In 2020, Wolf's artist residency at Mana Contemporary led to drawings that inspired sculptures and a solo exhibition in New Jersey. He has received individual fellowship grants from the New Jersey State Council of the Arts and Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation. Wolf was also honored with the prestigious Power of Art Award, presented by artist Robert Rauschenberg.
Richard Wiesel
Richard Wiesel, a photographer and relative of Elie Wiesel, who was a survivor of the Holocaust and received the Nobel Peace Prize, was given special permission to enter the private archives of the Sachsenhausen and Ravensbruck memorials. He captured photographs of valuable objects that had never been revealed before, and through his research, he managed to track down their original owners and uncover their stories.
Tatiana Arocha
Influenced by her upbringing in Colombia's rainforests, engages in fieldwork to study and document the forest ecosystem. She collaborates with indigenous communities to understand their relationships with nature. In the studio, the artist creates large-scale forest portraits to immerse viewers in the intricate connections of the natural world.
YongJae Kim
Yongjae Kim is a hyperrealist painter. He uses tiny paintbrushes smaller than our eyelashes to create super-realistic images of our daily surroundings in NYC. The Korean-born artist has been obsessed with detailed drawings and paintings, working strictly in oil painting. It takes him months and even years to complete one painting. He is a recipient of the Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, 2023, and The NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship in the category of Painting 2021, and the New York Foundation for the Arts award in 2021.