
PMT Gallery
Camelia Mohebi
Camelia Mohebi is a Visual Artist, Designer, Director and Entrepreneur.
Combining her knowledge of art and the understanding of the impact art has on the human psyche and the unconscious mind, Camelia has broadened her skills and holds Certificates in Neuro-Linguistic Programming, Theta Healing and Art Therapy.
Through Camelia's interest in people, the subconscious and the emotional mind, she utilizes elements of psychology, theology, physics, and metaphysics in her work and often uses acoustic frequencies to generate art in mixed mediums.
Garo Hakimian
Garo’s work immediately signals a mastery of post-war expressionism, drawing frequent and favorable comparisons to the powerful, gestural forms of established market figure Georg Baselitz. He also carries forward the profound, expressive spirit and artistic lineage of his late father.
His practice is a study in raw, uncompromising freedom, synthesizing the visceral intensity of artists like Jean-Michel Basquiat and George Condo with the conceptual boldness and market awareness of contemporary icons such as Damien Hirst and Jeff Koons. This broad artistic foundation ensures his pieces resonate across established collecting genres, from Neo-Expressionism to Conceptual Art.
Operating successfully outside the traditional gallery model, Garo has cultivated a formidable and organic global demand via social media, which acts as a primary marketplace for his work. This direct engagement highlights his rapidly emerging market trajectory and positions his art as a strategic acquisition, allowing collectors to access a rapidly appreciating artist before large-scale institutional representation.
For deeper insight into his thematic focus on transformation, suffering, and artistic production—which drives the emotional and aesthetic power of his canvases—collectors are encouraged to read his recent interview:
Read Garo's full interviews are available on FAD, WhiteHot Magazine, and Up Magazine.
Marcia Grostein
Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, The Hara Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo, Museum of Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro, and also spread in other different galleries. She was the first Brazilian artist whose work was purchased from a high museum like the Metropolitan Museum.
Michael Wolf
In 2020, Wolf's artist residency at Mana Contemporary led to drawings that inspired sculptures and a solo exhibition in New Jersey. He has received individual fellowship grants from the New Jersey State Council of the Arts and Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation. Wolf was also honored with the prestigious Power of Art Award, presented by artist Robert Rauschenberg.
Richard Wiesel
Richard Wiesel, a photographer and relative of Elie Wiesel, who was a survivor of the Holocaust and received the Nobel Peace Prize, was given special permission to enter the private archives of the Sachsenhausen and Ravensbruck memorials. He captured photographs of valuable objects that had never been revealed before, and through his research, he managed to track down their original owners and uncover their stories.
Tatiana Arocha
Influenced by her upbringing in Colombia's rainforests, engages in fieldwork to study and document the forest ecosystem. She collaborates with indigenous communities to understand their relationships with nature. In the studio, the artist creates large-scale forest portraits to immerse viewers in the intricate connections of the natural world.
YongJae Kim
Yongjae Kim is a hyperrealist painter. He uses tiny paintbrushes smaller than our eyelashes to create super-realistic images of our daily surroundings in NYC. The Korean-born artist has been obsessed with detailed drawings and paintings, working strictly in oil painting. It takes him months and even years to complete one painting. He is a recipient of the Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, 2023, and The NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship in the category of Painting 2021, and the New York Foundation for the Arts award in 2021.













