
Satellite Exhibition | Multiple Visions 2:
April 17 - June 30

A satellite exhibition at the Boca Raton Innovation Campus (BRIC) featuring the Arts Warehouse Resident Artists and recent program Alumni
April 17, 2025 – April 17, 2026
Join us for an Opening Reception on April 17th, 5 – 6:30pm
Featuring |
Jocelyn Chemel*
Andrea Facusse*
Sarah E. Huang
Bonnie Levinson*
Ma Nong
Renee Phillips*
Marianela Perez
Amanda Perna*
Renee Rey|
Kelley Ryan
*Alumni
Boca Raton Innovation Campus (BRiC)
5000 T-Rex Ave
Boca Raton, FL 33431
Gallery near Marcel Brewer’s Coffee Shop
The competitive Resident Artist Program at Arts Warehouse is made up of 15 private artist studios, supporting artists as small businesses. The studios offer the resident artists the opportunity to interact on a daily basis and develop their individual expression through their practice while working, learning and sharing with one another as a collective. One of the joys of working on their individual artistic visions at the Arts Warehouse is the access to the public through studio visits, First Fridays and special programs. The exhibition at the BRIC is an opportunity for an expanded public to experience this unique group of Resident Artists in a new setting and encourage further conversation in each artists’ personal studios back at the Arts Warehouse.
Multiple Visions 2 is the second iteration of this exhibition includes both past and present Arts Warehouse Resident Artists, celebrating each artist’s unique perspectives, extending their reach beyond their studio spaces, into the vibrant South Florida arts community. The high quality of work exhibited is a testament to the level of the resident artists at Arts Warehouse.
Additional programming including artist panel discussions, “Coffee & Conversation”, with dates to be announced soon.
Featured Artist’s Statements |
Jocelyn Chemel’s art practice is about her response to social and environmental events. During Covid she became aware of the ease of cells being able to mutate, about the world shutting down, and plants growing wild with no one to tame them. The photographs in this Multiple Visions exhibition play with the notion of the wild– scattered, misplaced, colored and in limbo.
Andrea Facusse is a multimedia artist and biologist. Her work focuses on painting and mixed media to capture the interplay between nature, memory, and human emotion, creating pieces that evoke both nostalgia and wonder.
Sarah E. Huang is a multidisciplinary artist currently exploring themes of memory and identity through paintings, installations, and soft sculpture objects. Her intimate abstract paintings form dream-like environments depicted through luscious swaths of color, mark-making, and texture that recall emotional landscapes, distant memories, and liminal.
Bonnie Levinson has moved to a beautiful new space in West Palm Beach, Studio 1608, where she continues her explorations by mixing painting, photography, and collage to achieve a distinct form of visual abstraction. Inspired by the natural environment and travels, her projects seek to express that which is hidden beneath, often invisible, to express alternate realities from her imagination.
Ma Nong’s art is driven by her interest in her identity, her signature series favor cubes and diamonds, on both large and small scales, and in bold colors and imaginative formations. She is working on abstract figure paintings and mixed media.
Renée Rey invites viewers to step into a realm where absence speaks as loudly as presence, offering immersive worlds where surrealism and abstraction converge. In large and intimate scaled paintings and mixed media work, Rey blends fragmented imagery with both traditional and non-traditional materials—oil, acrylic, cardboard, branches, and pearls—to explore the tension between nature, technology, and the built environment. Her work challenges perception calls for environmental stewardship and reimagines a future where cultures and nature coexist harmoniously, sparking reflection on our shared responsibility to the planet.
Marianela Pérez is a visual artist; her artwork transcends the conventional limits of geometric work to become a profoundly vibrant and emotional experience. We find in her creations a perfect fusion between simplicity and complexity, where geometry becomes a means to express the artist’s most intimate ideas. Looking at Pérez’s work, the viewer is immersed in an emotional journey where forms and structures become gateways to the artist’s memories and experiences. Each line, each vibrant color leads us to different emotional and mental places, taking us beyond simple observation into a deep and meaningful experience
Amanda Perna is an award-winning fashion designer, illustrator, and Project Runway alum known for her vibrant, joy-filled creations. Her work bridges the worlds of fashion and fine art, bringing illustrations to life with bold color, texture, and 3D elements. Each piece reflects her passion for storytelling, craftsmanship, and inspiring others to embrace their unique creativity. She recently opened House of Perna in Pineapple Grove Delray Beach featuring her original designs.
Renee Phillips’s process-based practice investigates materiality, experimentation, and the transformative potential of color. In my new West Palm Beach art studio. She is currently investigating rhythmic patterns found in nature through a layering technique of latex paint, spray paint and a power sander – the results reveal highly tactile yet meditative surfaces.
Kelley Ryan‘s work has recently transitioned from acrylic to oil paintings. This shift has introduced a richer texture, allowing more depth and values in her work which has changed the way she paints and lends itself to her portraits. The luminous quality of oil paint amplifies the tension between modern motifs and classical influence, creating a more immersive and resonant visual experience.