Paul Hodgson
(1972, Shrewsbury, UK) graduated from the Department of Fine Art at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne (1995) and the Royal College of Art, London (2000). Recent solo exhibitions include: Anteroom, Richard Parr Associates, The People’s Hall, London (2024). Other solo presentations include: Cambridge University Library (2010); St John’s College, University of Cambridge (2010); Marlborough Fine Art, London (2010); RISE Berlin, Berlin (2008); Marlborough Fine Art, London (2007); Feigen Contemporary, New York (2005); Museum of Foreign Art, Riga (2004); Rochester Art Gallery, Rochester (2004).. Selected group exhibitions include Arkas Sanat Alaçatı, Çeşme, İzmir, Turkey (forthcoming, 2025); Missy Decor, London (2025); Dollhouse, London (2025);, Drawing Room, London (2024); Arkas Art Centre, İzmir, Turkey (2022); Royal Academy of Arts, London (2020); and Milstein Exhibition Centre, Cambridge University Library (2019). Hodgson’s work is held in public collections such as the Elgiz Museum of Contemporary Art, Istanbul; Imperial War Museum, London; St John’s College, Cambridge; New Orleans Museum of Art; Pérez Art Museum, Miami; and the Royal College of Art, London.
Untitled (Mental Phenomena), 2025
Oil, acrylic, silkscreen ink and archival print on canvas
100 x 210cm (100 x 108 cm each)
Selected book: Tauba Auerbach, [2,3], 2011
Anna Ilsley
(b. 1982, Hertfordshire, UK) lives and works in Suffolk. She completed her BA in Fine Art Painting at Brighton University (2006) and her postgraduate studies at the Royal Drawing School, London (2010). Recent solo and two-person exhibitions include: Britten Pears Arts, Suffolk (2024) and Parsons X Payne, London (2023). Selected group shows include: Asylum Studios, Suffolk (2024); White Conduit Projects, London (2022); Terrace Gallery, London (2022). Her work is held in public collections such as Soho House, Brighton; Beijing CapitalMuseum and the British School at Athens.
Little Deaths, 2025
Oil on canvas
130 x 100cm
Selected book: Madonna, Sex, 1992
Gabriel Kidd
(b.1999 Manchester, UK) graduated with an MA in Fine Art at Slade School of Art (2025) and was awarded the Adrian Carruthers, Acme Studio Award. Solo exhibitions include: HOME, Manchester (forthcoming, 2026); Ive always kept a unicorn, Pipeline, London, UK (2023). Selected group exhibitions include: Cloister Stone, Pipeline, London, UK (2025); Heartlands, Flexitron Gallery, London, UK (2025); Give Me an Inch, Pipeline, London, UK (2024); finetoothcomb, Greatorex Gallery, London, UK (2024), Blue tac on a spike is no good, EC2A 2BS, London, UK (2024), In the membrane, Paradise Works, Salford, UK (2023), The Alumni Strike Back with Short Supply, Paradise Works, Salford, UK (2023) and New Contemporaries 2022, South London Gallery, London & Humber Street Gallery, Hull, UK (2022).
Poise, Pose, 2025
Pencil on paper
62 x 45cm
Selected book: Nurbol Nurakhmet, Persistent Patterns, 2024
Katy Stubbs
(b. 1992, Hong Kong) is a South-African British artist who lives and works in London. Stubbs studied illustration at the School of Visual Arts, New York and has completed residencies at Palazzo Monti, Italy, 2021 and ALMA ZEVI, Venice in 2019. She attended the Anderson Ranch residency, Aspen, USA, in February 2025. Recent solo exhibitions include Lyndsey Ingram, London (2023); ALMA ZEVI, London (2020). Recent group exhibitions include London’s County Hall (2025); Woman’s Art Collection, at the Murray Edwards College, Cambridge (2023); The Burton at Bideford, Bideford (2022); Paterson Zevi, London (2022). Stubbs participated in the British Ceramics Biennial (2021), and the Great Women Artists residency and exhibition, curated by Katy Hessel at Palazzo Monti (2021). Her work is held in the Zabludowicz Collection and the Katrin Bellinger Collection.
The Budgerigar, 2025
Earthenware and glaze
36 x 32 x 25 cm
Selected book: Christian Boltanski, Le Club Mickey, 1990
Nika Neelova
(b. 1989, Russia) lives and works in London, UK. She completed her MA in Fine Art Sculpture at the Slade School of Art, London (2011), and her BA in Fine Art at the Royal Academy of Art, The Hague (2008). Forthcoming solo exhibitions include Museum der Moderne Salzburg (2025) and Sir John Soane’s Museum, London (2025). Recent solo presentations include Nika Project Space, Dubai (2024); Noire Gallery, Turin (2023); Santozeum, Santorini (2023); ECContemporary, Chieri, Turin (2022); SILT, Brighton CCA (2021); Celine Art Project curated by Hedi Slimane, Celine, London (2021); The Tetley, Leeds (2019); Noire Gallery, Turin (2019). Selected group exhibitions include Fondazione Puglisi, Catania (2024); Frieze Sculpture Park with Noire Gallery, curated by Fatos Üstek, London (2024); Stephane Simmons Gallery, Knokke (2024); Ortigia Contemporanea, Sicily (2024); Noire Gallery, Turin (2024); Parafin, London (2023); Nika Project Space, Dubai (2023); Piran Museum of Visual Art, Slovenia (2023) and NITJA Museum, Oslo (2022); Copperfield, London (2021). Selection of public collections include: Celine Art Collection, David and Indre Roberts Art Foundation, Saatchi Gallery, Museum of Modern Art, Russia, New Art Centre, Biedermann Museum.
Chronotope, 2025
Cast abacus beads, handblown glass, reclaimed glass fragments, sand, ashes
Dimensions varied
Selected book: Stéphane Mallarmé, Un coup des jamais n’abolira le hasard, written 1897, book published 1914
Leon Scott-Engel
(b.1999, London, UK) lives and works in London. He completed his BA at Glasgow School of Art in 2022 and was awarded the Richard Ford Award and Research Residency at the Museo Del Prado, Madrid. Recent solo and duo exhibitions include: Pipeline, London (2023); Flexitron hosted by Pipeline, London (2023). Recent group shows include The Tagli, London (2025); Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool (2025); Hot Sheet, London (2025); Standpoint Gallery, London (2025); Flexitron, London (2025); Lea Bridge Library Pavilion, curated by Alex Fox, London (2024); HBH Gallery, London (2024); Saatchi Gallery, curated by Delphian Gallery, London (2024); Split, London (2023); Liliya Art Gallery, London (2024); Warbling, London (2022); Black White Gallery, London (2022); Transmission Gallery, Glasgow (2022) and D Contemporary, London (2022). His work has been exhibited at Swab art fair with Neven and Split, Barcelona (2024).
Rewind, 2025
Oil on stretched canvas
45 x 150 x 32 cm
Selected book: John Crombie, So, 1988
Sophie Seita
(b 1987, Germany) lives and works in London. Selected exhibitions, performances, and commissions, and engagements include: Seoul Museum of Art, South Korea (2025); Goethe Institute, London (2025); Kafkarna, Centre for Art and Ecology, Prague (2025); TACO!, London (2025); Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance, New York (2025); Queercircle, London (2025), ZK/U, Berlin (2025), Ruta del Castor (Mexico City, 2024), The Auxiliary, Middlesborough (2024); Crown Street Art Gallery, Darlington Library (2024); FAC Athens (2024), Café Oto, London (2022 and 2023), Mimosa House, London (2023); Nottingham Contemporary, Nottingham (2023); Ugly Duck (2023), Roberts Institute of Art/Hunterian Museum, Glasgow (2022). Seita’s work is held in the MoMA and Met Library, Whitney Museum, Beinecke Library, Banff Centre, Chelsea College of Art, Goldsmith Women’s Art Library, SUNY Buffalo Poetry Collection, British Library, University of Cambridge, Jan van Eyck Academie. Seita teaches in the Art Department at Goldsmiths, and recently held residencies at Studio Voltaire (2025), Akademie der Künste, Berlin (2024), Brown University (2023), Britten Pears (2022).
Pockets of Avoidant Attachment, 2025
Red-edge linen, blue/grey dupion silk (two-tone),
screenprint on crepe satin, beech, metal spars, sound 24:06”
Varied dimensions
Selected book: Sonia Delauney, Robe Poèmes, 27 tableaux vivants, 1969, text by Jacques Demase
Norberto Spina
(b. 1995, Italy) lives and works in London. He completed his postgraduate at the Royal Academy of Arts, London (2021–2024), following a BA in Painting from the Brera Academy, Milan (2014–2017) and an Erasmus programme at the Universitat de Barcelona (2016–2017). Solo exhibitions include: Cassina Project, Milan (2025); Cooke Latham Gallery, London (2024). Recent and forthcoming group exhibitions include: Fondazione Giuseppe Iannaccone, Vercelli (2025); Perrotin, Paris (2025); Pipeline, London (2025), Workplace, London (2024); Guts Gallery, London (2024); Palmer Gallery, London (2024); Royal Academy of Arts, London (2024) and Cassina Project, Milan (2024); Night Café Gallery, London (2023); Royal Academy of Arts, London (2023); and French Place, London (2023). Spina’s recent awards and residencies include the Brave Projects –Chapter Four Award (2025), the Almacantar Studio Award (2024), and the Keeler’s Acquisition Prize instituted by the Royal Academy of Arts, London (2024).
Portrait of a boy, 2025
Coloured pencil on paper
15 x 20 cm
*
Night Landscape, 2025
Coloured pencil on paper
35 x 47 cm
Selected book: Ekaterina Anchevskaya, I Remember Nothing, 2020