Open Call AIR Recipients

The KinoSaito Residency Program is a studio + residency program designed to provide artists with the space and time necessary to focus concentrated attention on any part of their practice they feel is ripe for development. For our first A.I.R. Open Call program, we host two artists for a one time four-week session to be held November 10 – December 9, 2024. The aim of this program is to ensure that practicing artists, their ideas and their energy will be a constant presence at KinoSaito.

When Kikuo Saito and Mikiko Ino purchased this property and the much-treasured school building in 2014, it was their dream that it would one day serve as a space for artists to work, play, experiment and collaborate. The KinoSaito Studios give artists the freedom to work every day in a quiet setting free from outside demands and responsibilities.

Each selected artist was awarded a generously proportioned 900 sq.f. studio located at KinoSaito in Verplanck, NY with large windows and high ceilings, a loft living quarters, a kitchenette, and a private bathroom for the duration of their residency. KinoSaito provides a $1,500 stipend to the accepted artists to use at their discretion for living costs and supplies during their residency. KinoSaito is not responsible for providing meals, art supplies or other materials to resident artists. Regular open studio events invite visitors to talk with artists and see works-in-progress. 

The selected artists were chosen by a jury of arts professionals based on the quality of the submitted work, and the artworks' alignment with KinoSaito’s mission.


2024 Open Call AIR Recipient

Katherine Sepúlveda

Katherine Sepúlveda (b. 1999, Stamford, CT) is a multidisciplinary Colombian-American artist based in Brooklyn, New York. In her practice, she utilizes both painting and installation to create maximalist works informed by the rich visual culture of femme, Latinx identity. Her works examine grief and serve as devotional objects in which she searches for a resolution to the perpetual alienation felt from her heritage, family history, and American identity. White, heterosexual womanhood is often challenged through representations of queer hyperfemininity and satirical depictions of her religious upbringing. Her works are informed by personal narratives, often referencing the consumption patterns of working class migrants, family archives, and catholic devotional imagery. She has participated in solo and group exhibitions in New York, New England, and Baltimore. Her recent solo exhibition, Halloween House, was featured on Hyperallergic’s list of 15 Art Shows to See in New York City. She received her BFA in painting from the Maryland Institute College of Art in 2021.

Through scenes depicting the rich visual culture of femme, Colombian-American identity, Sepúlveda’s work explores themes of religion, queer hyperfemininity, and generational cycles. Latinx maximalist aesthetics are tightly woven together to create pocket universes typically made from acrylic and found material. Her portfolio examines the manner in which the consumption patterns of impoverished individuals of color are subject to scrutiny. Immersive installations both literally and figuratively take up space, queering the principles of art and elevating styles arbitrarily deemed low-brow. Compositions featuring biblical themes, apocalyptic imagery, cosmological concepts, and depictions of personal narratives, simultaneously allude to and dismiss references to trauma, isolation, and loss. Through satirical depictions of archangels, nuns, and the Holy Ghost, her paintings deconstruct and reclaim symbols of oppression. Her work cycles through recurring motifs, interrogating the lasting legacies of colonialism and presenting hyperfemininity as a form of radical gender expression. The past is often revisited in a potentially futile attempt to understand the ever-evolving present. Her work is informed by family archives, Catholic devotional imagery, and landscapes within New York City and its suburbs paired against snipits captured from daily life in Colombian metropolises.

Katherine Sepúlveda, Halloween House, 2024, Found furniture, family photographs, altered Catholic devotional items, recycled bottles, acrylic and house paint on wood, fabric, foam board, and cardboard, 110 x 99 x 88 in

Katherine Sepúlveda, Heaven on Earth, 2023, Acrylic on canvas, 54 x 36 in

Katherine Sepúlveda, Divino Niño, 2023, Acrylic, oil, and glitter on canvas, 40 x 24 in

Katherine Sepúlveda, Altar, 2021, Found furniture, cardboard, acrylic, oil, Flashe paint, votive candles, household items, altered family archives, 60+ painted family photos, 96 x 180 x 60 in


2024 Open Call AIR Recipient

Capucine Bourcart

Bourcart has lived in New York City since 2006, originally coming from France. She carries with her a blend of French and Vietnamese heritage.

Bourcart's artistic footprint extends across various galleries and art venues, both nationally and internationally. From California to Boston, New York to France, and Switzerland, her work is featured in solo and group exhibitions.

Her photo-based creations are included in museum collections in both France and New York. She has ventured into the public sphere with four large-scale art pieces printed on aluminum, engaging audiences in the artistic landscape of New York.

In the broader art community, Bourcart has participated in art fairs such as Art on Paper, Art Wynwood, and Flux Art Fair. Her accolades include the Paula Rhodes Memorial Award for exceptional achievement in Fine Arts, recognizing her thesis work at the School of Visual Arts in 2023. Additionally, she has received grants from the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, Uniqlo Park Expressions, and The Puffin Foundation.

In 2020, Bourcart co-founded the collective Art Forms Us, a forum for open discussions on artistic processes and contemporary art topics and projects.

Her commitment to artistic exploration led her to complete a residency at the Vermont Studio Center in 2023, which followed her completion of her MFA from the School of Visual Arts in 2023.

Capucine Bourcart, Abyssal Crescendo, 2024, Acrylic paint, threads, sand, wood, seashells, and rug pad, 69.75 x 19.25 in

Capucine Bourcart, And Above It, the Birds Fly, 2024, Spray acrylic paint, thread, sand, feathers, and rug pad, 112 x 32 in

Capucine Bourcart, Crossroads, 2023, Porcupine quills, sand, 24 karat gold thread, moire, and rug pad, 23.75 x 13 in

Capucine Bourcart, Tic Tac Toe, 2024, Sand, green crushed stone, thread, and pine needles, 90 x 16 in