Roy DeCarava
Roy DeCarava was an American artist, photographer, and educator known for his groundbreaking photographs of African Americans revealing a unique sensitivity and intimacy. Born in New York City’s Harlem neighborhood in 1919, DeCarava graduated with honors from the Textile High School in 1938.
Tom Finkelpearl
Author, curator, and educator Tom Finkelpearl received his MFA from Hunter College in 1983. Former commissioner of the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs and former director of the Queens Museum, Mr. Finkelpearl is currently the Teaching Scholar-in-Residence at the Social Practice CUNY initiative.
Lisa Corinne Davis
Artist Lisa Corinne Davis is best known for her abstract paintings and works on paper resembling multilayered maps exploring perceptions of racial, social and psychological identity. Born in Baltimore, and currently living and working in Brooklyn, Davis received her MFA from Hunter College in 1983—studying with Lynda Benglis, Rosalind Krauss and Ron Gorchov.
Paul Pfeifer
Paul Pfeifer is a contemporary artist whose work explores themes of celebrity culture, mass media, and the intersection of technology and humanity. Born in 1966 in Honolulu, Hawaii, Pfeifer moved to the Philippines as a child with his parents, classically trained musicians.
Margarita Cabrera
Interdisciplinary artist Margarita Cabrera graduated from Hunter’s MFA program in 2001. Her work centers on social-political community issues including cultural identity, migration, violence, inclusivity, labor, and empowerment. Cabrera often creates sculptures made out of mediums ranging from steel, copper, wood, ceramics, and fabric.
Sarah Crowner
Brooklyn-based artist Sarah Crowner is recognized for her innovative large scale paintings that test the boundaries of geometric abstraction while engaging in its art historical legacy. She has been making art since the 1990s, and her paintings using a craft-oriented process of cutting and sewing the canvas to create abstract forms—along with the bodies of work that followed—have garnered her much attention.
Ellie Ga
Stockholm, Sweden-based multi-disciplinary artist Ellie Ga was born and raised in New York City, and earned her MFA at Hunter College in 2004. Her wide-ranging investigations address pressing social issues, often in unexpected contexts that explore the limits of the human capacity to objectively document and reconstruct both personal and historical events.
Julia Whitney Barnes
Artist Julia Whitney Barnes works in a variety of media from cyanotypes, watercolor, gouache, oil paintings, stained glass, murals, and site-specific installations. Born in Newbury, Vermont, Whitney Barnes spent two decades in Brooklyn, before moving to the Hudson Valley in 2015. Prior to attending Hunter College she received her BFA from Parsons School of Design.
Firelei Báez
Artist Firelei Báez graduated from Hunter College with an MFA in 2011. Widely exhibited and collected, her paintings, drawings, and installations draw upon diasporic histories, casting them into an imaginative realm and re-working visual references drawn from the past to explore new possibilities for the future. Báez was born in 1981 in Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic, to a Dominican mother and a father of Haitian descent.
Ryan Ponder McNamara
Brooklyn-based artist Ryan McNamara is both a member of the Hunter College faculty and a graduate of the MFA program. He works in a multitude of media and methods including performance, installation, photography, drawing, and sculpture.
Coralina Rodriguez Meyer
Brooklyn and Miami-based artist Coralina Rodriguez Meyer’s work tackles topics of racism, gender, and power imbalances. In 2005 she founded Abra Studio, a thriving interior and exterior design firm, where she does work for Fortune 500 companies and pioneering startups—getting coverage in The New York Times, Architectural Digest, the Los Angeles Times, and Metropolis.
Guadalupe Maravilla
Guadalupe Maravilla is a transdisciplinary visual artist, choreographer, and healer, who grounds his practice in the historical and contemporary contexts belonging to the undocumented and cancer communities. A cancer survivor who now seeks to heal others, Maravilla is also a former unaccompanied, undocumented immigrant, who at the age of eight was part of the first wave of children to arrive at the United States border in the 1980s as a result of the Salvadoran Civil War.
Sharon Madanes
Artist and psychiatrist Sharon Madanes straddles two seemingly disparate professions, making artwork using hospital forms and rituals to illuminate matters of life and death. Madanes says she was able to find an interesting and fruitful balance between the two disciplines while earning her MFA from Hunter College.
Derek Fordjour
Hunter College graduate Derek Fordjour was born in 1974 in Memphis, Tennessee, to parents of Ghanaian heritage. He earned a BA at Morehouse College before receiving an MEd in Arts Education at Harvard University. After a circuitous path to art making, Fordjour enrolled in the MFA program at Hunter College, graduating in 2016.