CINÉ curates Walk Through, a fine-art exhibition and salon at the Gibbes Museum of Art in support of My Sister’s House. The exhibition explores the moment life can no longer continue as it has been, and the long, imperfect work of rebuilding what comes next. The evening opens with champagne, carries guests through a guided sequence of rooms, and returns to a vibrant salon alive with artists at work and celebration.
After the residency closes, we host a black-tie unveiling—part exhibition, part living performance. Each set returns as its own room: muses reappear, scenes are re-created, and every artist’s interpretation hangs together beside looping films of the making. Music, cocktails, and curated moments turn the gallery into a sensory immersion—artists, collectors, and collaborators inside the story for one unforgettable night.
An immersive five-day artist residency where invited figurative painters live and work inside CINÉ-built cinematic sets—with live muses, curated sound, and couture-scale environments designed to spark new work. Built for serious creation: time, pressure, beauty, and focus—without commercial briefs. The week culminates in a public exhibition and salon, where the work is revealed, collected, and carried forward.
Meyer Vogl Gallery premiered six short films produced by CINÉ—cinematic artist portraits that bring viewers close to the people behind the work: what shapes them, what moves them, and why they make. Featuring Anne Darby Parker, Laurie Meyer, Marissa Vogl, Paul Ferrari, Susan Altman, and Susan Colwell. We laughed, we cried, and many hugs were exchanged.
During Meyer Vogl Gallery’s December group show, LOCAL, CINÉ installed a short-film program designed to live inside the exhibition. The films looped throughout opening night as an intimate companion to the paintings on view—bringing studio atmosphere, gesture, and making into the room in real time.
CINÉ curates Walk Through, a fine-art exhibition and salon at the Gibbes Museum of Art in support of My Sister’s House. The exhibition explores the moment life can no longer continue as it has been, and the long, imperfect work of rebuilding what comes next. The evening opens with champagne, carries guests through a guided sequence of rooms, and returns to a vibrant salon alive with artists at work and celebration.
An immersive five-day artist residency where invited figurative painters live and work inside CINÉ-built cinematic sets—with live muses, curated sound, and couture-scale environments designed to spark new work. Built for serious creation: time, pressure, beauty, and focus—without commercial briefs. The week culminates in a public exhibition and salon, where the work is revealed, collected, and carried forward.
After the residency closes, we host a black-tie unveiling—part exhibition, part living performance. Each set returns as its own room: muses reappear, scenes are re-created, and every artist’s interpretation hangs together beside looping films of the making. Music, cocktails, and curated moments turn the gallery into a sensory immersion—artists, collectors, and collaborators inside the story for one unforgettable night.
Meyer Vogl Gallery premiered six short films produced by CINÉ—cinematic artist portraits that bring viewers close to the people behind the work: what shapes them, what moves them, and why they make. Featuring Anne Darby Parker, Laurie Meyer, Marissa Vogl, Paul Ferrari, Susan Altman, and Susan Colwell. We laughed, we cried, and many hugs were exchanged.
During Meyer Vogl Gallery’s December group show, LOCAL, CINÉ installed a short-film program designed to live inside the exhibition. The films looped throughout opening night as an intimate companion to the paintings on view—bringing studio atmosphere, gesture, and making into the room in real time.