Waterfall invites you to “dwell therein,” to find a sure place known only to you. We seek to help you uncover a sanctuary that is uniquely your own—a place of respite and security, where breath becomes revitalizing and transformative. As an ode to summer, Waterfall proudly presents a captivating group exhibition of 7 featured artists on the ground floor with an extension of 31 international artists on the upper floors. This collection of artworks portrays each artist’s unique way of “dwelling therein” alongside their invitation to rediscover the essence of our breath.
Antonio Murado is a New York-based painter who experiments with a variety of techniques and source materials to create his works. His images range from abstract to representational, with thick impasto and lighter gestural marks. His works often contain mythological and art historical references that explore his interest in nature.
Jinwon Chang is a Korean artist who studied Korean traditional painting in South Korea. Chang focuses on life and God in his pieces and uses art to grasp the concepts of invisibility and the spiritual world. He uses art as a tool to overcome his confusion on things he cannot see, and as a starting point for understanding and telling the stories of his personal struggles and triumphs in regards to his faith.
As a master of ceramics technique, Lee Seung Hee creates remarkable ceramic works unite the beauty and charm of traditional Korean forms with the more conceptual concerns of contemporary art.
Born in the border town of Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico, in 1979, Lorenzo grew up in a culture of craftsmanship. With modest incomes, many of the people in his community learned how to make things to survive, from the garments they wore to the houses they lived in. His mother was a knitter who made all the family’s clothes.
Mika Horie is a Japanese artist who is one of the few modern practitioners of traditional Gampi paper. In 2013 after completing her MA degree in London, she moved to Shiga, Japan, to practice this endangered craft hoping to discover the history and inherit the job of making all-natural papers using Gampi branches.
Minha Yang, based in Korea, works with technology and art. He believes that despite the great advancements made so far, technology still carries imperfections that will continue to evolve and be resolved over time. He believes it is his vocation as an artist to recognize these imperfections and to find human traces in between the illusion and reality that technology creates.
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Orna Ben-Ami uses welded iron to create highly symbolic pieces that carry universal, local, and deeply personal meanings. As one of the only female welders in Israel, hers is a voice of tremendous empowerment that holds a great deal of cultural value.
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