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New Visionary Podcast
New Visionary Podcast
Author: Visionary Art Collective
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© 2026 Visionary Art Collective
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New Visionary is a podcast for artists and creative entrepreneurs, featuring conversations with some of the most inspirational visionaries in today’s art world. Hosted by Victoria J. Fry, founder of Visionary Art Collective and New Visionary Magazine.
146 Episodes
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In this insightful interview, artist Jelena Hay shares her creative journey, the emotional depth behind her layered drawings, and how she balances her art practice with her life as a mother in New York City. Discover how residencies, personal experiences, and bold experimentation have shaped her unique style.Here’s what we discuss:1. Jalena’s artistic evolution from portraiture to abstraction2. The influence of personal experiences and heritage on her work3. The role of residencies in artistic growth4. Balancing motherhood, full-time work, and art practiceAbout JalenaJalena’s practice is all about taking control of the chaos. Her work layers Pen, Ink, Gouache, Pastel and Colored Pencil to create intricate compositions that don’t just ask for your attention—they demand it. These compositions evoke a tension between abstraction and emotion, where every mark becomes part of a larger exploration of themes such as impermanence, resilience, and interconnectedness. Jalena Hay was born and raised in Southern California before moving to New York City to study Drawing and Printmaking at Pratt Institute. Her passion for printmaking took her to Amsterdam, where she dove deep into lithography, pushing the boundaries of line, texture and form.Website: jalenahay.com IG: @jalena.hayVisit our website: visionaryartcollective.comFollow us on Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagJoin our newsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
In this episode, Victoria interviews visual artist Vivian Cavalieri, who discusses her impactful work focusing on women's rights and social justice, particularly in relation to her exhibition at the Military Women's Memorial. Vivian shares her inspirations, the importance of storytelling through art, and how her background as an attorney influences her artistic practice. The conversation delves into the significance of women's contributions during World War II and the ongoing relevance of these stories today.Here’s what we discuss:Exploring Women’s Rights through artThe impact of research on artistic practiceThe evolution of assemblage as a mediumConnecting the past and the present with the roles in women in historyAbout Vivian-Vivian Cavalieri is a visual artist with a studio on Chincoteague Island, Virginia. Her three-dimensional miniature scenes prompt conversations on a range of global issues including immigration, climate change, and social justice. Cavalieri’s first solo exhibition took place in January-February 2025. Her second solo show runs from November 2025-May 2026 at the Military Women's Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery. Her work has appeared in numerous group exhibitions in the US and abroad. Six of her assemblages were included in WOVEN 2023, curated by Ciara Hambly of the Hambly & Hambly Gallery in Northern Ireland. Following six weeks at the Sasse Museum in Los Angeles, the exhibit travelled to France where filmmaker Lara Laigneau produced a documentary on it. In 2024, she received the Boynes Monthly Artist Award for December and was short-listed for the John Richardson French Residency Award. In 2025, she was shortlisted for the 2025 Women United Art Prize and longlisted for the 2025 Visual Art Open.Website: viviancavalieri.comIG: @vc_artworks_Visit our website: visionaryartcollective.comFollow us on Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagJoin our newsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
In this episode, Victoria shares insights from a recent guest lecture on working with galleries, offering a clear and empowering perspective on how artists can navigate gallery relationships today. She discusses the importance of building a cohesive body of work, developing professional materials, cultivating relationships, and maintaining independence while pursuing representation. Rather than waiting to be chosen, artists are encouraged to focus on alignment, consistency, and long-term momentum, remembering that strong careers attract the right gallery partnerships.To book a 1:1 Strategy Session with Victoria (limited availability) visit:https://www.visionaryartcollective.com/services/p/11-strategy-session-with-victoria-j-fry-45-minTo learn more about Victoria's 1:1 Mentorship Program, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/mentorshipTo access Victoria's signature Artist Statement & Bio workshop:visionaryartcollective.com/artist-statement-bio-workshopTo enroll in The Visionary Community, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/visionary-community-enrollVictoria J. Fry is a New York City–based painter, educator, curator, and founder of Visionary Art Collective, New Visionary Magazine, and Warnes Contemporary. She has supported thousands of artists through exhibitions, publications, and mentorship.Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagNewsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
In this episode, Victoria reflects on a reminder to “reaffirm the moments we’ve already had” and connects it to the way artists often focus on what’s next instead of acknowledging how far they’ve come. She shares how sorting through past work and recording guiding questions in the studio helped her feel more connected to her evolving botanical and butterfly series. Victoria explores the difference between grounded ambition and desperate ambition, reminding listeners that scarcity is often perceptual and rooted in feeling behind. She encourages artists to pause, name their wins, let inquiry guide their practice, and trust that even in quieter seasons, they are still artists.To learn more about Victoria's 1:1 Mentorship Program, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/mentorshipTo access Victoria's signature Artist Statement & Bio workshop:visionaryartcollective.com/artist-statement-bio-workshopTo register for Victoria's upcoming webinar at Salmagundi, visit:https://salmagundi.org/2026-from-studio-to-gallery/To learn more about The Visionary Community, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/visionary-community-enrollVictoria J. Fry is a New York City–based painter, educator, curator, and founder of Visionary Art Collective, New Visionary Magazine, and Warnes Contemporary. She has supported thousands of artists through exhibitions, publications, and mentorship.Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagNewsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
In this episode, Victoria speaks with James McCrae, an author, poet, and teacher who explores the intersection of creativity and mindfulness. They discuss James's journey as a creative, the importance of community in nurturing artistic expression, and the philosophy behind his initiative, Sunflower Club. The conversation delves into overcoming creative blocks, the healing power of creativity, and the release of vulnerability in sharing one's art. James also shares insights from his latest book, 'The Art of You,' which emphasizes the balance between the spiritual and practical aspects of creativity.Here’s what we discuss:The challenge societal expectations can pose for artists, and how to overcome themHow to find time for art with a busy schedule and navigating creative blocksHow Engaging with new experiences can refill creative inspirationMeditation and mindfulness practices to enhance creativityAbout James - James McCrae is a poet and teacher at the intersection of creativity and mindfulness.As the founder of Sunflower Club, a global creative community, he helps writers, artists and entrepreneurs embody their authentic voice and higher purpose. He is a regular speaker and workshop facilitator at events and retreats around the world. A former Madison Avenue brand strategist, James has helped numerous companies define their message and mission. James lives in Austin TX, where he hosts regular open mic nights.Website: jamesmccrae.comIG: @wordsarevibrationsVisit our website: visionaryartcollective.comFollow us on Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagJoin our newsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
Victoria shares grounded advice on studio visits, offering guidance on how to prepare your space, what kinds of work to show, how to navigate dialogue and silence, and why presence and generosity matter more than perfection. The episode also touches on easing into the year with grace and viewing studio visits as opportunities for connection, feedback, and long-term relationship building.To learn more about Victoria's 1:1 Mentorship Program, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/mentorshipTo register for Victoria's upcoming webinar at Salmagundi, visit:https://salmagundi.org/2026-from-studio-to-gallery/To learn more about The Visionary Community, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/visionary-community-enrollVictoria J. Fry is a New York City–based painter, educator, curator, and founder of Visionary Art Collective, New Visionary Magazine, and Warnes Contemporary. She has supported thousands of artists through exhibitions, publications, and mentorship.Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagNewsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
Victoria shares what’s coming up at Visionary Art Collective, New Visionary Magazine, and Warnes Contemporary. She discusses reviewing applications for her 1:1 Mentorship Program beginning in March, announces a February webinar with the Salmagundi Club on what curators and gallery directors look for, and shares updates on Femina, the gallery’s first all-women group exhibition of 2026. Victoria also notes that enrollment is open for The Visionary Community, that Warnes Contemporary will return to the Affordable Art Fair this March, and notes the shift of New Visionary Magazine to a biannual publication schedule, reflecting a more intentional and sustainable approach to growth.To learn more about Victoria's 1:1 Mentorship Program, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/mentorshipTo register for Victoria's upcoming webinar at Salmagundi, visit:https://salmagundi.org/2026-from-studio-to-gallery/To learn more about The Visionary Community, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/visionary-community-enrollVictoria J. Fry is a New York City–based painter, educator, curator, and founder of Visionary Art Collective, New Visionary Magazine, and Warnes Contemporary. She has supported hundreds of artists through exhibitions, publications, and mentorship.Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagNewsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
In this solo episode, Victoria explores what it means to stay in relationship with your creative practice, especially during imperfect or inconsistent seasons. She reflects on her January drawing challenge, reframing missed days not as failure but as an invitation to practice persistence, forgiveness, and trust. Rather than focusing on productivity or perfection, this episode emphasizes returning to the work, honoring natural rhythms, and recognizing that simply showing up, even when nothing visible happens, is an essential act of devotion to a sustainable art practice.To learn more about Victoria's 1:1 Mentorship Program, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/mentorshipTo learn more about The Visionary Community, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/visionary-community-enrollVictoria J. Fry is a New York City–based painter, educator, curator, and founder of Visionary Art Collective, New Visionary Magazine, and Warnes Contemporary. She has supported hundreds of artists through exhibitions, publications, and mentorship.Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagNewsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
Artist, curator, educator, and founder of The Art Is the Next Level, Sergio Gomez joins Victoria for a candid conversation about sustainability, boundaries, and staying grounded in an increasingly distracted world. Together, they reflect on how intentional routines, self-awareness, and thoughtful decision-making can help artists avoid burnout while continuing to grow creatively and professionally.Here’s what we discuss:How morning routines and grounding practices create a buffer against overwhelm, and why they need to be personal, flexible, and enjoyableNavigating distraction, digital fatigue, and the constant pull away from creative work in a screen-driven cultureThe power of intentional boundaries, including Sergio’s “add and subtract” rule for protecting time and energyReframing success through self-reflection, accountability, and aligning daily choices with the highest version of yourselfAbout Sergio-Sergio Gomez is a visual artist, gallery director, author, and podcast host known for his large-scale figurative abstraction paintings and charcoal drawings that explore the cycles of life. Based in South Florida after years in Chicago, his work has been featured in over 45 solo exhibitions across the U.S. and internationally in museums in Romania, Italy, Mexico, and Vienna, as well as in over 150 group exhibitions worldwide. He is the Director of Exhibitions at the Zhou B Art Center and founder of 33 Contemporary Gallery, curating over 100 exhibitions, including the renowned National Wet Paint MFA and National Self Portrait Annual. Sergio co-founded Art NXT Level®, a coaching platform for artists, and hosts the popular Art NXT Level podcast with 375+ episodes. As co-author of Crush Self-Sabotage and Live Fully!, he empowers artists to build sustainable careers.Website: sergiogomezonline.comIG: @sergiogomezartVisit our website: visionaryartcollective.comFollow us on Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagJoin our newsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
Jonathan Carver Moore joins Victoria to share his journey into the art world and the founding of Jonathan Carver Moore Gallery in San Francisco, a space dedicated to championing BIPOC and LGBTQ+ artists through a Black queer lens. Jonathan reflects on how early museum visits shaped his love of art, how community and curating organically led him toward gallery ownership, and the pivotal impact of encountering Zanele Muholi’s work during a time of personal and global transformation. Together, Victoria and Jonathan discuss building inclusive art spaces, the power of community-driven programming, and why sometimes the most meaningful opportunities come from simply asking.Key Topics –Jonathan’s path from nonprofit work to gallery ownership and the moments that clarified his curatorial vision.Creating an inclusive gallery in the Tenderloin and building community through artist talks, open houses, and a robust Artist in Residence program.Art fairs as relationship-building and marketing, the value of smaller fairs, and why long-term connections matter as much as immediate sales.About Jonathan –Jonathan Carver Moore is the founder of Jonathan Carver Moore Gallery in San Francisco, a contemporary gallery dedicated to championing BIPOC and LGBTQ+ artists through a Black queer lens. Through exhibitions, community programming, and an Artist in Residence initiative, he creates space for storytelling, representation, and connection, while supporting artists in building visibility and sustainable careers.Website: jonathancarvermoore.comIG: @jonathancarvermooreVisit our website: visionaryartcollective.comFollow us on Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagJoin our newsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
In the first episode of 2026, Victoria reflects on easing back into work after the holidays and the role of routine, patience, and self-trust in rebuilding creative momentum. She shares openly about returning to the studio after time away and how honoring both rest and structure supports a sustainable art practice.Victoria discusses her January drawing challenge and the powerful impact daily, low-pressure drawing has on reconnecting with flow, releasing perfectionism, and sharpening technical skills. She emphasizes the value of prioritizing studio practice before career goals, encouraging artists to reflect on what they want to make, revisit, pause, or explore this year. This episode invites artists to begin the year by grounding themselves in practice, curiosity, and alignment, trusting that clarity and momentum grow from consistent, intentional presence.To learn more about Victoria's 1:1 Mentorship Program, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/mentorshipTo learn more about The Visionary Community, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/visionary-community-enrollVictoria J. Fry is a New York City–based painter, educator, curator, and founder of Visionary Art Collective, New Visionary Magazine, and Warnes Contemporary. She has supported hundreds of artists through exhibitions, publications, and mentorship.Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagNewsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
Victoria closes out 2025 with a reflective solo episode focused on honoring growth, releasing what no longer serves, and intentionally preparing for the year ahead. She reflects on the evolution of the podcast, personal challenges she’s navigated over the past few years, and the importance of staying connected to purpose during difficult seasons. Drawing from symbolism in the Year of the Snake and the Year of the Horse, Victoria explores themes of shedding, intuition, alignment over approval, and the momentum that comes from embodied self-trust. This episode invites artists to pause, acknowledge their resilience, and step into 2026 with clarity, courage, and intention.To learn more about Victoria's 1:1 Mentorship Program, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/mentorshipTo learn more about The Visionary Community, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/visionary-community-enrollVictoria J. Fry is a New York City–based painter, educator, curator, and founder of Visionary Art Collective, New Visionary Magazine, and Warnes Contemporary. She has supported hundreds of artists through exhibitions, publications, and mentorship.Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagNewsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
Michelle Brandt joins Victoria to share her journey from art educator to gallery director and founder of Pecha Projects, a project space dedicated to counter narratives in contemporary art. Michelle reflects on staying “obedient to her gifts,” navigating a life-threatening illness, and learning to prioritize presence over perfection in both her work and life. She and Victoria discuss alignment, rejection as redirection, and the power of championing artists whose stories and practices feel deeply meaningful and alive.Key Topics –Michelle's journey with Brandt Gallery, Pecha Projects as spaces for social narrative and underrepresented voices.Reframing rejection as redirection, asking for what you want, and approaching galleries with intention and professionalism.Letting go of “perfect balance,” embracing trade-offs, and using meditation, mornings, and self-care to stay grounded and present.About Michelle –Michelle Brandt is the owner and director of Brandt Gallery in Columbus, Ohio, and the founder of Pecha Projects, a project space and initiative centered on counter narratives and contemporary art. With a background in art education and years of experience working in galleries, Michelle has built a practice around championing artists, connecting people, and sharing stories that make us think differently. Through her gallery, project space, and mentoring, she supports artists in cultivating meaningful, sustainable careers.Website: brandt-gallery.comIG: @brandtgalleryVisit our website: visionaryartcollective.comFollow us on Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagJoin our newsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
Artist, author, and creative leader Ekaterina Popova joins Victoria to explore the evolution of her creative practice, from her childhood in Russia to building an expansive career as a painter, mentor, and founder of Create! Magazine. Ekaterina reflects on the women who shaped her early artistic identity, the emotional foundations of her work, and the challenges and rewards of leading a growing creative community. She and Victoria discuss intuition, experimentation, and the inner permission artists need to grow, shift, and embrace play throughout their careers.Here’s what we discuss:Developing an artistic voice shaped by memory, cultural transition, and familial influence.Building Create! Magazine, supporting artists, and navigating the responsibilities of leadership.Embracing “ugly” phases, intuitive sketching, and listening to inner alignment.Balancing discipline and devotion while fostering freedom, curiosity, and authentic creative evolution.About Kat -Ekaterina Popova is a Russian-born artist whose contemporary oil paintings explore themes of home, belonging, and identity. After earning her Bachelor’s degree in Fine Art from Kutztown University in 2011, she has continued to develop her studio practice and share her work through exhibitions across the U.S. and internationally. Inspired by post-impressionism, fauvism, and magical realism, Popova’s paintings evoke mood and emotion through richly textured interiors and landscapes. Her decade-long exploration of home and place reflects a deep connection to personal narrative and the meaning of belonging. Her work has been featured in galleries including Cohle Gallery in Paris and Menorca, The Painting Center in New York, James Oliver Gallery, Paradigm Gallery, and more. Popova’s journey and work have been highlighted in publications such as Colossal, Flow Magazine, Beautiful Bizarre, American Art Collector, The Jealous Curator, and The Philadelphia Inquirer. She has participated in residencies at Centre Pompadour in France, NES Residency in Iceland, and the Skopelos Foundation for the Arts in Greece, all of which have contributed to her evolving studio practice. Based in Philadelphia at 1241 Carpenter Street Studios, Popova is also the founder of Create! Magazine and Art Queens and the host of the Art & Cocktails podcast. She has co-authored The Complete Smartist Guide and The Creative Business Handbook, helping artists build sustainable art careers.Website: katerinapopova.com + createmagazine.co + paintwithkat.comIG: @katerinaspopova @createmagazineVisit our website: visionaryartcollective.comFollow us on Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagJoin our newsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
As the year comes to a close, Victoria answers some of the most common questions artists are asking right now—from choosing the right opportunities to growing an online presence with intention. She shares why long-term vision is the anchor for decision-making, how to build meaningful relationships in the art world, and why authenticity (not trends) is the strongest strategy for social media. Victoria also invites artists to pause, reflect, and set the energetic tone for 2026 before diving into goals or planning.In this episode, she also announces that she’s opening a very limited number of 1:1 Strategy Sessions for new artists, designed to help you gain clarity, direction, and a solid plan for the year ahead.Victoria also shares details about the debut of her new watercolor series Where Flowers Dream, on view at Warnes Contemporary in Brooklyn on December 13, with a free in-person watercolor workshop on December 14. This episode is for artists who want to enter 2026 feeling grounded, strategic, and empowered—ready to take aligned steps toward the career they truly want.To book a 1:1 Strategy Session:visionaryartcollective.com/services/p/11-strategy-session-with-victoria-j-fry-45-minLearn more about Victoria’s upcoming watercolor debut:warnescontemporary.com/upcomingeventsVictoria J. Fry is a New York City–based painter, educator, curator, and founder of Visionary Art Collective, New Visionary Magazine, and Warnes Contemporary. She has supported hundreds of artists through exhibitions, publications, and mentorship.Visit our website: visionaryartcollective.comFollow us on Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagJoin our newsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
Patrick Quarm, a Ghanaian mixed-media artist, discusses his journey from drawing in his youth to developing a distinctive practice that explores cultural duality, hybridity, and identity. He reflects on how moving between Ghana and the U.S. shaped his perspective, and how an intuitive studio discovery led him to integrate African print fabrics into layered, three-dimensional portraits. Patrick shares insights on navigating multiple cultural contexts, the evolution of his conceptual thinking during graduate school, and the importance of experimentation and reflection within his creative process. He also speaks about using the body as a visual language to negotiate personal and collective identity.Here’s what we discuss:The development of his signature layered mixed-media process.How living between Ghana and the U.S. influences his artistic perspective.Identity, hybridity, and cultural negotiation in his portraiture.The role of experimentation and intuitive discovery in shaping his practice.How periods of reflection and travel impact his creative growth.About Patrick-Patrick Quarm (b. 1988, Ghana) earned his BFA in Painting from Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Ghana (2012), and his MFA from Texas Tech University, USA (2018). He currently lives and works between Ghana and the United States. Quarm’s practice explores identity with a focus on cultural hybridity and social evolution. His multi-layered paintings weave and splice cultural signifiers from different eras and communities, creating complex dialogues between history, memory, and contemporary life. His work has been presented in numerous exhibitions, including the Ford Foundation, New York, NY; Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, Omaha, NE; Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus, OH; Moody Center for the Arts, Rice University, Houston, TX; Kunstraum Potsdam, Berlin, DE; Gagosian, London, UK; Library Street Collective, Detroit, MI; K.N.U.S.T. Museum, Kumasi, Ghana; and the Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts, Grand Rapids, MI.Quarm’s work is represented in several public and private collections, including the Syracuse University Art Museum, Kalamazoo Institute of Arts, Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, and Ruby City. He has also participated in notable residencies, including the Red Bull Arts Detroit Residency (2019), the NXTHVN Fellowship (2021–2022), and the Artpace International Artist-in-Residence Program in San Antonio.Website: .patrickquarm.comIG: @_quarmVisit our website: visionaryartcollective.comFollow us on Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagJoin our newsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
Victoria explores why self-worth is the essential foundation of a sustainable art career. She reflects on how confidence, boundaries, resilience, and visibility all stem from knowing your own value, and why external validation can never replace a deep inner sense of worthiness. Drawing from her own journey and the book she’s currently writing, she invites artists to examine the beliefs they’re embodying, release old narratives, take ownership of their path, and show up with intention. This episode is a reminder that self-worth is a daily practice, and that choosing yourself is one of the most powerful steps you can take in your art career.To learn more about Victoria's 1:1 Mentorship Program, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/mentorshipTo learn more about The Visionary Community, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/visionary-community-enrollTo learn more about From The Ground Up juried by Erika b Hess, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/from-the-ground-upVictoria J. Fry is a New York City–based painter, educator, curator, and founder of Visionary Art Collective, New Visionary Magazine, and Warnes Contemporary. She has supported hundreds of artists through exhibitions, publications, and mentorship.Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagNewsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
Brooklyn-based artist and organizer Carter Shocket, co-director of Eleventh Hour Art and founding director of Trans Art Fest, joins Victoria to discuss the intersections of art, identity, and community care. Carter shares his journey as a visual artist navigating abstraction and queerness, and reflects on the power of collective art-making as a means of survival, connection, and transformation.Here’s what we discuss:Founding Trans Art Fest and creating trans-led spaces for artistic expression.Exploring identity, intimacy, and transformation through abstraction.Building networks of care and reimagining queer futurism through art.About Carter-Carter Shocket (he/him) is a trans and queer interdisciplinary artist from North Carolina living and working in Brooklyn, New York. His work includes woven sculpture, installation, street art, tapestry, and other process-based textile art. He regularly exhibits work in New York City with Eleventh Hour Art, the Textile Arts Center, and more. He was an Artist In Residence (Cycle 15) at the Textile Arts Center from 2023-2024, and is showing new work at the Somerville Museum in Massachusetts in early 2026. Notable collectors include the team at Artsy for their NYC Headquarters building. Alongside his studio practice, he is the Founding Director of Trans Art Fest, a new Brooklyn-based festival that exhibits and celebrates trans visual artists.Website: cartershocket.com + eleventhhourart.comIG: @carter_shocket @eleventhhour_artVisit our website: visionaryartcollective.comFollow us on Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagJoin our newsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
In this reflective solo episode, Victoria shares three powerful themes to carry into the new year—focusing on what’s within your control, separating your worth from external validation, and embracing the natural rhythm of success. She invites artists to shift from waiting for opportunities to creating them, to value their work beyond sales or recognition, and to trust that momentum always returns.Through journaling, reflection, and small intentional actions, Victoria encourages artists to reconnect with their long-term vision and step into 2026 with clarity, confidence, and renewed creative energy.To learn more about Victoria's 1:1 Mentorship Program, visit: visionaryartcollective.com/mentorshipTo learn more about The Visionary Community, visit: visionaryartcollective.com/visionary-community-enrollTo learn more about From The Ground Up juried by Erika b Hess visit:visionaryartcollective.com/from-the-ground-upVictoria J. Fry is a New York City–based painter, educator, curator, and founder of Visionary Art Collective, New Visionary Magazine, and Warnes Contemporary. She has supported hundreds of artists through exhibitions, publications, and mentorship.Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagNewsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter
In this heartfelt solo episode, Victoria shares a personal breakthrough in her art practice, shifting from textured, atmospheric paintings to ethereal watercolors, and reflecting on what this transformation has taught her about creative evolution, self-trust, and flow. She invites artists to release the fear of change, follow their intuition, and allow their art to evolve alongside their inner growth.To join The Artist Glow Up Program, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/glowup-enrollUse code GLOWUP20 for 20% off the programTo learn more about 1:1 Mentorship, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/mentorshipTo learn more about The Visionary Community, visit:visionaryartcollective.com/visionary-community-enrollVictoria J. Fry is a New York City-based painter, educator, curator, and founder of Visionary Art Collective, New Visionary Magazine, and Warnes Contemporary. She has supported hundreds of artists through exhibitions, publications, and mentorship.Instagram: @visionaryartcollective + @newvisionarymagNewsletter: visionaryartcollective.com/newsletter



