There’s a quiet pull to Inge Schuster’s work. It doesn’t try to overwhelm you—it asks you to slow down. Her images live somewhere between the real and the imagined, in that slightly unfamiliar space where something begins to shift.
Explore exhibits, behind-the-scenes stories & updates from the Castellani Art Museums blog.
There’s a quiet pull to Inge Schuster’s work. It doesn’t try to overwhelm you—it asks you to slow down. Her images live somewhere between the real and the imagined, in that slightly unfamiliar space where something begins to shift.
Monsters, for artist Sudi Wang, are not the creatures we should fear. They are the figures that help us understand ourselves. In her upcoming exhibition, Beyond Relief: The Monsters of Sudi Wang, visitors will encounter towering prints, intimate hand-pulled impressions, and immersive installations that invite them into a world where monsters become mirrors of human identity.
Ed Wong-Ligda does not paint landscapes — at least, not in the traditional sense. Instead, his canvases are metaphors, layered with memory, imagination, and the inevitability of change. “Nature, for me, is a metaphor of the persistence of life and the inevitability of death,” he reflects. In Landscapes of Memory and Mortality, Wong-Ligda invites viewers to step into imagined terrains that are at once familiar and disorienting, grounding and ethereal.