THE CURRENT
Highlighting artists that shape culture, inspiring other young artists.
THIS PAGE IS A CONCEPT ONLY
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THIS PAGE IS A CONCEPT ONLY -
Artist in Residence
AMBER PARK
AMBER PARK is the vanguard of young visual artists working today, specializing in creative, artistic, and imaging direction. Of Korean descent and raised in LA, Amber strives to disrupt work that drives art and culture in distinct, captivating directions. She is one of the leading creative directors of today’s Gen Z zeitgeist and as a true paragon of her generation, she nimbly weaves between multimedia projects, deftly conquering branded content, music video, socials and life events with consistent precocious confidence. She has collaborated with artists such as Camilla Cabello, Katy Perry, and Ty Dolla $ign, and created immersive content for Verizon, Vevo, and Vogue, to name, but a small few.
Past Artists
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Daniel Berrios
Daniel Berrios is a New York-based artist blending the cinematic pulse of the city with deeply personal storytelling. His sound moves between alt-R&B and indie pop, marked by introspective lyricism, atmospheric production, and raw emotion.
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Isabela Salzar
Isabela “Bela” Salazar is a multitalented creative force whose energy spans music, visual culture and fashion. As a guitarist and founding member of the band The Linda Lindas, Bela brings raw instrumental drive and an unfiltered spirit to her sound — a blend of youthful urgency, punk-pop hooks and cultural awareness.
Parallel to her musical life, Bela channels her aesthetic into fashion through her clothing endeavour, La Rosa, building a brand that doesn’t simply follow trends but reflects identity, authenticity and creative independence.
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Matthew Yu
Matthew Yu is a Taiwanese-American visual storyteller whose work lives at the intersection of illustration, concept art and narrative design.
Whether constructing vast imagined sets, atmospheric scenes or personal visual experiments, his goal is consistent: to tell stories through space, form and light that linger beyond the screen. At once technical and expressive, Matthew’s art is less about showing what’s possible and more about feeling what’s possible.