the artist.

5 total pieces of artwork sold from our June 30the event! Contact an artist if you would like to purchase a print or original of their artwork.

 

Bria Sterling-Wilson

“Free Roaming” | Collage (Print Edition of 7) | 20x20 | 2020

Bria Sterling-Wilson is a photographer and collage artist from Baltimore, Maryland. She received her B.F.A in Photography and Digital Arts from Towson University, Towson, MD in 2021. Sterling-Wilson uses found imagery, magazines, newspaper, and fabrics to construct alluring scenes, portraits, and interiors to express the black experience. Sterling-Wilson has exhibited in Brooklyn, New York, Los Angles, California, Washington, D.C, Rehoboth, Delaware, and Baltimore, Maryland. Sterling-Wilson was awarded Young Artist recipient for the Trawick Prize Exhibition in 2020 and received 1st place in the 6th Rehoboth Art League Regional Juried Photography Exhibition in 2021. Sterling-Wilson's collage works are featured in Black Collagists: The Book by Teri Henderson and the cover art for Marcus Board Jr's Invisible Weapons: Infiltrating Resistance and Defeating Movements.

Sold for $525

See their current works here

Yewande K Davis

“Miss sue from alabama, her real name Suzianna” | 8x10

Yewande Kotun Davis is a Nigerian American artist based in Baltimore, Maryland. She grew up heavily involved in the arts, and ultimately chose visual art as her way of communing with the world. Yewande uses art, design, and storytelling as vehicles for self-care and community care. She currently works from her home studio and has exhibited in Baltimore, Washington, DC, Hermosa Beach, California, and Atlanta.

Sold for $125

See their current works here

Book Karnjanakit

“Sunday Afternoon” | Mixed Media | 11x14 | 2019

Book Karnjanakit, aka Koobta (She/They), is a cartoonist and illustrator originally from Bangkok, now living in Baltimore. Her frequently used media include watercolor, pencil color, collage, and digital. Every day she is still learning and unlearning about gender, sexuality, social justice, and cultural differences. Her free time is often spent watching birds, thinking silly thoughts, exploring the city, and eating yummy food.

See their current works here

“The Legendary Snailies” | Silk Screened | 12x16 | 2020

Sold for $50

Christina Delago

“An Offering” | Color digital photo on matte paper | 22x30 | 2014

Christina Delgado became a photographer and an artist later in life. Her experience started as a hobby; then became a profession and her reason for wanting to become a teacher early in her career. She has been an educator, a photographer, community advocate, and culture worker for well over 17 years. She is the founder of Tola’s Room, a collective of the arts, community, & education located in NE Baltimore. This space educates and influences using art, culture, and community organizing, while also serving as the only Puerto Rican cultural hub in Baltimore City. She is currently on the Maryland State Arts Council Artist-in-Resident Roster and works with Arts for Learning Maryland as an arts equity advisor, mentor, and Teaching Artist. She also serves in the Community Advocacy Position on the Board of the Environmental Control Board for Baltimore City. Christina is deeply invested in issues of diversity, equity, and art empowerment, upholding the mindset that these issues are a collective responsibility and thus require engagement and action.

Déjà

“BLACK & BLUE” | 24x24

From a young age, Déjà has always had a passion for the arts. Throughout her adolescence, she was introduced to the professional arts community. Obtaining the knowledge from her visual arts and stage design classes gave her the foundation needed to grow within her many crafts, thus allowing her to open up through other forms of art and design. Déjà’s process contains integrations of multiple media such as - abstract and contemporary art, lighting design, audio, sound design, and set/ installation design to create a conceptual piece and an open experience. She is constantly experimenting with all forms of media, texture, and acrylics to allow the paintings to come together as one whole picture.  She believes her paintings emphasize chaos because what is depicted in the paintings is unpredictable, disorderly, and formless. This is something Déjà chooses to embrace, not within her paintings but herself. 

Villager

“cows they're domesticating us” | Acrylic and Oil pastel | 16x20 | 2022

Currently based in Baltimore, MD, villager is a neo-expressionist painter born in Lagos, Nigeria. As a budding artist, villager presently uses acrylic and oil pastels to create simplistic yet concrete, abstract images that invite the viewer to create their interpretations of the work without the burden of rigidity and perfection.

Using primitive and child-like motifs, villager challenges themselves to construct visuals, experiences, and stories to be shared and occupied by the viewer. Villager's work allows them to explore interconnectedness and invites viewers to understand our shared human conditions better.

Jocelyn Campbell

“Through your Eyes” | Watercolor | 10x14 | 2022

Jocelyn Campbell is an interdisciplinary artist whose primary interests lie in watercolor and video art/installation. Campbell’s work explores the intersectionality of being Black and a woman, as well as Black spirituality and Christianity. She draws inspiration from the experiences of herself and others in her community, as well as her ancestors.

Sold for $50

 

Want to show your work in the next? Send us an email or fill out the form below at info@nosemerebaltimore.org

the artist.

5 total pieces of artwork sold from our June 30the event! Contact an artist if you would like to purchase a print or original of their artwork.

 

Bria Sterling-Wilson

“Free Roaming” | Collage (Print Edition of 7) | 20x20 | 2020

Bria Sterling-Wilson is a photographer and collage artist from Baltimore, Maryland. She received her B.F.A in Photography and Digital Arts from Towson University, Towson, MD in 2021. Sterling-Wilson uses found imagery, magazines, newspaper, and fabrics to construct alluring scenes, portraits, and interiors to express the black experience. Sterling-Wilson has exhibited in Brooklyn, New York, Los Angles, California, Washington, D.C, Rehoboth, Delaware, and Baltimore, Maryland. Sterling-Wilson was awarded Young Artist recipient for the Trawick Prize Exhibition in 2020 and received 1st place in the 6th Rehoboth Art League Regional Juried Photography Exhibition in 2021. Sterling-Wilson's collage works are featured in Black Collagists: The Book by Teri Henderson and the cover art for Marcus Board Jr's Invisible Weapons: Infiltrating Resistance and Defeating Movements.

Sold for $525

See their current works here

Yewande K Davis

“Miss sue from alabama, her real name Suzianna” | 8x10

Yewande Kotun Davis is a Nigerian American artist based in Baltimore, Maryland. She grew up heavily involved in the arts, and ultimately chose visual art as her way of communing with the world. Yewande uses art, design, and storytelling as vehicles for self-care and community care. She currently works from her home studio and has exhibited in Baltimore, Washington, DC, Hermosa Beach, California, and Atlanta.

Sold for $125

See their current works here

Book Karnjanakit

“Sunday Afternoon” | Mixed Media | 11x14 | 2019

Book Karnjanakit, aka Koobta (She/They), is a cartoonist and illustrator originally from Bangkok, now living in Baltimore. Her frequently used media include watercolor, pencil color, collage, and digital. Every day she is still learning and unlearning about gender, sexuality, social justice, and cultural differences. Her free time is often spent watching birds, thinking silly thoughts, exploring the city, and eating yummy food.

See their current works here

“The Legendary Snailies” | Silk Screened | 12x16 | 2020

Sold for $50

Christina Delago

“An Offering” | Color digital photo on matte paper | 22x30 | 2014

Christina Delgado became a photographer and an artist later in life. Her experience started as a hobby; then became a profession and her reason for wanting to become a teacher early in her career. She has been an educator, a photographer, community advocate, and culture worker for well over 17 years. She is the founder of Tola’s Room, a collective of the arts, community, & education located in NE Baltimore. This space educates and influences using art, culture, and community organizing, while also serving as the only Puerto Rican cultural hub in Baltimore City. She is currently on the Maryland State Arts Council Artist-in-Resident Roster and works with Arts for Learning Maryland as an arts equity advisor, mentor, and Teaching Artist. She also serves in the Community Advocacy Position on the Board of the Environmental Control Board for Baltimore City. Christina is deeply invested in issues of diversity, equity, and art empowerment, upholding the mindset that these issues are a collective responsibility and thus require engagement and action.

Déjà

“BLACK & BLUE” | 24x24

From a young age, Déjà has always had a passion for the arts. Throughout her adolescence, she was introduced to the professional arts community. Obtaining the knowledge from her visual arts and stage design classes gave her the foundation needed to grow within her many crafts, thus allowing her to open up through other forms of art and design. Déjà’s process contains integrations of multiple media such as - abstract and contemporary art, lighting design, audio, sound design, and set/ installation design to create a conceptual piece and an open experience. She is constantly experimenting with all forms of media, texture, and acrylics to allow the paintings to come together as one whole picture.  She believes her paintings emphasize chaos because what is depicted in the paintings is unpredictable, disorderly, and formless. This is something Déjà chooses to embrace, not within her paintings but herself. 

Villager

“cows they're domesticating us” | Acrylic and Oil pastel | 16x20 | 2022

Currently based in Baltimore, MD, villager is a neo-expressionist painter born in Lagos, Nigeria. As a budding artist, villager presently uses acrylic and oil pastels to create simplistic yet concrete, abstract images that invite the viewer to create their interpretations of the work without the burden of rigidity and perfection.

Using primitive and child-like motifs, villager challenges themselves to construct visuals, experiences, and stories to be shared and occupied by the viewer. Villager's work allows them to explore interconnectedness and invites viewers to understand our shared human conditions better.

Jocelyn Campbell

“Through your Eyes” | Watercolor | 10x14 | 2022

Jocelyn Campbell is an interdisciplinary artist whose primary interests lie in watercolor and video art/installation. Campbell’s work explores the intersectionality of being Black and a woman, as well as Black spirituality and Christianity. She draws inspiration from the experiences of herself and others in her community, as well as her ancestors.

Sold for $50

 

Want to show your work in the next? Send us an email or fill out the form below at info@nosemerebaltimore.org