November 13–December 19, NYC
Offering an intimate counterpoint to an age of control, Jamie Isenstein, Fabienne Lasserre, and Sophy Naess reflect through the lenses of feminism, humor, and imagination to reclaim the body as a site of autonomy, performance, and pleasure.
Artists share their process and ideas to help you see in new ways in our exclusive artwork, exhibitions, films and stories.
Start CollectingSince the birth of the internet, Stephen Hendee has considered the consequences of our digital embrace. Drawing from virtual and physical spaces for his unique aesthetic language, Hendee envisions dark futures.
Grace DeGennaro's Platonic Solids series explores the sacred geometric forms believed by Plato to be the fundamental building blocks of the universe. DeGennaro's sensitive handing of oil on linen imbues these paintings with a quiet, beautiful mystery.
From Dürer’s woodcuts to Warhol’s silkscreens, printmaking has democratized art for centuries.
Friday Arts continues this tradition, partnering with artists to create limited edition works on paper that offer collectors exceptional, accessible work.
Grace Hager’s vivid, emotionally charged works hover between reality and reverie, offering a portal into nature’s quiet intensity. Through ceramic sculptures and paintings, she translates fleeting encounters—like firelight or a passing animal—into expressively heightened, contemplative forms.
With color as a guiding force, Hager's creations feel both personal and elemental—where memory, metaphor, and feeling converge.

Get early access to curated art, authentic artist conversations, and cinematic short films that reveal the stories behind the work.

Stephen Hendee re-imagines vintage pinball machines as sculptural, playable artworks—transforming their outdated themes with the luminous aesthetics of his installation practice. Drawing on sci-fi narratives, his machines invite players to reflect on the evolution of technology and the stories we embed in games.