Towards the Late Light:

Isabella Amram, Kan Hung-Ju,

Yehong Mao

27 March - 23 April, 2026
Private View: Thursday, 26 March, 6-8 pm

Isabella Amram (b. 1995, Turkey) is a Turkish-Venezuelan artist based in London. Born in Istanbul, she holds an MA in Painting from the Royal College of Art. Amram’s paintings develop through an extended physical engagement with the canvas, where images are not predetermined but discovered through a process of accumulation, revision, and interruption. Each mark alters the conditions for the next, allowing the work to unfold gradually over time.

Kan Hung-Ju (b. 1993, Taiwan) is a New York-based painter, holding a BFA from the National Taiwan University of Arts (2015) and an MFA from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design (2020). In his paintings, Kan transforms familiar motifs into fluid symbols of cultural memory and time. Suspended between landscape and abstraction, his work reflects an ongoing inquiry into belonging, where painting becomes a site for negotiating identity, memory, and home.

Iris Yehong Mao (b. 1976, China) is a Los Angeles–based painter whose work bridges intuition, abstraction, and the visionary. She studied at the Shanghai Academy of Arts and Crafts (1996) and the School of Fine Arts at Shanghai University (2000). Improvised and intuitive, Mao’s paintings allow forms to emerge and dissolve through layered gestures and luminous colour. Rooted in a deeply felt creative process, her work invites a contemplative engagement with perception, transience, and the act of seeing.