Bill Eppinger
(b. 1961, lives Frenchtown, NJ) A born-again Christian, Eppinger translates spiritual messages into symbolic language through daily drawings. He constructs fantastical cardboard architecture from discarded materials collected at his job, such as W.E. Castle—a fortress guarded by rubber figurines and populated with smiley face characters and animals. His work merges spiritual practice with found-object sculpture, creating narrative environments from everyday waste.
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Katie House
(b. 1983, lives Frenchtown, NJ) House practices mixed-media intervention on found photographs spanning from 1960s educational materials to early 20th-century portraits. She overlays bright painted color onto these forgotten images, accentuating the personalities of long-lost subjects and breathing contemporary life into archival material. Her practice interrogates photography and painting as tools for resurrection and recontextualization.
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Rachel Irgang
(b. 1995, lives Lambertville, NJ) Irgang paints intimate personal subjects—beaches, favorite foods, family memories—with pastel palettes and floating, dreamlike compositions. Her work draws from vaporwave aesthetics and early 2010s nostalgia for 1980s–90s visual culture, translating digital and consumer imagery into soft, ethereal paintings that hover between memory and fantasy.
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Matthew Jacobs
(b. 1991, lives Delaware River Valley, NJ) Jacobs employs a methodical synthesis of two art-historical references in each painting, combining Western modernism with indigenous abstraction. His hybrid titles reflect this deliberate union of sources, creating works that honor foundational artistic traditions while generating new formal languages through juxtaposition.
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Daisy Rodriguez
(b. 1977, lives Flemington, NJ) Rodriguez dissolves flowers and still lifes into vibrant abstractions through broad gestural strokes and pointillist marks. Her technique celebrates the materiality of paint itself—its drips, flows, and tactile presence—transforming recognizable subjects into mysterious, energetic compositions that privilege process and sensation.
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Patrick Warner
(b. 1990, lives Delaware River Valley, NJ) Warner's still lifes reference Dutch painting traditions from Rembrandt to van Gogh, while his recent figurative work channels the visceral expressionism of Chaim Soutine. He allows paint to move freely across canvas—both controlled and spontaneous—generating haunting, unsettling surfaces through drips, wet color-mixing, and technical command that blur intention and accident.
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David Weinhold
(b. 1994, lives Pittstown, NJ) Weinhold draws from sci-fi, horror, fantasy, comics, and animation, working across painting, drawing, graphic novels, and digital illustration. His carefully rendered gouache paintings honor classical animators and cartoonists (Tex Avery, Chuck Jones, R. Crumb, Jack Kirby) while employing graphic conventions of flatness, simplicity, and economy of means with meticulous attention to shading and color-blending.
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