Curated Art Gallery Dealer, Debbie Dickinson, has a new exhibition on view now until May 28 at 37 West 57th Street in Manhattan here in New York City. This new gallery will examine the most important organ of our body, our brain, which Debbie celebrates as “Cerebral”. It is also a celebration of the beautiful things our mind can do without question, as well as raise awareness about mental health, promoting healthy habits that our brain needs to deal with stresses. Debbie challenges her lineup of artists to take up the question of “Cerebral”, looking at the intricate depths of human psyche through their own diverse and profound insights.
Debbie Dickinson Gallery and her Artists are in alliance with Smile Gallery. NYC ‘s Dr. Lee Gause DDS to support dental care for those in need and The Brain Fitness Foundation with Dr. Kamran Fallanpour Ph.D for mental wellness. They are proud supporters to deliver brain treatment and rehabilitation and dental care accessible.


In this examination of human thought, Debbie’s range of artists includes Anthony Haden-Guest who uses his cartoonist talent to express the humor of human inconvenient truth. Bill Buchman takes his masterful use of oils, acrylics, canvas, and wood to create mindful work to magnify a brain’s dreams, free-spirited sympathy in the dark, the complexities of a thought, and wood symbolizing a moment of brilliance. Powerful brain activity takes place with Cosmo Mullican, oils on wood panel is the only thing needed to witness the complex and dangerous moments our brain experiences, mental health is stressed.


David Richardson’s use of oil and canvas with vibrant hues create floral stills expressing chaos through preservation and contemplation. Evan Sebastian Lagache fights for mental survival through chess moves and bishops to help express emotions of the artist. Frank Mann takes a classic universal approach by starting at reality before injecting science and imagination.


Marc Bouwer uses oil, acrylics, and cardboard to eschew reality to tell the story of shock, secrecy, and awkwardness. Mary Reid’s simple oil on canvas proudly stresses what mental wellness and self care can look like. Rick Secen uses pure movie cinema for you to be aware of your own mental health through boulders and contemplation. And Tina Salvesen wants you to see reality in the most limitless and exaggerated dream like form possible, where reality turns into your own beautiful eternity.
With “Cerebral”, Debbie Dickinson not only wants you to enjoy and interpret the beautiful work her lineup of artists challenge themselves to with this theme, but to encounter the human mind. The brain is a beautiful and vital organ by itself, but if we see an artistic expression of the brain in progress, we will appreciate the highs and lows of mental health. “Cerebral” will also be a strong advocate for a brain that needs to have a brighter and healthier future by eliminating perils. Through past, present, and future, “Cerebral” will celebrate our minds to motivate our own self-awareness while we get excited at a better way for our brain.
Daniel Quintanilla
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