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Hamilton Aguiar's Optical Series
Mirrored Plexiglass, Custom Commissions, and the Art of IllusionHamilton Aguiar is a Brazilian contemporary artist based in Miami, best known for his Optical series, paintings that use tonal gradients and fine linework to create the illusion of movement and depth. His newest works push that illusion further with oil applied directly over mirrored plexiglass, turning the surface itself into part of the composition. Carousel Fine Art represents Aguiar and works directly with collectors and designers on custom commissions in the Optical series, including large-format and multi-panel pieces.
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Christopher Schulz, born in California in 1974, is a sculptor working primarily in marine-grade stainless steel and bronze, best known for the Tiburon series, suspended, hyper-polished shark sculptures he describes as an alternative to the aquarium. His practice extends beyond sharks into elephants, hybrid "combine" forms, and industrial subject matter drawn from cars and architecture. Represented by Carousel Fine Art in Atlanta and West Palm Beach, alongside galleries in London, Paris, and Monaco, his work has shown at Scope Miami Beach, Art Palm Beach, and the Los Angeles Contemporary Art Fair, and sits in corporate collections including Isuzu, Kawasaki, and HBA Design. This guide covers his materials, his signature series, and where to see the work, timed to Shark Week 2026 (July 26–August 1), when interest in his best-known subject peaks.
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Caroline De Souza is a Brazilian-born sculptor and painter, trained in Milan as a fashion illustrator and designer before relocating to Athens, Greece, and shifting her focus entirely to art. Mentored by Greek artist Angelos Panagiotou and further trained through Central Saint Martins, she works across acrylic, oil, resin, metal, and bronze. Her 2020 bronze "Love Has No Color," commissioned by the Brazilian Embassy as a permanent public installation in Athens, and her gold-plated "Unbeaten" hearts, now in galleries across nine countries, established her signature material language. Her current body of work, the Chess Series, including "Check Mate," "Life is a Game," and "Silent Warriors," is available now at Carousel Fine Art. This guide covers her training, her three defining series, and where to see or acquire her work.
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The Artifact Collection is Beau Simmons' first major departure from straight photography. Each serigraph is built from acrylic ink mixed with ranch pigment, dust and earth Simmons has hand-collected from working ranches across the American West, hand-pulled onto archival Coventry Rag paper. Two works anchor the series so far: "Hold Tight," an edition of 20 built around the hands and leather of a working cowboy, and "The Sound of Steel," which carries the story of a Montana branding morning shot one day after Simmons was attacked by a bear. Both are original within their editions, since no two pulls carry pigment in exactly the same way. This piece covers what the collection is, how it's made, and why it lands at a particularly loaded moment for American iconography, six days after Rodeo 250 closed on the National Mall as part of the country's Semiquincentennial.
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Eric Alfaro Gómez, born in 1991, trained at Cuba's Provincial Academy of Fine Arts Raúl Martínez in Morón, Ciego de Ávila, before building a career now spanning Miami, Palm Beach, Cologne, Paris, Torino, and Saint-Tropez. He is represented by Carousel Fine Art in Miami, Atlanta, and Saint-Tropez, with additional gallery relationships internationally. His work, best known for the Blossom Series, the Water Lilies, and earlier figurative bodies like Becoming, sits in private collections across more than two dozen countries and in institutional holdings including the Copperbridge Art Foundation and the Lincoln Center Orchestra's New York collection. This guide covers his training, his exhibition record, and where his major series fit for a collector building a room or a collection around his work.
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Eric Alfaro's Blossom Series, unveiled at Carousel Fine Art's Spring Reverie exhibition in May 2024, builds cherry blossoms and spring bouquets from thick impasto, then drags fresh paint horizontally across the canvas before it dries. The smudge is deliberate: it reads as a bloom caught mid-fall, a still life that admits it will not stay still. The series spans intimate 24-inch studies to 120-inch statement canvases, in oil on linen and acrylic on canvas, and has become one of Carousel's most requested bodies of work for large-scale interior placements. This piece walks through the technique, the key paintings, and where the series belongs in a room.
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Tennis (2019) is a large-scale photographic bookscape by Colombian-American artist Max Steven Grossman, built entirely from real tennis literature, biographies of Djokovic, McEnroe, Borg, Serena and Venus Williams, Sampras, Agassi, Sabatini, Laver, Ashe, King, and dozens more, digitally composited into a single library that does not exist anywhere but in this photograph. It is a Diasec-mounted print, 48 by 100 inches, edition of 5, available through Carousel Fine Art. Arriving as Wimbledon 2026 plays out at the All England Club, it makes the case for tennis as a collecting category rather than a decorating theme.
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We The People
Three Artists Reframe American Identity For the 250th AnniversaryThis Fourth of July marks the Semiquincentennial, the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, a milestone the National Gallery of Art, the Smithsonian, the Met, and Crystal Bridges are all marking with major American-identity programming in 2026. Carousel Fine Art is marking it with three artists who were not born here. Xan Padrón's We the People (2025), made as the milestone approached, builds a single photographic portrait of a nation from hundreds of individual New Yorkers. Javier Guadalupe's Brave Nation (2024) renders courage as woven textile sculpture. Jean-Daniel Lorieux's Karen Mulder (1995) captures the fashion industry's machinery for making global icons, photographed by a Frenchman who spent four decades doing exactly that. All three works are available now through Carousel Fine Art's Atlanta, Miami, West Palm Beach, and Chicago galleries.
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The Photograph Maradona Looked Into
David Yarrow's 1986 World Cup Image at Carousel Fine ArtDavid Yarrow photographed Diego Maradona at the 1986 FIFA World Cup Final in Mexico City, producing one of the three best-selling sports images of all time. The photograph, Maradona (1986), Edition 35 of 40, is available now at Carousel Fine Art's Buckhead gallery in Atlanta as part of The Beautiful Game World Cup exhibition, through July 31, 2026.
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Carousel Fine Art Featured in Hedgerow Gazette's Summer 2026 Issue
"A Curated Approach to Collecting"Hedgerow Gazette's Summer 2026 issue (pages 98–101) features Carousel Fine Art under the headline "A Curated Approach to Collecting: The Modern Collector's Gallery." The piece, with photography and words credited to Carousel Art Group, profiles founders Laura and Philippe Horowicz and the philosophy behind the gallery's four locations in Miami, West Palm Beach's NORA District, Chicago's River North, and Atlanta's Lenox Square and Buckhead Village, plus advisory services for collectors in New York and the Hamptons. The throughline: collecting art should run through a trusted advisor, not just a gallery transaction.
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Alexi Torres's Game of Life: Soccer, Mythology, and the Woven Canvas
World Cup 2026 AtlantaAlexi Torres (b. 1976, Matanzas, Cuba) builds mythological figures from the woven geometry of a soccer ball in his Game of Life series. Eight large-format oils are on view at Carousel Fine Art's Buckhead gallery in Atlanta through July 31, 2026, as part of "The Beautiful Game" World Cup exhibition. Works are available for acquisition.
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If You Saw the Wolf in the Cadillac on Peachtree Road
Here's the StoryA new billboard at Peachtree Road and West Paces Ferry Road, the gateway to Buckhead Village, is carrying David Yarrow's "Spring in Aspen" above Atlanta traffic. The photograph, a vintage blue Cadillac, a wolf-like dog, and a model framed against the Rockies, is part of Yarrow's celebrated Aspen series. Yarrow's work is now on view for the first time at Carousel Fine Art's Buckhead Village gallery (3025 Bolling Way NE) and at its Lenox Square location (3393 Peachtree Rd NE). Here's who Yarrow is, what the billboard is announcing, and what's currently on the walls at both galleries.
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Nemo Jantzen is a Dutch contemporary artist whose two signature bodies of work — nail-and-thread portraits and dome pieces built from thousands of embedded photographs — have sold out Art Basel, entered museum collections on three continents, and landed in the hands of Claudia Schiffer, Kobe Bryant, and Ronnie Wood. His work is available through Carousel Fine Art.
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Five New Voices
Who Are The New Artists Who Just Changed What's on Our WallsFive artists — Michael Kalish, Evelyne Brader-Frank, Audra Weaser, Billy Monsalve Duffo, and Stefania Nazzal — have officially joined the Carousel Fine Art roster. Their work is on view now in Buckhead, Chicago, West Palm Beach, and Lenox Square. Each brings something the room didn't have before.
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Chicago's First Summer Curation
Michael Kalish, Evelyne Brader Frank, and New Works at Carousel Fine Art -
On May 18, 2026, Christie's New York sold $1.1 billion in art across two back-to-back evening auctions, the highest single-night total in the house's history. Jackson Pollock nearly tripled his record. Brancusi cleared $100 million. Rothko set a new high. And every single work in the S.I. Newhouse collection found a buyer, in under an hour. This is what that means.
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Christie's recruited Nicole Kidman to appear in a film promoting Constantin Brancusi's Danaïde ahead of its May 18, 2026 sale. The sculpture sold for $107.6 million — a new record for the artist. The campaign made headlines, but what it reveals about fine art, celebrity culture, and how serious collectors should think is the more interesting story.
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The Meaning Behind Hunt Slonem's Bunnies
And Why Collectors Keep Coming BackHunt Slonem's bunny paintings are among the most immediately recognizable works in contemporary American art. But their appeal goes well beyond surface charm. For Slonem, painting bunnies is a meditative practice rooted in personal symbolism, spiritual repetition, and a lifelong relationship with the natural world, and for collectors, they are among the most deeply inhabitable works he makes.
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The Weight of Play
How Adam Umbach Turned Childhood Longing Into Some of the Most Compelling Painting in America Today -
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Who Is Nemo Jantzen?
The Dutch Contemporary Artist Redefining Mixed MediaNemo Jantzen is a Dutch contemporary artist born in The Hague in 1970. Trained at the RTO Art Academy in Rotterdam, he built his career across Belgium, Spain, and now New York and Barcelona. He is best known for two signature techniques: hyper-detailed thread-and-nail portraits and neo-pointillist resin dome mosaics. His work appears in major museums, private collections, and leading galleries worldwide.
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Detroit Is the Canvas: Jisbar's Open-Air Museum
What It Says About One of Contemporary Art's Most Compelling Voices -
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Sylvain Tremblay Artist Interview | Pushing Contemporary Boundaries
Sculptural Painting, Artistic Evolution, and Worldwide CommissionsIn the world of contemporary art, few artists operate with the same level of material curiosity and conceptual risk as Sylvain Tremblay. Known for his sculptural paintings and highly textured surfaces, Tremblay has built a practice that exists between disciplines—where painting, sculpture, and performance converge.
In this edition of Art Talk: Artist Interviews, Carousel Fine Art offers collectors a rare, behind-the-scenes look into Sylvain Tremblay’s artistic process, studio residency, and bespoke commission work. The conversation reveals not only how his works are made, but why they resonate so strongly with collectors seeking investment art and one-of-one commissions.
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Banksy Unmasked?
The Art World’s Biggest Mystery May Finally Have a Name.What Reuters says it found, why the story matters, and what this means for street art, the market, and Banksy’s legacy.
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The Art of Craft: Isabelle Scheltjens and the Power of the Handmade
Exploring Isabelle Scheltjens's Glass Mosaic Portraits and the Beauty of Handcrafted Art -
The Origins of Street Art
From Ancient Graffiti to Global GalleriesStreet art is humanity’s favorite bad habit turned global cultural engine: public messages for public people. It didn’t appear out of thin aerosol… Street art endures because cities never stop talking, and artists never stop answering. From Pompeii scribbles to AR-triggered murals, the medium might change but the mission remains the same: claim public space, spark dialogue–stay alive. -
When it comes to collecting fine art, timelessness is the ultimate measure of value. Styles evolve, trends come and go, yet certain works transcend eras, fitting seamlessly into diverse settings while maintaining their power to captivate. Cuban artist Eric Alfaro embodies this rare quality. His paintings are not only striking in the moment—they are built to endure, resonating across generations, cultures, and environments.
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A Moment of Human Tenderness: How Mariela Garibay Creates Her Signature Sculptures
Diving Deeper into Mariela Garibay's Artistic ProcessBefore a single figure takes shape, before any marble is carved or bronze is cast, Mariela Garibay begins with something much quieter—stillness. Her art doesn’t begin with her hands. It begins with her heart. And it’s this deeply intentional process that makes her work so moving—and why collectors around the world are beginning to take notice. But how does Garibay bring these tender figures to life?
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The World of Jisbar: Where Street Art Meets Pop Icons
Transforming Art History with a Contemporary TwistFrench artist Jisbar is redefining the boundaries of contemporary art with a bold fusion of pop culture, street art, and art history. Known for reimagining iconic artworks and cultural figures, Jisbar creates layered canvases that invite viewers to see familiar subjects in new and thought-provoking ways. By blending the energy of street art with the accessibility of pop art, Jisbar has developed a unique visual language that bridges the gap between classical references and modern culture. Delve into Jisbar's creative journey, distinctive style, and the cultural impact of his work, while understanding why he is one of the most compelling artists in the contemporary art world today.
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Art Collecting Basics: Miami Art Week
Learn About Miami's Art Week with Carousel Fine ArtWelcome to Miami Art Week, a period when the art world’s most prominent galleries, collectors, artists, and enthusiasts converge. Each December, Miami transforms into an immersive art experience with renowned fairs like Art Basel, Art Miami, and Untitled bringing contemporary, modern, and experimental art to the city’s shores. Learn about Miami Art Week 2024, art fairs generally, and specific fairs taking place during Art Week. Whether you’re a collector, curator, or art lover, discover what makes this week a cornerstone of the global art scene.
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JackF / stock.adobe.comThe anonymous artist, Banksy, has once again made headlines with "Nine Days of Banksy," a series of animal-themed murals around London, culminating in a dramatic piece at the London Zoo. As the artist continues to challenge societal norms, people continue to ask questions regarding the true message behind his latest works. From interpretations of animal symbolism to reflections on contemporary issues, Banksy’s latest series exemplifies his unique blend of humor and social critique. His work not only sparks conversation but also elevates street art within the art market, highlighting its growing influence and value.
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Unraveling Evolution in the Digital Embrace
Beto Gatti's "Saudades, A Origem"The exploration of technological progress, human connection, and the potential beginnings of an unforeseen devolution in our evolution.
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A Visual Tapestry of Personal Narratives
Chance Cooper's "Bag Series"As we step into the captivating realm of Chance Cooper's artistic repertoire, a series of works emerges that unveils a world of vivid imagination and whimsical storytelling. In this "Bag Series,” Cooper immerses us in an intimate exploration of personal narratives and enigmatic tales, all contained within the confines of a bag.
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A Harmonized Vision Among People-Scapes
Chance Cooper, "Song Series"In the pulsating heartbeat of contemporary art one name emerges from the bustling streets of LA, Chance Cooper, creating a symphony of visual narratives that resonate with the rhythm of life itself. -
Evolution's Paradox: As Virtual Threads Bind Minds, Physical Bonds Unravel
Behold Beto Gatti's “Realidade Virtual”The bronze scultpure Realidade Virtual, meticulously crafted by Brazilian artist Beto Gatti, serves as a captivating portal into a profound exploration of the human condition.
