And the winners are….

Inspired by medicine and science, Londoner Shannon Bono’s paintings embody an Afrocentrist consciousness, using oils, acrylics and spray paints to produce layered and figurative compositions, centralising black womanhood as a source of knowledge and understanding.

LA-based artist Adam de Boer uses traditional Javanese techniques such as ‘Batik’ (wax-resist dyeing) to explore his international heritage, drawing on Western painting history and Southeast Asian traditional craft.

In Tokyo, painter Brittni Bell Warshaw works in acrylic and oil pastels, primarily on raw and treated canvas with works that explores the themes of identity, motherhood, and personal evolution.

New York-based artist, Takura Suzuki’s work focuses on the relationship between contemporary digital technology and humans, combining iconography with classical still life.

In Hong Kong, meet Chan Wai Lap, who’s recent ‘swimming pool’ series was created with fine pencil on paper, each tile reconstructed individually and brought together in an illusion perspective.

Parisian artist Matthieu Livrieri makes figurative works of vibrant and unfiltered images of his lived experiences, working in both drawing and painting in an expressive and stylized visual language.

Over the next few weeks, these six artists will each make a new piece of work. These will be revealed as a collection for the first time in October. Sign up to our newsletter for first look at the newly created pieces.

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