At Vital Art Studios, we have a collection of consistent artists who create their artwork here on a regular basis. With these artists participating in creating a diverse range of artwork, we have a place for all types of artists here.
Eungee Alex Lee
Visual Artist
Eungee is a visual artist mainly focusing on creating illustrations with watercolor, and he likes to combine scenes that are unfamiliar and somewhat quirky. His background is fine art and he studied sculpture in high school and college but was always more drawn to illustration, so he switched to be an illustrator ever since. Recently, Eungee has started experimenting working in digital to expand his range of artistic possibilities!
Jaimee Todd
Abstract Painter and Collage Artist
Jaimee Todd is a self-taught multidisciplinary artist who currently works and resides in New York City. She maintains her studio practice in Queens and her current body of work focuses on abstract painting and collage. She has exhibited her work in various prominent venues which include Bergdorf Goodman, Instagram headquarters, Apple, the National Black Theatre, the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Rutgers University-Newark, and the U.S. State Department. Recognized for her talent and contributions to the arts, Todd recently served as an artist fellow through the Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning ARTworks program and Art On The Block, where she had a sold out exhibition. Todd’s work is defined through vibrant color, bold line work and is influenced by indigenous cultures of Africa, the Americas and Australia.
Paul Williams
Illustrator, Graphic Recorder, and Designer
Paul Williams is a multidisciplinary artist whose practice includes oil painting, reduction woodcut, and autobiographical comics. His work often begins with direct observation and builds around a moment that feels emotionally true—whether serene, anxious, humorous, or hard to name. He studied art at The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, The University of Pennsylvania, and The Art Students League of New York. His paintings and illustrations have received recognition including an Honorable Mention for the Benjamin West Prize for Painting (2005). His recent autobiographical mini comic was published in an anthology at the Art Students League. Paul’s work is shaped by a broad range of influences—from Richard Diebenkorn and David Park to Ralph Steadman, Lucian Freud, and the Impressionists—but equally by a desire to sidestep the pretension that can surround fine art. He makes work for those who are willing to pause, look closely, and maybe feel something unexpected.
