Gallery-Ready: My New York Art Show Debut and the Ritual of Becoming
For my debut New York art show, I got ready like I was becoming. Silk, curls, courage. This is how I stepped into my artist era.

The Ritual of Arrival: My First New York Art Show + Bohemian Beauty Prep
On a sunny Saturday, I did my makeup, gathered my nerves, and put on a brave smile—despite the social anxiety buzzing just beneath my skin. I was met by friends and family at a bustling downtown café in Peekskill, New York, for the opening reception of my first New York art show, Becoming: A Reckoning and Reconstruction, in Color—a deeply personal debut art exhibition exploring memory, healing, and identity through bold, abstract paintings.
I walked in not knowing what to expect—dressed in a thrifted silk BCBG halter dress and platform Bed|Stu sandals, embodying my signature bohemian fashion aesthetic—ready to become.
There’s a moment before your debut—a quiet, suspended breath between who you were and who you’re becoming. For me, it started in a leopard robe with freshly washed curls, applying my glowy makeup routine while a sweet potato loaf baked in the oven for the backyard art show afterparty at my aunt and uncle’s house. And it ended in a room full of potential collectors, where I wasn’t quite ready to tell my story—but the paintings spoke for me.


Within minutes, I was swept into hugs and kind words. Someone handed me a bouquet of roses. A painting had already sold—Eyes of the Abyss. A cosmic oil piece about my rise as a music photographer in Asheville and the quiet collapse that followed a breakup, the whispers, the gossip, the envy. You can read the full artwork story—and every other behind-the-scenes narrative from the show—here.

I was stunned. People loved the work. They scanned the custom QR codes I created for my art show and read the stories behind each piece. My heart raced. My voice trembled through small talk. But the sun poured in, the café buzzed, and my art kept speaking. My aunt and uncle—who’ve loved me like parents—began to tear up as people debated over which piece to claim, like hungry bidders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.


I wanted to dress bohemian to reflect my blog and lifestyle. Between the flowing dress and dewy, K-beauty inspired makeup that caught the light just right, I wasn’t quite ready for my closeup. But somehow, the moment held me anyway—flaws, nerves, and all.
That morning, I wasn’t lost in indecision. I was getting ready to become—lining my lips with care, fluffing my curls, checking the loaf in the oven. Then, I slipped into the dress like a second skin. A soft, powerful ritual. A gentle entry into the day my art would finally speak to the world.
This post isn’t just about an outfit or makeup—it’s about creative rituals, chosen details, and the moment I stepped fully into my emerging artist era.



Bohemian Beauty Rituals and Soft Mornings Before the Show
I didn’t want to do the show at first. Lately, even getting out of bed felt hard. But I decided to show up anyway.
So I began where I always do—by creating something.
Not on canvas this time, but on my face. In my space. On my own skin.
My bohemian beauty routine became a soft, sacred ritual. A kind of self-portrait in motion. It was my getting ready ritual for something bigger than myself.
I went for a dewy, K-Beauty-inspired makeup look:
- Fenty Beauty Skin Tint for a glowy base
- Urban Decay liquid blush in a bright crimson I scored at Sephora at Kohl’s
- A simple three-shade eyeshadow look
- Benefit Benetint in a bold berry tone.


I was chasing that sun-kissed, glass-skin glow—and as the tint melted into my skin like butter, I felt something deeper. Like joy. Like arrival. The dark spots from my tretinoin purge were nearly invisible beneath the glow. My skincare routine for hyperpigmentation—my ritual of care—was starting to pay off.
I filled in my brows with the very last bit of my Charlotte Tilbury Brow Cheat pencil, praying it would last just long enough. It did. A tiny miracle. Somehow, my natural-looking brows came out perfectly.
My hair, of course, was still wet. Because in true curly-girl routine fashion, I washed it last minute. Wash day isn’t a task—it’s a ceremony.
I sat under my old hooded dryer—the same one I bought at a New Jersey beauty supply store in college—while working on my blog’s About page update, racing to publish it before the reception. This was all part of the process—not just showing my art, but also soft-launching my bohemian lifestyle blog, The Bohemian Bungalow.
The apartment was still. The scent of toasted walnuts and sweet potato loaf filled the air. Sunlight spilled across the hardwood floor. It felt like something sacred.
Styling my hair was meditative. Leave-in conditioner, curl serum, Curlsmith souffle, and Shea Moisture gel—smoothed in with prayer hands. I watched my curls form in plump, hydrated clumps. Each section felt heavier with the weight of the day—but also more me.
This wasn’t just curly hair prep. It was another layer of creation. A moment of artistic self-care for creatives.
By the time I finished, the loaf was done. The apartment had gone quiet again. The light had softened. The moment had arrived.
I wasn’t just getting ready. I was creating.
I was becoming.
The Dress That Carried Me: Thrifted Style for My Art Show Debut

The BCBG dress, most likely made in the late 2000s or early 2010s, hung in my closet like it had been waiting. As I slipped it on, it looked like summer, like softness, like me. I zipped it up. It fit perfectly—like it had always belonged to this moment.
I put on my shoes and raced to get my bag ready. Late to the opening, I grabbed my sparkly blue Kate Spade wallet (a $3 find at a church festival in Ossining), my green floral toiletry pouch, my tabletop tripod, and the still-warm homemade sweet potato loaf—a personal touch for the afterparty.
My outfit wasn’t just an outfit. It was a bohemian fashion statement—a living expression of The Bohemian Bungalow blog: personal, artistic, and real. A blend of thrifted style, creative intention, and quiet courage.
Walking into the café for my New York art show felt like the final crescendo of a symphony I’d been building all morning—not just on canvas, but in the stillness of my apartment, the rhythm of my routine, the curve of my curls, and the care I gave myself as part of my creative lifestyle ritual.
The artist had become the art.


The Art of Becoming: Reflections From My New York Show
Becoming isn’t a single moment. It’s not just the clink of glasses or the applause when a painting sells.
It’s the quiet morning in a leopard robe with wet curls and cinnamon in the air.
It’s the decision to honor your body and beauty even when you feel fragile.
It’s the belief that even if no one else shows up—you will. That your softness, your space, your vision deserves to be treated like a masterpiece.

That day was never just about the art reception. It was about reclaiming my story as an emerging artist. Letting my work speak before I could. And shedding the old version of me—the one who doubted, the one who disappeared.
I was the woman who showed up. Who lined her lips. Packed her loaf. Walked into a room with trembling hands and hopeful eyes. Who wore her art on her face, her skin, and her thrifted silk dress.
This was the soft launch of The Bohemian Bungalow—but also of something deeper: My voice. My vision. My life as art.
Because beauty is art. Ritual is art. Bohemian becoming is art.
And I’m just getting started.
🌿 Stay awhile. Join Slow Notes, my monthly letter from The Bohemian Bungalow — a quiet, creative space for art, style, and soul.