Jennifer Mone Hill artist with her painting Spectrum
Jennifer Mone Hill artist with her painting Spectrum

About Jennifer

Abstract artist Jennifer Moné Hill works primarily with acrylic paint and resin. Her work explores viscosity, motion, vibration, and the interaction of color, to provoke emotion, spark curiosity, and visual delight. Her bold color palette, signature cell details, wisps, and drips down the canvas sides are evidence of the great movement and spontaneity of her process. Jennifer's art is the fusion of controlling the uncontrollable fluidity, using old and creating new techniques, pushing materials to the limit, experimental ideas, exploring emotion via motion, and the interaction of color, while allowing muse to contribute. Jennifer's painting inspiration comes with great enthusiasm, curiosity, intuition, love of color, nature, and positive energy.

In 2020, Jennifer became a member of the historic Silvermine Guild of Artists. You may have seen Jennifer's work on exhibit on the monumental screens at the Oculus World Trade Center, her solo show on LinkNYC across from Lincoln Center, at Viridian Gallery in Chelsea, and closer to home in recent exhibitions at the Silvermine Arts Center, Mattatuck Museum, Hammond Museum, Rene Soto Gallery, Rowayton Arts Center, Carriage Barn Arts Center, Ridgefield Guild of Artists, and Greenwich Art Society.

Jennifer lives and works in Danbury, Connecticut. Born and raised in White Plains, New York, she studied Visual Arts at SUNY Purchase, and then began working as a commercial photographer for over twenty years. Jennifer's curiosity has led her to simultaneously pursue many creative outlets including furniture making, hand dying fiber, and of course painting which is now her greatest passion. Continuously learning technical processes, inventing new ways, and using old and new to conceive something beautiful is the common thread in all of her pursuits.

"Working in abstract painting, going beyond the representational world, to the pure, raw, power of emotion is what excites me. When colors combine, when we make a mark that means something to the spirit, beyond the known familiar image, breaking past the facade of our perception to something greater, that’s what motivates me."