A Contemporary
Co-operative Gallery
in Boston's SoWa
Art & Design District

Youngsheen A. Jhe

Flowing: The Flow of Love

Marian Dioguardi

Still Refections

NAWA Massachusetts

Playing With Fire

GALLERY HOURS: Mar-Oct, Thu-Sun, 12-5pm, Nov-Feb, Thu-Sun 12-4pm and by appointment

Lynne Adams

Lynne Adams

Lynne Adams

Artist Statement: 

Landscape painting is both a calling and a form of sustenance for me—art is my way of making sense of the world.

My paintings emerge from an intimate engagement with landscape. My current focus is on water —both inland and coastal. I am interested in how water shapes land over time and how its movement—through drought, flood, and tide—echoes broader environmental instability. The layered nature of my process mirrors this instability. By adding, scraping, and reworking paint, I create surfaces that suggest concealment and revelation, presence and obliteration.

Looking at water is also a way of looking into the landscape itself, where nature reflects and transforms its own structures. I feel an increasing urgency to paint water as it becomes ever more vital to our survival in the face of climate change. Through this work, I seek moments of balance and beauty within a world marked by environmental fragility and rapid change.

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment

Agusta Agustsson

Agusta Agustsson

Agusta Agustsson

Artist Statement: 
My work straddles the space between chance and intention. I print my fabric on a gelatin plate using plants I find on my walks or packaging repurposed from the grocery store. I layer the images responding to whatever is already on my fabric. When the printing is done I lay out my fabrics on the floor and ideas begin to percolate. This past year climate change and pollution have been dominating my thoughts whether it is melting sea ice or seas filled with plastic. I don’t think in terms of narrative or illustration, but rather through the emotional impact of shape, color and texture. I hope people react to my quilts on a visceral level.

Artist Bio: 
Agusta began making quilts as a painting major at Massachusetts College of Art. Concurrently she created silkscreened posters which received local, national and international recognition at the Graphic Workshop. Many of her pastel landscapes are in numerous corporate collections. She worked as an art teacher for 22 years. The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston acquired one of her quilts in 2017.

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment

Clare Asch

Clare Asch

Clare Asch​

Artist Statement: 
In my paintings, I explore the interaction of chance and predetermined structures. Natural phenomena like gravity and its effect on the flow of water fascinate me. I also have a long-standing interest in mark making. This dialogue of chance, gesture and structure is the foundational basis of my art.

Artist Bio: 
Clare Asch was born in Hungary and came to the United States as a young child. She showed an early interest in art and attended the High School of Music and Art in New York City. Afterwards, Clare was a student at the Cooper Union School of Art and Architecture. At Cooper Union, she studied painting with Wolf Kahn and sculpture with Rueben Kadish among other esteemed faculty. Ms. Asch received her BFA cum laude from the University of Massachusetts and her MFA from Lesley University. Her paintings can be found in the collection of Northeast University, the Marriott and the City of Boston. She has recently exhibited at Galatea Fine Art, the Cambridge Art Association and the Attleboro Art Museum.

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment

Claudine Bing

Claudine Bing

Claudine Bing

Artist Statement:
My paintings are artistic explorations of my curiosity about our planet and our universe.
I read about the newest scientific discoveries and ponder how they correspond to our psychology as human beings.  Our lives are intertwined with the cosmic forces of time and space.  For many years I have created images about the shift of continents, tectonic plates, ridges under the ocean and the forming, through different eras, of our earth and sky.  I want my art to express the contrast between the individual human being and the vast powers of light, matter and energy.  That we are all made of star dust continues to fascinate me.  My paintings express this.
Artist Bio:
Claudine Bing has been a professor of Art at Michigan State University and a professor and Department Chair at The Massachusetts College of Art and Design.
She is a painter exploring themes of our perception of the Universe and of the Natural World.

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment

Maren Brown

Maren Brown

Maren Brown

Artist Statement:
Maren Brown is an award-winning painter based in Northampton, Massachusetts, whose work has been exhibited widely at museums and galleries in both group and solo exhibitions. For more than thirty years, she has worked in egg tempera—a medium that combines egg yolk, pigment, and water, first popularized in the Renaissance—blending experimental and traditional techniques to create luminous, layered paintings. In recent years, she has also embraced acrylics, drawn to the medium’s immediacy and expressive possibilities.

Her work has been featured in museum exhibitions at the Hill-Stead Museum in Farmington, Connecticut; the New Bedford Art Museum in New Bedford, Massachusetts; and the Attleboro Arts Museum in Attleboro, Massachusetts. She has also exhibited in juried shows selected by leading curators including Carmen Hermo (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston), Alison Rudnick (Metropolitan Museum of Art, who awarded her painting Black Mountain Best in Show in 2025), and Michèle Wije (Yale University Art Gallery).

Artist Bio:
I create abstract paintings in egg tempera and acrylic, using layered processes to explore form, color, and meaning. The centuries-old medium of egg tempera offers luminosity, precision, and a meditative pace, while acrylic allows for immediacy and spontaneity. Together, they provide a balance between structure and intuition, merging tradition with contemporary approaches.

My work often unfolds in series, each offering a distinct lens on shared human experience. Origin(al)s reflects on the promise and ethical complexities of DNA research, while Sacred Bones reimagines skeletal forms as both structural and metaphorical frameworks. The Atmospherics paintings create contemplative, nature-inspired spaces, and Travelogues capture the light, memory, and atmosphere of place. The Prayer Panels embed secular prayers beneath the painted surface in pencil. Over time—20 years or more—these hidden words will emerge, signifying the enduring energy of prayer and private intention, even when invisible.

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment

Frank Capezerra

Frank Capezerra

Frank Capezzera

Artist Statement: 
These paintings are from my current body of work depicting figurative images, some from live models. They arise from my interest in the work of several waves of the Bay Area figurative art movement of the 60s, 70s and 80s. My paintings are efforts to fashion elements of the human form – a gesture, the nape of a neck, a sideways glance, piled hair, a breast in silhouette, the cant of a hip, – in fields of color. I like to think that these images arise from my inner self, and that they represent something essentially human and recognizable.

I always have been drawn to the mid 20th century American abstract expressionists – Hoffman, Klein, de Kooning and many others – but also to Edward Hopper, to whom I was introduced in South Truro when I was an eight-year-old aspiring artist.  I did not follow a path to art;  instead I became a lawyer and enjoyed a satisfying career as a partner in a Boston law firm. But I never lost the desire to find out how to create something like the paintings I had seen and loved. Over the decades I made small landscapes, portraits and genre images to stay connected to my artistic passion in the hope that some day I could fully commit to it.
Now I am able to devote all of my working energy to making art on a more ambitious scale and in ideas that interest me; and, with the help of great teachers, I find myself happily making my own paintings and searching for my own language.

Artist Bio:
 

Frank Capezzera is an artist self-taught from reading, art history study, online video, observation, drawing and mark making throughout his life. Frank has intensively studied the work of Edward Hopper, having read virtually all of the serious scholarship and commentary about him. Frank had a series of formative connections with Hopper very early in his life (1950’s) and beginning in the 1960’s to date. Frank has studied life drawing privately with Dick Stroud, a classically trained painter, as well as in classes at the MFA, MIT, the Provincetown Art Association, and the New Art Center with John Murray, a neo-post modern expressionist painter. Other studies include plein air painting with Mary Giammarino, Cape School of Art; watercolor and sumi-e painting with D’Wei Kwo, and personal study of Zen ink painting images and kanji.

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment

Marian Dioguardi

Marian Dioguardi

Marian Dioguardi

Artist Statement: 
Color and chaos call me to paint. These paintings are born from visual derangement, commotion and confusion. They capture both a sense of an overwhelming disorder and a beauty from the emerging order.They are my answer to life. "Beauty will save the world"- Dostoevsky.
Artist Bio: 
Marian Dioguardi was born and raised in the Italian American neighborhood of East Boston. Marian pursued her childhood ambition, art, only after a more traditional career in education and after more colorful careers including undercover investigations and gemstone buying.

While working full time as an electronics company’s operation manager, Marian attended art classes at Massachusetts College of Art and the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, studying under Barnet Rubenstein. Her painting skills were further advanced by studying independently for five years under Ed Stitt, a Boston Painter. She has been painting as a professional, full time painter since 2001.

Marian Dioguardi's painting, Little Pink, was purchased by The Dana Farber Hospital’s permanent art collection . Her signature laundry line paintings of Venice were featured in the Italian art journal, Arte In.  Her paintings continue to be acquired for public and private collections.

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment

Randa Dubnick

Randa Dubnick

Randa Dubnick

Artist Statement: 
My recent paintings are part of a series of mountain landscapes inspired by memories and daydreams of my home state of Colorado. The mountains are in my mind's eye and I try to capture the beautiful lines of the Rocky Mountains and the colors of Colorado. The work is done from my imagination and my memories of the Colorado mountains. I work in acrylic paint, often on paper.  I enjoy experimenting with techniques and approaches borrowed from watercolor, mixed media, printmaking, and even raku pottery, to create the shapes and textures of the mountains.

I make art every day. Since 2005, I have been posting an image daily on my blog, Randi Art. (randiart.blogspot.com)

Artist Bio: 
Randa Dubnick was born and raised in Pueblo, Colorado. As a child, she loved to draw and paint, and took art lessons from grade school through high school.

She studied painting at Southern Colorado State University and earned a BFA at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Randa also earned an MA and PhD in Comparative Literature from the University of Colorado. Her dissertation on Gertrude Stein and Cubism was published by the University of Illinois Press in 1984. Although Randa left Boulder after college, going back only periodically to visit family and friends, those mountains have stayed with her all this time.
 
Randa had a long career in college teaching and administration and moved frequently, living in Lawrence, Kansas; Chicago, Illinois; and Princeton, New Jersey. In 1997 she moved to Beverly, MA.
 
She has participated in drawing groups, artist’s collectives, art auctions, group shows, and art instruction (formal and informal), whenever possible, including evening classes at Montserrat College of Art, where she was VP of Student Services from 1997 to 2004.  
 
Since 2005, Randa has been a member of Porter Mill Studios in Beverly, MA, where she maintains a studio and participates in events and exhibits.  In 2013, she began exhibiting at Galatea Fine Arts.

460B Harrison Ave. #B-6 | Boston, MA 02118

617-542-1500 | director@galateafineart.com

GALLERY HOURS: Thu-Sun, Mar-Oct, 12-5pm; Nov-Feb, 12-4pm, and by appointment