What does it mean to be lost? Is it the ache of a memory you can’t quite reach, the silence left by someone who once filled your world, or the uncertainty of a path with no clear end? Perhaps it’s the echo of a place that only exists in memory, or the unexpected moment when you find yourself again.
Gallerium proudly presents Lost 2025, the 2nd annual international juried exhibition, a deeply emotional journey through memory, longing, and rediscovery. This year’s exhibition brings together artists from across the world who have transformed the experience of loss into powerful visual storytelling, revealing not only what we lose but what we find along the way.
Opening October 23, and continuing through December 23, Lost 2025 invites you to experience art as both mirror and map, to see how creativity becomes a language for grief, beauty, and healing.

Each artwork in Lost 2025 carries a quiet strength, whether it speaks of love remembered, a place erased by time, or a moment of personal transformation. Together, these works form a collective diary of our shared humanity, where absence becomes presence, pain becomes poetry, and remembrance becomes renewal.
In a world where “lost” has taken on many forms—lost people, lost places, lost connections, and lost certainty—this exhibition reminds us that art endures. It helps us see that in every shadow there is a trace of light, and in every ending, a quiet beginning. Lost 2025 offers more than visuals; it offers reflection, empathy, and hope.
Visitors are invited not only to view but to engage: rate the artworks, share heartfelt comments, and connect with the stories behind them. Every interaction helps artists know how their work resonates and brings the exhibition to life through shared emotion and conversation.
Let Lost 2025 move you. Wander through its corridors of memory, linger in its moments of quiet beauty, and discover that to be lost is sometimes the first step toward being found.
View full list of participant artists here:
Sandra Teepen, Ivan Gall, ILIA, Steve Mason, DeAndre Sims, Veda Kagabo, Patti Walsh, Patti Fulton, Joanna Szuba, Amanda Carroll, Ashley Young, Robert Trask, Caroline Avent, Shannon Coffey, David Poyant, Jeff Chapman-Crane, Tina Takasaki, Matt Jagitsch, Sara Redger, Jody Abssy, Susana Mazzarino Jimenez, Steven Assmann, Misha Kitto, LIBWA, Jennifer Vroom, Lycee Anaya, Jordi B, Vahagn Bagoyan, Yeon Chang, Heather Climer, Suzanne Cross, Yves De Vocht, Brenton Deardorff, Daiva Diana, Paul Federico, Sam Foster, Laura Friesel, Demi Green, Robin Griswold-Ott, Julie Harris, Ignacio Hernandez, Guy Hivroni, Lawrence Hughes, Sanya ilich, Brooke Keller, Joanne Ladisa, Emma Lieber, Eric Lintala, Matthew Malkowski, David Manoguerra, Galen Martin, Mike Means, Brigitte B Burckhardt, Ania Modzelewski, Joanne Monaco-King, Vince Quevedo, Sam Rashba, Kenneth Ricci, Stephanie Romanowski, Cefora Rubin, Michael Salazar, Lena Shvets, Sara Simonson, Carlos Soca, Steve Sult, Gerrit van Ommering, Thomas VonOehsen, Ed Whitmore, Gary Wilson, Ricky Workman

Leave a comment