Carolyn Garay
The whole house argues that only humans can make the gold. Here's the proof, by name. A female Bob Ross — real paint, real hands, real human work.
If you've read anything else here, you know the one rule and the one lie: the machine drafts the gray, and only a human paints the gold. Carolyn Garay is what the gold looks like. Stand in front of one of her pieces and the paint comes up off the canvas — texture you could close your eyes and feel, light that glows out of the middle of the thing. No render does that. A hand did that, over hours, on purpose.
The curator calls her a female Bob Ross — and means it as the high compliment it is: someone who makes the act of creation look like joy, and makes you believe you're welcome near it. She is honored across this house as the matriarch — in the footer of every page, in the Hall of Heroes, and now here, with her name at the top.
What comes through the room
The range is the tell of the real thing — one hand, many rooms, a bit of the old work and some brand-new prints fresh off the presses:
(Described from work the curator keeps and champions; the pieces, titles, editions, and prices live at her site — see them there, first-hand.)
See it · love it · buy it — from her carolyngaray.com →Why she comes first
The curator built this whole site to make his name and to sell art — and then drew the line right across his own front door: "if you need something human, buy her first, not me." That's not modesty; it's the thesis with skin in the game. A house that says only humans score has to send its first dollar to a human who scored. She did. So she's first.
The machine drafts the page. Only humans make the art. ;