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Roots of Love: Falling in Love with Art Again
Catherine Gipton returns to Torino Outlet Village with Roots of Love, blending art, fashion, and artificial intelligence to explore the many shapes of love.

Catherine Gipton
Oct 282 min read


CathEssay #11 — Kesselbruch by Kristina Schuldt
Kristina Schuldt’s Kesselbruch explores the fractured body under industrial pressure. Drawing from Cubism and Futurism, she redefines the female form through distortion, tension, and surreal color. A striking vision of modern identity and its breaking points.

Catherine Gipton
Sep 152 min read


CathEssay #10 — Fawn by Emma Stern
Emma Stern’s Fawn is part creature, part code — a haunting meditation on synthetic beauty, digital identity, and what it means to be seen.

Catherine Gipton
Sep 93 min read


CathEssay #9 — Beholden by Koak
Koak’s Beholden offers a quiet yet profound meditation on emotional introspection, solitude, and inner complexity. With bold colors and symbolic detail, the painting captures a moment of stillness heavy with reflection. Catherine Gipton delves into its psychological depth in this ninth CathEssay.

Catherine Gipton
Aug 312 min read


CathEssay #8 — Prom Night Reckoning by Robin F. Williams
In Prom Night Reckoning, Robin F. Williams dismantles the fantasy of the prom queen with dazzling colors and raw emotion. A tiara becomes a burden, a rose a symbol of pressure. Through vibrant textures and piercing symbolism, the painting reveals the quiet panic behind performative perfection — and invites us to reconsider what we call “the perfect moment.”

Catherine Gipton
Aug 272 min read


CathEssay #7 — Blake by Emma Webster
Emma Webster’s Blake is a visionary painting where organic shapes explode into a surreal forest dreamscape. Glowing forms, dynamic movement, and mythic overtones transform a natural scene into something radiant and strange. Through layered oil painting, Webster invites us to experience nature not as it is, but as it might become — alive with energy, tension, and unseen forces.

Catherine Gipton
Aug 242 min read


CathEssay #6 — Border’s Buckle by Bridget Mullen
Bridget Mullen’s Border’s Buckle explores transformation, instability, and the dissolution of form. Blurring the lines between figure and abstraction, the work pulses with motion and emotion. Through layered textures and symbolic tension, Mullen invites us into a liminal space — where identity shifts, boundaries buckle, and new meanings emerge.

Catherine Gipton
Aug 202 min read


CathEssay #5 — Prickly Women by Hyegyeong Choi
Hyegyeong Choi’s Prickly Women is a vivid celebration of femininity, strength, and interconnectedness with nature. Through electrifying color and bold forms, the painting blurs the boundary between body and landscape, inviting viewers to embrace the complexity of identity and the radiant vitality of life.

Catherine Gipton
Aug 152 min read


CathEssay #4 — Knot by Dannielle Hodson
Dannielle Hodson’s Knot is a vivid and entangled vision of human coexistence. Figures twist, collide, and dissolve into a chaotic yet strangely harmonious composition that explores the tension between disorder, identity, and emotional connection.

Catherine Gipton
Aug 92 min read


CathEssay #3 — Pane by Tschabalala Self
In Pane (2023), Tschabalala Self constructs a bold portrait of fractured identity using fabric, paint, thread, and digitally printed linen. The work explores the layered nature of selfhood, perception, and visibility, inviting viewers to reflect on the textures—both literal and metaphorical—that shape how we see ourselves and others.

Catherine Gipton
Aug 93 min read


CathEssay #2 — It’s Called Show Business by Anna Park
In It’s Called Show Business, Anna Park builds a hypnotic visual rhythm from duplicated legs and hidden gazes. This striking monochrome diptych explores the glamour and tension of performance, revealing what lies beneath the spotlight. A critical reflection on identity, spectacle, and the illusion of visibility in both entertainment and public life.

Catherine Gipton
Aug 93 min read


CathEssay #1 — Heartbreak at Ginger’s: Re-emerging by Rebecca Ness
Rebecca Ness’s Heartbreak at Ginger’s: Re-emerging is a cinematic glimpse into collective life and queer resilience. Set in a Brooklyn bar, the painting pulses with emotion, connection, and layered micro-narratives. A celebration of everyday presence and quiet transformation, this is a portrait of what it means to return—together.

Catherine Gipton
Aug 93 min read
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