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Jet Le Parti is a German-American artist working across Berlin, Brooklyn and Los Angeles. A self-taught multimedia practitioner, his work spans disciplines and themes, engaging with phenomenology, theoretical sciences, historical recursion, hyperreality, and existential thought.
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L. S. Toy is a conceptual artist based in Hackney, London, whose work focuses on capturing the conditions and elements of the larger world, particularly through the lens of hyper-capitalism. Toy studied economics at the University of London and the London School of Economics before attending the Royal College of Art. He has since pursued a more autonomous path, challenging traditional artistic boundaries and employing industrial methods and digital tools to critique the mechanized, impersonal nature of contemporary conflicts and media narratives. His practice critically examines global conflicts, media representation, and commodification, presenting the art object as an interactive performance that reflects the complexities of existence in a digitized age.
MFA. Royal College of Art. * / BSc Economics. University of London + LSE
Based: London, UK
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Tino Park (b. 1994, South Korea) is a Brooklyn-based painter working in oil and acrylic. He arrived in the United States in 2018 and received his BFA in Painting with a minor in Psychology from Pratt Institute in 2023.
Park's work draws on figurative and art historical reference — reappropriating the visual language of the masters and recontextualizing canonical forms through the pressures of the present. His paintings move between abstraction and figuration, using the weight of inherited imagery to explore the full spectrum of human emotion: grief, desire, displacement, resilience. The psychological underpinning of his practice is deliberate — he is interested not only in what images mean, but in how they act on the body and the unconscious.
His approach is stoic and unsparing. Park does not resolve tension so much as hold it — allowing cultural, symbolic, and personal registers to coexist within a single plane. The result is work that feels both historically grounded and urgently alive.
That same disposition extends into his performance practice. In a journey completed over two to three months, Park walked the eastern coastal Americas from Queens, New York to the Florida Keys — sleeping exclusively outdoors throughout. The work engaged the geography of immigration directly, tracing the colonial corridor of the American coast on foot as a foreigner navigating the American experience from the ground up.
Park has exhibited in select group exhibitions and is fully represented by RP.1, Brooklyn. He will make his major debut in Everyday is a Countdown, forthcoming in 2026.