Jessica Luostarinen: PG Studios - Online Exhibition 07

29 January - 29 April 2026
  • Jessica Luostarinen is a painter working primarily in oil. Her practice explores how identity is constructed, performed, and protected. She...

    Helm, 2025, Oil on canvas, 30 x 20 cm

    Jessica Luostarinen is a painter working primarily in oil. Her practice explores how identity is constructed, performed, and protected. She is interested in the emotional and psychological strategies people develop to navigate the world, and in how identity is shaped not only through social roles or appearances, but through the objects we attach meaning to, the rituals we repeat, and the memories we carry.

     

    There is a sense of archaeology in her process. She seeks to unearth moments that feel buried: the things we were drawn to as children, when curiosity moved instinctively. She is interested in the symbolic weight of everyday objects — a shell, a napkin, a piece of fabric — which hold meaning not because of what they are, but because of what we have come to believe they represent. These beliefs can offer protection, power, or comfort. In her paintings, such objects often become metaphors for how we assemble ourselves emotionally, psychologically, and spiritually.

     

    A significant part of her recent work explores these ideas through a series of paintings that use armour as a central motif. She sees armour not simply as a historical object, but as a symbol of the protective structures, both visible and invisible, that we build around ourselves. These works reflect on contemporary forms of self-protection, drawing parallels between the literal and metaphorical shields people carry.

     

    Her imagery is drawn from a mix of found and constructed sources, including film stills, archival material, online images, personal snapshots, and built still lifes. She is drawn to the space between performance and privacy, where roles are being prepared rather than performed. She works with a muted, often monochromatic palette that brings the focus to gesture and tone. This visual restraint mirrors the emotional territory she explores: subtle shifts, half-held expressions, and objects in transition.

     

    Luostarinen often works in series, allowing themes and motifs to deepen and evolve over time. Symbolism and gesture play a strong role in her compositions, and she is interested in building narratives that emerge through minimal visual cues.

  • Artworks

    • Fitting, 2024 Acrylic on canvas 91.5 x 81.5 cm
      Fitting, 2024
      Acrylic on canvas
      91.5 x 81.5 cm
    • Fitting - 2, 2025 122 x 92 cm Oil on canvas
      Fitting - 2, 2025
      122 x 92 cm
      Oil on canvas
    • Fitting - 3, 2025 Oil on canvas 110 x 140 cm
      Fitting - 3, 2025
      Oil on canvas
      110 x 140 cm
    • At Ease, 2025 Oil on canvas 25.5 x 20.5 cm
      At Ease, 2025
      Oil on canvas
      25.5 x 20.5 cm
    • Gauntlet, 2025 Oil on canvas 40 x 30 cm
      Gauntlet, 2025
      Oil on canvas
      40 x 30 cm
    • Helm, 2025 Oil on canvas 30 x 20 cm
      Helm, 2025
      Oil on canvas
      30 x 20 cm
  • About the Artist

    Jessica Luostarinen (b. 1993, Finland) is a self-taught painter based in London, UK
    Jessica Luostarinen (b. 1993, Finland) is a self-taught painter based in London, UK

    Luostarinen’s recent exhibitions include Studio Lazcano, a two-person exhibition curated by Georgina Pounds in Mexico City (2025) and Not a Threat, a Promise at Shipton Gallery, London (2025). She completed an artist residency with Studio Lazcano in Mexico City. Her work has been featured in publications such as Numéro Berlin, Vogue Portugal and Helsingin Sanomat.

  • About PG Studios

    PG Studios is Palmer Gallery's online exhibition programme principally aimed at supporting self-trained artists who did not attend traditional art school. 

     

    In today’s art ecosystem, great importance is placed on formal training and art education, often to the detriment of talented creatives who simply choose not to study in a formal context, or who are not in a position to take on the financial risk of a fine art degree. Studios are arguably the great leveller across all artists and an omnipresent feature in the creative process: from artists with huge warehouses subsidised by commercial galleries, to those who make work in their bedrooms, nearly every artist has a private space in which they can create. 

     

    PG Studios highlights the work of different types of artists, putting forward a programme that alternates between those who are self-taught and those with more formal training, focusing on the artist studio as a sacred space of creation that runs like a golden thread through the experience of all artists.