Gallery
Dev Harlan is a New York based artist working in sculpture, installation and digital media. He has exhibited in the US and internationally and has permanent commissions with corporate and private collectors. Dev is a 2020 NYFA Fellowship Finalist in Digital Media Arts and winner of the 2022 Mozaik Artist Grant.
Solo exhibitions include Christopher Henry Gallery (NY) and Gallery Madison Park (NY). Group shows include “Noor” at the Sharjah Art Museum, the New Museum’s “Ideas City” NY and the Singapore Light Art Festival. Dev has been an artist in residence at the Frank Lloyd Wright School Of Architecture and the SVA Sculpture & New Media Residency. Dev is currently pursuing a BA in Earth Science at Columbia University.
As an interdisciplinary artist, Rachel Rozanski creates surrealist documentary pieces through the mediums of drawing, photography, and video. Her creative research unravels cultural fantasies of restoration and repair in environments and in bodies, borrowing from scientific fields to trace planetary disablement through the study of air, sea, and stone. Through residency projects in the Yukon, Northwest Territories, Nunavut, and Iceland, she has collaborated with researchers and been inspired by studies of permafrost degradation, pollution, extinction, and adaptations for the Anthropocene. Rachel’s work as a PhD student and member of AIM Lab portrays the creative survival of people, plants, and animals in both sick bodies and sick lands. Her work has been exhibited in galleries internationally and across Canada including PAVED arts, Prefix Circuit Gallery, Two Rivers Gallery, the Canada Council for the Arts Ajagemo gallery, and Artspace Gallery for CONTACT Photography Festival.
Jessica Segall works in hostile and threatened landscapes and plays with both the risk of engaging with the environment and the vulnerability of the environment itself, examining a queer ecology. Jessica’s work is built on a foundation of research that often includes cross-disciplinary collaboration with scientists, activists, plants and animals. She exhibits her work internationally and it has been featured in Cabinet Magazine, e-flux Criticism, Frieze, The New York Times, Sculpture Magazine, Mousse Magazine and Art in America. Her work is in the collections of the Museum de Domijnen, The Manetti Shrem Museum of Art and the Aura Contemporary Art Foundation. She received her MFA from Columbia University and her BA from Bard College. Jessica teaches classes and workshops on Ecofeminism and Interspecies Design and is the current Guest Lecturer in Sculpture at Sarah Lawrence College.
Frida Teller is a cross-disciplinary artistic researcher engaging with the poetics and politics of the Anthropocene. She graduated with a Masters in Cross-Disciplinary Strategies from the University of Applied Arts, Vienna.
Her work has been presented in Athens, Bochum, Vienna, Bangalore, and Berlin, among other places. Her work has been awarded with the Social-Design Prize of the Vienna Design Week 2023, and the IF Student Design Award.
Daniela Trinkl explores the changing relationship between humans, technology and the environment.
In I exist in a mix of plastic, rubble and soil, relics of technological civilisation become visible,
narrating a creeping loss of human control. The starting point is weathered drainage pipes found in the Viennese Woods — remnants that, through overgrowth and discolouration, seem to have merged with their surroundings, taking on an almost organic presence. Photographs of these pipes are transferred onto aluminium sheets, while the found objects themselves inhabit the exhibition space. Together they reveal a state of transition between artifact, fossil and living being. The work reflects on the fragile relationship between human achievements and uncontrollable processes and creates scenarios in which the man-made develops a life of its own.




















