Jo Cosme: Battle for Paradise
Past Exhibitions Jessie Past Exhibitions Jessie

Jo Cosme: Battle for Paradise

A powerful photographic series by multimedia artist Jo Cosme, this exhibition is part of her larger body of work, Welcome to Paradise: ¡Viva Puerto Rico Libre!, a searing visual investigation into the impacts of neocolonialism and disaster capitalism in Borikén/Puerto Rico.

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Amara Eke: Guess What?
Past Exhibitions Jessie Past Exhibitions Jessie

Amara Eke: Guess What?

Eke’s cheerful exploration of the egg goes beyond its physical form—it becomes a symbol for the human experience, reflecting language, nature, and the universe itself. The egg, she believes, connects humanity through shared potentials rather than differences, offering a reminder of what unites us all.

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Rowan Eriksson: I Said She Was Wicked
Past Exhibitions Jessie Past Exhibitions Jessie

Rowan Eriksson: I Said She Was Wicked

Rowan Eriksson’s works present a visual dialogue about the continuous scrutiny of gender performance through layered sketches, advertisements, and bodily remnants that resist easy interpretation. In this exhibition, materials such as hair, glass, oil, pastel, and acrylic serve not only as aesthetic elements but as active agents in the process of meaning-making.

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Ingrid Sojit: Hysterical Blindness
Past Exhibitions Jessie Past Exhibitions Jessie

Ingrid Sojit: Hysterical Blindness

These paintings explore the relationship between eyesight, the physical ability for the eye to see, and vision, the ability of the brain to process what it sees. The term vision has several literal and metaphorical meanings—from a person’s ideological foundation, to their imagined plans for the future, to imagination itself, or even to a supernatural apparition. 

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Jessie Summa Russo: Cosmic Grids
Past Exhibitions Jessie Past Exhibitions Jessie

Jessie Summa Russo: Cosmic Grids

This selection of mixed media works by guest artist Jessie Summa Russo is inspired by physicist Frank Wilczek’s conception of our universe as a “vibrant energy field” that he calls The Grid. Oil paintings, collages, and monotypes support and contain Russo’s abstract maximalism to present a visual meditation on this concept.

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