Featured Artists

Jason Jägel is a San Francisco-based artist whose work uses storytelling to conjure fictional worlds where anything can happen at any time, like everyday life. His work is in many collections including the Museum of Modern Art - New York, Hammer Museum - Los Angeles, and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, among many others. His 2019 public commission, The Author & Her Story, is a 13x34-foot ceramic tile mosaic at San Francisco International Airport. “I want to create a place with its own inner life and see what happens.”

Jason Jägel
Jason Jägel

Jason Jägel is a San Francisco-based artist whose work uses storytelling to conjure fictional worlds where anything can happen at any time, like everyday life. His work is in many collections including the Museum of Modern Art - New York, Hammer Museum - Los Angeles, and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, among many others. His 2019 public commission, The Author & Her Story, is a 13x34-foot ceramic tile mosaic at San Francisco International Airport. “I want to create a place with its own inner life and see what happens.”

Jason Jägel
Jason Jägel

Jason Jägel is a San Francisco-based artist whose work uses storytelling to conjure fictional worlds where anything can happen at any time, like everyday life. His work is in many collections including the Museum of Modern Art - New York, Hammer Museum - Los Angeles, and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, among many others. His 2019 public commission, The Author & Her Story, is a 13x34-foot ceramic tile mosaic at San Francisco International Airport. “I want to create a place with its own inner life and see what happens.”

Jason Jägel

Martín Ferreyra was born in Córdoba, Argentina. He has a bachelor’s degree in psychology and is largely a self-taught artist. His work moves between painting and ceramics, creating a personal language that investigates identity, ritual, and myth— concepts drawn from the collective unconscious. Ferreyra has exhibited in residencies, festivals, and shows across Denmark, Japan, Paris, Spain, Chile, Uruguay, Argentina, Mexico, Canada, the United States and many other galleries across the globe. Now based in Oaxaca, he works from his studio in Etla, exploring new materials and collaborations with local artists in ceramics, textiles, and printmaking.

MartÍn Ferreyra
MartÍn Ferreyra

Martín Ferreyra was born in Córdoba, Argentina. He has a bachelor’s degree in psychology and is largely a self-taught artist. His work moves between painting and ceramics, creating a personal language that investigates identity, ritual, and myth— concepts drawn from the collective unconscious. Ferreyra has exhibited in residencies, festivals, and shows across Denmark, Japan, Paris, Spain, Chile, Uruguay, Argentina, Mexico, Canada, the United States and many other galleries across the globe. Now based in Oaxaca, he works from his studio in Etla, exploring new materials and collaborations with local artists in ceramics, textiles, and printmaking.

MartÍn Ferreyra
MartÍn Ferreyra

Martín Ferreyra was born in Córdoba, Argentina. He has a bachelor’s degree in psychology and is largely a self-taught artist. His work moves between painting and ceramics, creating a personal language that investigates identity, ritual, and myth— concepts drawn from the collective unconscious. Ferreyra has exhibited in residencies, festivals, and shows across Denmark, Japan, Paris, Spain, Chile, Uruguay, Argentina, Mexico, Canada, the United States and many other galleries across the globe. Now based in Oaxaca, he works from his studio in Etla, exploring new materials and collaborations with local artists in ceramics, textiles, and printmaking.

MartÍn Ferreyra

Big Happy (Robert Garcia, III) was born and raised in a working-class Chicano community in Merced, California. His earliest glimpses of art came through the inked letters his uncles sent home from San Quentin Penitentiary—hand-drawn images he’d trace and study—and the graffiti that bloomed across the neighborhood walls. From a young age, he became consumed by a need to create and collect, letting the weight of his surroundings and the richness of his culture shape his expression. With no formal training, he looked to the streets, to sound, to memory. Art became a language, a way to make sense of the world around him. That hunger—to dig deeper, to keep learning, to give shape to feeling—set him on a lifelong path through art and music. Alongside his art, he is a Senior Graphic Designer at Apple, where precision and design further sharpen his sense of form while also carrying a global presence as a world-renowned record collector and DJ – through every medium he touches he brings a depth of art, design, and music, weaving them into a singular visual language that is unmistakably his.

Big Happy
Big Happy

Big Happy (Robert Garcia, III) was born and raised in a working-class Chicano community in Merced, California. His earliest glimpses of art came through the inked letters his uncles sent home from San Quentin Penitentiary—hand-drawn images he’d trace and study—and the graffiti that bloomed across the neighborhood walls. From a young age, he became consumed by a need to create and collect, letting the weight of his surroundings and the richness of his culture shape his expression. With no formal training, he looked to the streets, to sound, to memory. Art became a language, a way to make sense of the world around him. That hunger—to dig deeper, to keep learning, to give shape to feeling—set him on a lifelong path through art and music. Alongside his art, he is a Senior Graphic Designer at Apple, where precision and design further sharpen his sense of form while also carrying a global presence as a world-renowned record collector and DJ – through every medium he touches he brings a depth of art, design, and music, weaving them into a singular visual language that is unmistakably his.

Big Happy
Big Happy

Big Happy (Robert Garcia, III) was born and raised in a working-class Chicano community in Merced, California. His earliest glimpses of art came through the inked letters his uncles sent home from San Quentin Penitentiary—hand-drawn images he’d trace and study—and the graffiti that bloomed across the neighborhood walls. From a young age, he became consumed by a need to create and collect, letting the weight of his surroundings and the richness of his culture shape his expression. With no formal training, he looked to the streets, to sound, to memory. Art became a language, a way to make sense of the world around him. That hunger—to dig deeper, to keep learning, to give shape to feeling—set him on a lifelong path through art and music. Alongside his art, he is a Senior Graphic Designer at Apple, where precision and design further sharpen his sense of form while also carrying a global presence as a world-renowned record collector and DJ – through every medium he touches he brings a depth of art, design, and music, weaving them into a singular visual language that is unmistakably his.

Big Happy

Emi is a rising San Francisco-raised artist whose work has quickly gained recognition across the Bay Area, with exhibitions and sold pieces spanning galleries, community spaces, and independent publications. Currently studying Visual Communication Design at San Francisco State University, she moves fluidly between painting, sewing, and digital illustration, building a vibrant world shaped by childhood nostalgia, anime, and video-game storytelling. At the center of her practice is her character XO (pronounced zo)—a bunny alter ego she has developed for over a decade. XO embodies vulnerability, moodiness, playfulness, and heart, serving as an emotional mirror and narrative guide through her evolving creative universe. Emi’s work is grounded in self-reflection and personal storytelling, offering pieces that feel intimate, relatable, and full of life. Emi brings a fresh, youthful voice to contemporary art and design—inviting viewers to step into her world and meet XO along the way.

Emi
Emi

Emi is a rising San Francisco-raised artist whose work has quickly gained recognition across the Bay Area, with exhibitions and sold pieces spanning galleries, community spaces, and independent publications. Currently studying Visual Communication Design at San Francisco State University, she moves fluidly between painting, sewing, and digital illustration, building a vibrant world shaped by childhood nostalgia, anime, and video-game storytelling. At the center of her practice is her character XO (pronounced zo)—a bunny alter ego she has developed for over a decade. XO embodies vulnerability, moodiness, playfulness, and heart, serving as an emotional mirror and narrative guide through her evolving creative universe. Emi’s work is grounded in self-reflection and personal storytelling, offering pieces that feel intimate, relatable, and full of life. Emi brings a fresh, youthful voice to contemporary art and design—inviting viewers to step into her world and meet XO along the way.

Emi
Emi

Emi is a rising San Francisco-raised artist whose work has quickly gained recognition across the Bay Area, with exhibitions and sold pieces spanning galleries, community spaces, and independent publications. Currently studying Visual Communication Design at San Francisco State University, she moves fluidly between painting, sewing, and digital illustration, building a vibrant world shaped by childhood nostalgia, anime, and video-game storytelling. At the center of her practice is her character XO (pronounced zo)—a bunny alter ego she has developed for over a decade. XO embodies vulnerability, moodiness, playfulness, and heart, serving as an emotional mirror and narrative guide through her evolving creative universe. Emi’s work is grounded in self-reflection and personal storytelling, offering pieces that feel intimate, relatable, and full of life. Emi brings a fresh, youthful voice to contemporary art and design—inviting viewers to step into her world and meet XO along the way.

Emi

Flavia Elisa Mora is a queer, Mexican migrant artist, activist, and community organizer raised in occupied Ramaytush Ohlone land, in a neighborhood known as La Misión. Amongst her interdisciplinary art practice, her main two foci are muralismo and Flor y Canto poesía. Through painting on top of ladders and weaving singing into poetry, she finds herself closer to her ancestry rooted in the Caxcan ranchos of Aguascalientes, and Nochistlan, Mexico. Flavia’s work delves into the exploration of her identity, relationships, migration story, family and community history. She is a published writer, has performed poetry throughout the Bay Area, and is one of the lead artists for the mural, Alto al Fuego en la Misión located on 24th and Capp, SF.

Flavia Elisa Mora
Flavia Elisa Mora

Flavia Elisa Mora is a queer, Mexican migrant artist, activist, and community organizer raised in occupied Ramaytush Ohlone land, in a neighborhood known as La Misión. Amongst her interdisciplinary art practice, her main two foci are muralismo and Flor y Canto poesía. Through painting on top of ladders and weaving singing into poetry, she finds herself closer to her ancestry rooted in the Caxcan ranchos of Aguascalientes, and Nochistlan, Mexico. Flavia’s work delves into the exploration of her identity, relationships, migration story, family and community history. She is a published writer, has performed poetry throughout the Bay Area, and is one of the lead artists for the mural, Alto al Fuego en la Misión located on 24th and Capp, SF.

Flavia Elisa Mora
Flavia Elisa Mora

Flavia Elisa Mora is a queer, Mexican migrant artist, activist, and community organizer raised in occupied Ramaytush Ohlone land, in a neighborhood known as La Misión. Amongst her interdisciplinary art practice, her main two foci are muralismo and Flor y Canto poesía. Through painting on top of ladders and weaving singing into poetry, she finds herself closer to her ancestry rooted in the Caxcan ranchos of Aguascalientes, and Nochistlan, Mexico. Flavia’s work delves into the exploration of her identity, relationships, migration story, family and community history. She is a published writer, has performed poetry throughout the Bay Area, and is one of the lead artists for the mural, Alto al Fuego en la Misión located on 24th and Capp, SF.

Flavia Elisa Mora

Born and raised in Los Angeles, CA and currently residing in San Francisco, CA, Nick Yusi, aka Bust, is a 24 year old contemporary artist using airbrush, acrylics, and other mediums to create his unique pieces. You can find his art in San Francisco galleries, and on a variety of different musicians' album art covering a wide variety of genres. He draws his inspiration from old music videos and horror movies from the late 80’s to the early 2000’s, harnessing the energy and creativity of the creators of his favorite forms of media introduced to him at a young age.

Nick Yusi
Nick Yusi

Born and raised in Los Angeles, CA and currently residing in San Francisco, CA, Nick Yusi, aka Bust, is a 24 year old contemporary artist using airbrush, acrylics, and other mediums to create his unique pieces. You can find his art in San Francisco galleries, and on a variety of different musicians' album art covering a wide variety of genres. He draws his inspiration from old music videos and horror movies from the late 80’s to the early 2000’s, harnessing the energy and creativity of the creators of his favorite forms of media introduced to him at a young age.

Nick Yusi
Nick Yusi

Born and raised in Los Angeles, CA and currently residing in San Francisco, CA, Nick Yusi, aka Bust, is a 24 year old contemporary artist using airbrush, acrylics, and other mediums to create his unique pieces. You can find his art in San Francisco galleries, and on a variety of different musicians' album art covering a wide variety of genres. He draws his inspiration from old music videos and horror movies from the late 80’s to the early 2000’s, harnessing the energy and creativity of the creators of his favorite forms of media introduced to him at a young age.

Nick Yusi