ABOUT THE ARTIST

Pryce is a contemporary artist whose practice explores memory, place, and the quiet emotional texture of everyday life. Her work is defined by a balance of clarity and playfulness. She creates high quality, yet approachable, art pieces that allow the collector's personality to shine through.

She graduated from the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill and studied Business and Advertising. In school, she studied and traveled in Europe and was overly stimulated by creative living — art museums, beautiful people, and new places. She grew up in an artistic household, but it wasn’t until 2021, post-pandemic and post-grad, that she focused on her artwork. While her academic path was not traditionally studio-based, Pryce turned to art more fully in the years following the pandemic, as a return: a way to reconnect with people, preserve fleeting moments, and imagine place as both remembered and still unfolding.

A fascination with music and it’s ability to bring you back to a place in time or remind you of a person influences her creativity. Like music, her art should go beyond the canvas. It should connect to the emotions, or little moments, of everyday.  

Her practice is rooted in the idea of play — not as frivolity, but as an intentional way of moving through the world. That child-like wonder of noticing and remembering everything. She depicts familiar rituals: city living, coastal evenings, lively dinners, mimosa mornings, lonely mornings, (the beautiful confusion of your 20s), etc. These scenes reflect universal experiences that bind people across geographies and stages of life, creating a visual language that can resonate across sand, snow, and concrete. While informed by an East Coast upbringing, her work also draws from the varied lifestyles she has encountered and respected globally.

Her current body of work and commissions focus on warm moments, remembered places, and objects or activities that quietly anchor people to something — or someone — they love. The work does not aim to narrate these experiences fully, but to hold space for them, allowing viewers to locate their own memories within the image.

Through color, composition, and abstract subject matter, she wants her art to visualize the emotions that you can’t really describe with words – how you feel at night by the ocean, when you see the Eiffel tower peek out from behind a building on a walk with your mates, the senses you have driving through the mountains with blue skies and yellow leaves (and that specific song that was playing), that first date spot, or that time you explored a new city.

You can find her in an art studio in Brooklyn.

[Hi, I'm Pryce. Thank you for being here.]