Meet the Artists

Greg Busch

A shadow in the world of art, yet an undeniable force within it, Greg Busch exists beyond the bounds of convention. A lifelong creator and relentless innovator, he approaches art not as a commodity but as an intimate dialogue—one that begins in solitude and speaks volumes without words. Each piece is a quiet revelation, a distillation of emotion, technique, and an ever-evolving pursuit of new perspectives.

Eschewing the limelight, he remains elusive by design, allowing his work to stand as the sole testament to his vision. His canvases, born from a devotion to process rather than commerce, are rarely released—but when they are, they transcend possession, becoming experiences in their own right. His current journey takes him across the globe, absorbing the textures of unfamiliar landscapes, the rhythm of distant cultures, and the silent narratives woven into the world’s forgotten corners.

What he creates is not merely art—it is a glimpse into a mind unbound, an invitation into a realm where technique and instinct converge in effortless harmony. For those who encounter his work, the privilege is not in ownership, but in witnessing something that was never meant to be contained.

Jonas Stirner

With over two decades of experience in the global art scene, Jonas Stirner has cultivated a career that merges mastery with innovation. His journey began alongside the legendary Robert Rauschenberg in 1997, leading to 15 years of immersion in the international art world. From his base on Captiva Island, Florida, he played a pivotal role in the creation, transport, and installation of Rauschenberg’s works, attending and assisting with exhibitions across the U.S., Spain, Italy, and France. During this time, he also exhibited his own pieces alongside Rauschenberg in Florida and New York.

Since 2012, Jonas Stirner has pursued an independent path, securing prestigious museum exhibitions and large-scale commissions. His first museum showing came in 2015 at Grounds for Sculpture in New Jersey, followed by high-profile projects, including a custom 9 x 4-foot chandelier for a luxury residence and a 10-foot sculptural centerpiece for All Seasons of Naples, engineered to withstand Florida’s demanding climate. His expertise in large-scale sculpture has led to public commissions in Arizona, a donor recognition wall for the NJ Nature Conservancy, and most recently, the installation of Square Wave, an 11.5 x 12 x 7-foot sculpture at the entrance of BIG Arts on Sanibel Island.

A master of composition, he honed his skills in large-scale photography-based transfer printmaking during his tenure with Rauschenberg. Over the past five years, he has refined his personal studio practice, pioneering his own approach to collage painting—transforming vision into a striking, layered narrative. Each piece is a testament to his ability to balance technique and emotion, scale and intimacy, tradition and bold new frontiers.

Victor Schegin Seehund

Victor Seehund, a Paris-based visual artist, first engaged with paint at the age of 15 through graffiti and tagging in the streets of Paris. His artistic journey evolved from lettering to figurative subjects, eventually leading him to experiment with traditional mediums.

Holding a Bachelor's degree in Journalism, he honed his skills in photography and editing—both integral to his current artistic practice. His formal training includes five years of intensive study in drawing and oil painting at Paris' public workshops, where he was mentored by esteemed artists, including surrealist painter Gilles Fourgassié, a former protégé of Nicolas Wacker.

Today, Seehund’s work reflects a synthesis of technical mastery and a deep understanding of visual storytelling, shaped by years of discipline and exploration. Seehund’s figurative paintings bridge reality and the invisible currents of our inner self with a note of tragedy. By juxtaposing realistically rendered details with areas of expressive abstraction, the painter aims to reveal a haunting beauty. He is not painting portraits; he’s painting the echoes of feelings that linger between us. Through this interplay of form and feeling, the artist creates a space for contemplation, where vulnerability, solitude, evanescence, and hope coexist.

Maximilian Wiedemann

Maximilian Wiedemann is a modern-day cultural commentator, seamlessly merging street art with the world of high fashion and celebrity. Describing himself as a "camera lens for celebrities," he documents the spectacle of contemporary luxury much like a 19th-century painter—only with spray cans instead of oils. His work, influenced by icons such as Basquiat and Haring, as well as powerhouse brands like Prada and Vogue, reflects the paradoxes of excess, power, and aspiration with razor-sharp wit and incisive humor.

Wiedemann’s rise to prominence was catalyzed by none other than Karl Lagerfeld, who, after acquiring one of his works, introduced him to French Vogue editor Carine Roitfeld in Paris. Since then, his career has flourished, with exhibitions in major art capitals—London, Paris, New York, Miami, and Los Angeles—and a collector base that includes global elites such as Bono, Kate Moss, and Elle MacPherson.

Constantly innovating, Wiedemann experiments with neon, found-object sculptures, photography, and film, yet his signature remains unwavering: an irreverent critique of the very world he inhabits. His art doesn’t just reflect 21st-century culture—it playfully exposes its contradictions, inviting the viewer to revel in both its beauty and its absurdity.

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