JULIA SEABROOK GALLERY

NEW GALLERY. NEW ART. ETERNAL THEME.


Miss Universe
Julia Seabrook Gallery, 660 Franklin Ave. Brooklyn Contact: @juliaseabrookgallery, info@abeartllc.com
Miss Universe, an exploration of the feminine experience through a range of print and photographic media, opened March 2 at Brooklyn’s newest art headquarters, Julia Seabrook Gallery, 660 Franklin Ave., Crown Heights. The exhibition, which runs through April 3, features a diverse cast of emerging and established artists bringing their talent, skills and incandescence to the task of defining what it means to be a woman in a post-modern world, touching on themes of beauty, strength, sexuality, desire, frustration and need.
Taking part in the inaugural show at the newly renovated JSG space are artists Maggie Holland, Anna Friemoth, Chris Carr, Gabriele De Cos, Lewinale Havette, ABE, Lane Sell and Adam Pitt. Late printmaking greats Nancy Spero and Emma Amos also are represented.
Julia Seabrook Gallery, a division of Abe Art LLC, is owned by Nicole ABE Titus. JSG offers an approachable, nonaligned threshold to the art world for promising emerging artists and a robust growth catalyst for established talent.
NANCY SPERO
An American painter and feminist artist, Spero’s expressive work is characterized by its figurative interpretation of sociopolitical and cultural issues, often directly tackling racism,
violence, and sexism in contemporary space. “I've always sought to express a tension in form and meaning in order to achieve a veracity.”
(DECEASED)

We Are Pro Choice, 1992, Screenprint in colors, on pink Japanese laid paper, the full sheet. 18 1/2 × 30 × 1/2 in | 47 × 76.2 × 1.3 cm


MAGGIE HOLLAND
Raised among goats, sheep, cowboys and cedar trees in Rosebud-Lott, Texas, Holland fell in love with print making while attending Baylor University. She moved to Brooklun in 2016. “I moved to New York in 2016 because I wanted to

be openly bi without the social pressures of conservative baptists. I began making art regularly again in late 2020. I returned to printmaking in the spring of 2021 when I joined Shoestring Press.”
We Are Pro Choice, 1992, screenprint in colors, on pink Japanese laid paper, 18 1/2 × 30 × 1/2 in | 47 × 76.2 × 1.3 cm




ANNA FRIEMOTH

Born and raised in New York, Anna uses photography to explore possible ways of seeing and understanding, in order to reimagine conventional tropes of language and image. She received her B.F.A. from Maryland Institute College of Art and Central Saint Martins. Her work has been published internationally in France, South Korea, Turkey, China, London and New York, in BLINK Magazine, Beautiful/Decay, Feature Shoot, MATTE Magazine, and Flavorwire.

Iron, 2017

Archival pigment print, 20 × 16 in | 50.8 × 40.6 cm

Editions 2-10 of 10

ABE

Growing up in foster care, ABE gravitated towards art at an early age as a means of escaping harsh realities. Her painting style can be described as abstract expressionism, while her overall art style is conceptual. There are sexual allusions in her work as well as references to the imbalances of power and money in society. In this work, her modeling explores questions of femininity, strength and struggle.

Strong Black Woman (1 through 4), 2021, Digital Print on luster paper, 24 × 18 in | 61 × 45.7 cm



GABRIELE DE COS

A Spanish-Colombian, multimedia artist based in New York City, de Cos' art practice is influenced by her extensive work as a fashion stylist, costume designer, photographer, and set designer as well as her interests in art and technology. Full of Grace, her latest project, is an exploration of intimacy, youth culture, and gender fluidity from a contemporary lens.
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LEWINALE HAVETTE

“Intimate but universal in its relevance, my artwork deals primarily with aspects of female identity, including gender and power dynamics, race, religion, and sexuality. It debunks the historical power structure systems that once surrounded me.”
Havette’s work has been featured in exhibitions in museums and galleries in the United States and Europe.


EMMA AMOS
Painter, printmaker, and weaver Emma Amos was born in 1937 and grew up in Atlanta, Georgia, where her parents owned a drugstore. “Images come to me of words like sass and back talk that describe the attitudes of people who actively resisted oppression. My work

has often taken shots at assumptions about skin color and the privileges of power and of whiteness.”

(DECEASED)

CHRIS CARR

Carr is a Brooklyn-based multidisciplinary conceptual artist, photographer, emcee, educator and instrumentalist. "I am intrigued by the history of cultural expression, power relationships, semiotics, post-modern sociological theory, and interpersonal


dynamics. My work takes on themes of normalcy vs. deviancy, alternative culture, social inequality, and the metaphysically interstellar."

ADAM PITT


A woodcut printmaker who spent decades navigating life as a corporate manager for a Fortune 500 company, Pitt worked simultaneously as an undercover artist. Pitt works in two distinct series; Nudes and Korporate Culture. Both series observe the muse, becoming a narrative for his own work-life dichotomy.

LANE SELL
A St. Thomian artist living and working in Crown Heights, Sell is a printmaker by trade, his work extends into installation, assemblage, sculpture, and performance. He is the founder
and Master Printer of Shoestring Press, a community printshop and artist space on Classon Avenue which has served Brooklyn artists for the past decade.
From Lane Sell's Interseries
Program by B Scene Zine
bscenezine.com




@bscenezine
bscenezine@gmail.com