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rhea dillon sculpture new talent

Rhea Dillon, a 29-year-old artist and writer, is preparing for three exhibitions opening over the summer: a group show at the Whitney Independent Study Program (ISP), a solo exhibition at Heidelberger Kunstverein, and a booth in the Statements section of Art Basel Switzerland. Her work, which draws on Black and Caribbean intellectual traditions, uses everyday objects and symbols to critique postcolonial diasporic identity, as seen in sculptures like *Caribbean Ossuary* (2022) and *Swollen, Whole, Broken...* (2023). Dillon also discusses her linguistic approach, explored in drawings at Paul Soto Gallery, where she repeats and redefines the shape of a spade to transform a racial slur into new forms.

art jesus hilarios reyes young artist

Cultured profiles Jesús Hilario-Reyes, a 29-year-old New York-based artist who describes themself as “anti-disciplinary,” working across performance, sound, video, and sculpture. Inspired by queer rave culture, migration, Western carnivals, and Puerto Rico’s hurricane-worn mangrove forests, they have performed at Documenta, the Kitchen, Gladstone Gallery, and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. In the interview, Hilario-Reyes discusses key influences from graduate school teachers, the importance of spontaneity and presence in their practice, and their underrated studio tool—an electrical die grinder.

art cherrie yu young artist

Cultured magazine profiles Cherrie Yu, a 30-year-old artist based in New York who grew up in Xi'an and Wuxi, China. Yu creates videos, performances, and prints that examine the relationship between everyday movement, dance, labor, and play. Notable works include 'Trisha and Homer' (2018), which juxtaposes a 1986 solo by choreographer Trisha Brown with the movements of a mopping maintenance worker, and 'Wrestling Study' (2017), a video reenacting a wrestling match in Chicago traffic. Yu cites mentor Bryan Saner, a woodworker and performer, as a key influence on their understanding of the laboring body as the dancing body.

art hannah taurins young artist

Cultured magazine profiles 27-year-old artist Hannah Taurins, who is based in New York and originally from Houston. Her upcoming show with Tureen will explore the life cycle of a love story, drawing on nuptial aesthetics. Taurins’ drawing and painting practice extracts spiritual undertones from superficial sources like magazine spreads, pop anthems, and fangirl culture, and has been shown at galleries including Theta and Château Shatto. She cites Amy Sillman’s painting class at Cooper Union as a key influence, and describes her work as "sexy, colorful, fresh."

aislan pankararu brazil new talent 2025

Aislan Pankararu, an Indigenous Brazilian artist and licensed physician, maintains a studio in São Paulo where he creates works that draw from his Pankararu heritage, medical training, and the Caatinga biome of northeastern Brazil. His practice includes clay-pigmented paintings, abstract forms evoking cellular structures and ritual designs, and series such as "Soil" (2024) and "Touch" (2024). After returning to drawing during his medical residency in 2019, Pankararu quickly gained recognition, participating in exhibitions at the Museu Nacional da República and Museu de Arte de São Paulo, and winning the prestigious PIPA Prize in 2024.

art mimi park young artist

Mimi Park, a 29-year-old South Korean artist based in New York, creates kinetic sculptures and installations that explore themes of responsibility, care, and value. Her recent work at SculptureCenter, titled “Dahlia,” consisted of recycled shredded paper arranged in a firework shape that viewers inadvertently destroyed within minutes of the opening—a process she embraced as part of the artwork's evolution. Park has also shown at Bard’s Hessel Museum and Sebastian Gladstone, and her practice includes handmade robots, dust, and seedlings.

art maud acheampong young artist

Cultured magazine profiles Ghanaian-American artist Maud Acheampong, age 27, as part of its 2025 Young Artists list. Before their first solo show, Acheampong gained hundreds of thousands of TikTok followers through theatrical videos performed as Dainty Funk, a digital avatar and drag persona. Their work explores surveillance, monstrousness, and existential themes, with a recent live performance piece, "A Yawn, A Scream, An Endless Opening of the Mouth" (2025), presented at the Marshak Planetarium at City College of New York. The artist describes a hypothetical $150,000 project involving an obsidian dome in Ghana, ritual dance, and 3D-scanned footprints.