Christina Conway is a multidisciplinary artist living and working in Los Angeles. Her primary mediums are acrylic, ink and resin. She developed a unique method of layering tinted epoxy resin that gives her pieces a sculptural feel to reach out and draw the viewer into their depths.

The biggest impact on Christina’s work was relocating to Los Angeles from gloomy Rochester, NY: “I felt like Dorothy dropping into the land of Oz. LA is exactly what I hoped it would be, filled with sunshine, Surrealism, and possibilities”. She raised a family in Venice Beach, works as a location manager for TV and films, while simultaneously always diving deeper into her art practice.

In her most recent work Christina is exploring LA and its’ resistance to aging. Known for its’ idolization of youth, aging in LA is something everyone seems to want to hide. Landmarks are torn down and modernized, communities are gentrified and whitewashed, while droves of young people continue to move here, chasing dreams.

Her figurative and topographical resin sculpture paintings invistigate the ways the landscape and cultures of Los Angeles have stayed the same, the ways it is constantly changing, and how that mirrors the evolution of our human aging process. LA is always under threat, we are told, from fires, earthquakes and coastal erosion, yet here she stands, gritty and glorious, much in the same way humans move through trials and time yet remain.