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Jeremy Hush

To quote Anagnorisis, the macabre, elaborate, wild yet delicate drawings of Jeremy Hush are “heavy influenced by Arthur Rackham and other 19th-century illustrations….His spidery drawings are dark and mysterious, but, like Rackham’s drawings, evoke the fear, love, and awe one might have for nature and her power.” He often draws with ballpoint pens he finds in hotels around the world (Hush is prone to wanderlust), uses “traditional India ink and watercolor,” and “also experiments with a plethora of other media. such as coffee, for example.”

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Korin Faught

Taking cues from classical art (she is a self-confessed devotee of Vermeer), Korin Faught paints beautifully realistic portraits of women, in white dresses and Dutch caps, often in groups of enigmatic or symbolic meaning; a striking blend of the modern and the traditional, the surreal and the lifelike, a balance between a crisp and precise style and an expressive, imaginative quality.

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