BOLSTERARTS RESIDENCY

COHORT 04

Spring 2026

Selected by jurors Jessica Hong (Chief Curator, Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art), Damien Davis (Artist, Educator, and Curator), and Carla Forbes (Assistant Curator, Brooklyn Museum, Center for Feminist Art).

Delvin Lugo

Delvin Lugo



RYAN COSBERT

RYAN COSBERT

A portrait of Ryan Cosbert in her studio sitting in front of her large yellow, red, and purple abstract painting.

  • Portrait of Delvin Lugo, a New York City–based artist, looking directly at the camera in a gallery setting.

    DELVIN LUGO

    Delvin Lugo is a New York City-based artist whose work explores themes of home, intimacy, and identity through narrative figurative painting.These investigations have led him to experiment with home linens, whose worn surfaces reflect the intimacy and lived-in feeling of his work. He began his studies at the Maine College of Art before moving to New York to complete his education at the School of Visual Arts. Upon completing art school, fashion styling became his creative outlet. Being surrounded by many creative designers inspired him to create and paint again. Delvin is a 2024 Bronx Art Museum AIM Fellow and also LMCC Workspace resident. Lugo is a recipient of the 2025 Lillian Orlowsky and William Freed Grant presented by The Provincetown Art Association and Museum.His work has been featured in New American Painting issue #152 and ESSE Magazine #107. His work has been acquired by Microsoft Art Collection, Fidelity Investments Art Collection, and private collections. Lugo’s work is featured in the 2026 7th AIM Biennial at The Bronx Museum of Art.

  • Portrait of Ryan Cosbert, conceptual artist and current BolsterArts Residency artist, standing in front of a colorful abstract painting.

    Ryan Cosbert

    Ryan Cosbert is a first generation African-American (of Haitian & Guyanese descent) conceptual artist who’s work approaches and focuses on her own humanistic experiences, self-expression, political issues and historical narratives. Cosbert aims to bring her viewers to see things from an internal / external perspective to explore and ignite conversations while encouraging higher consciousness. Cosbert rigorously researches the history and people of the African diaspora that she uses as inspiration for the subjects of her work. Cosbert is also interested in the consequences of subjugation and oppression along with their historical and​ ​generational impact on the Black community.  

    When it comes to Cosbert’s abstract paintings she creates a sense of control using the grid format to apply what she calls “tiles” which creates a geometrical balance.  She forms different layers using the tiles, paints, and physical objects giving the work more depth and a three-dimensional composition.  Both color and materiality play an important role in her work. She often incorporates physical objects and colors that tie directly to the subject matter of the painting. Cosbert graduated from The School of Visual Arts (SVA) in New York City with a BFA in Fine Arts (Class of 2021).

Meet the COHORT 04 Jury

  • Portrait of Jessica Hong, Chief Curator at the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, photographed against a warm, softly blurred background. Hong wears a black collared shirt and has short cropped hair, looking slightly off camera.

    JESSICA HONG

    CHIEF CURATOR

    KEMPER MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART

    Jessica Hong is a curator and cultural worker who has dedicated her practice to highlighting under-recognized narratives and stimulating generational change within institutional sites. She is interested in rethinking curatorial practice to center the support of artists, mentorship, to build upon community, facilitate critical dialogues, while foregrounding collaboration and equity. 

    Hong is the newly-appointed Chief Curator at the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art in Kansas City, MO. She is formerly the Senior Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at the Toledo Museum of Art where she was responsible for broadening art historical narratives and shaping a dynamic collection and exhibitions program. At the TMA, she organized the premiere of Stan Douglas’s major film installation Doppelgänger in a U.S. institution, Living Legacies: Art of the African American South, and Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg–Machine Auguries: Toledo, the artist’s first U.S. solo presentation. In the lead-up to the Museum’s historic reinstallation, Hong acquired key works by Pacita Abad, Huguette Caland, Teresita Fernández, Jeffrey Gibson, Kerry James Marshall, Isaac Julien, Ana Mendieta, Mickalene Thomas, Remedios Varo, the museum’s first digital artwork by Osinachi, among others. Additionally, she worked on inaugurating TMA’s digital artist residency in which she served as artistic director and, in 2022, she was awarded Toledo’s 20 Under 40, which recognizes leaders in the community.

  • Black-and-white portrait of Damien Davis, a Newark-based artist and educator, wearing a dark shirt and chain necklace, looking directly at the camera with a neutral expression.

    Damien Davis

    ARTIST, EDUCATOR, WRITER AND CURATOR

    Damien Davis is a Newark-based artist and educator originally from Crowley, Louisiana, and raised in Phoenix, Arizona. His practice explores cultural representation and identity through a distinctive visual language that recontextualizes symbols from diverse cultures, challenging historical narratives and inviting new interpretations.

    Davis has exhibited widely, including at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, Museum of Modern Art, and Museum of Arts and Design. He has been recognized with the Rema Hort Mann Foundation Community Engagement Grant and has participated in residencies at Project for Empty Space, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, and the Sugar Hill Children’s Museum of Art and Storytelling, among others.

    Currently an Adjunct Professor at Purchase College (SUNY), Davis also holds a BFA in Studio Art and an MA in Visual Arts Administration from New York University. His work has been featured in publications such as The New York Times, Hyperallergic, and Frieze Magazine.

  • Portrait of Carla Forbes, Assistant Curator at the Brooklyn Museum’s Center for Feminist Art, and juror for the BolsterArts Residency Program.

    CARLA FORBES

    ASSISTANT CURATOR

    BROOKLYN MUSEUM

    CENTER FOR FEMINIST ART

    Currently the Curatorial Assistant in the Brooklyn Museum's Center for Feminist Art, Carla Forbes supports the Center’s curatorial team in creating exhibitions that forefront artists who engage feminist methodologies and frameworks, such as María Madalena Campos-Pons, Nona Faustine, and Elizabeth Catlett.

    Prior to their work at the Brooklyn Museum, Forbes has held a range of experiences in education, visitor engagement, and curatorial capacities across several institutions including The Oakland Museum of California, the De Young Museum, and The Museum of the African Diaspora.

    Motivated by Black Queer Feminist theory, Forbes is interested in centering the practices and experiences of artists and publics of the African diaspora, while shaping anti-oppressive arts and culture ecosystems that struggle towards more liberatory psychic, social, and civic potentials, both inside and beyond institutional boundaries.

    Forbes is an inaugural alum of the Studio Museum in Harlem Arts Leadership Praxis, and is currently a fellow in the Association of Art Museum Curators Professional Alliance of Curators of Color. They hold a B.A. in African and African-American Studies from Stanford University.

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