Past Event
This event took place on March 21, 2026 at 2:00 PM (Eastern Time)
All One Gallery NEW EXHIBITION & Artist Panel
Supernal Light
NEW EXHIBITION in All One Gallery
Opening March 21st, 2026
Hosted by Alex Grey & Allyson Grey featuring an Artist Panel.
Exhibit Theme: Supernal Light
Admission:
This event is free to CoSM Members. (Apply your discount code at checkout)
General Admission: $25
Join us for this special opening of a NEW ALL ONE Gallery exhibition of Visionary Art, an occasion to celebrate with the CoSM community.
Stay into the evening for...
the 2026 Vernal Equinox Celestial Celebration!
Featuring a memorable night of bonfire & fire spinning, live music & live painting, interactive art experiences & community connection. (Tickets to the Vernal Equinox are sold separately.)
Honoring the sacred within, we'll observe this special Vernal Equinox moment with art, spirit & friends.
Event Schedule:
- 12 PM: CoSM Opens to the Public
- 2 PM – 4 PM: All One Gallery Official Opening & Artist Panel Discussion with Alex Grey, Allyson Grey, Aleah Chapin, Issac Abrams, A. Andrew Gonzalez and Vibrata Chromodoris
- 7 PM – 8:30 PM: Vernal Equinox Opening Ceremony with Alex Grey & Allyson Grey
- 8:30 PM – 1 AM: Celestial Celebration with live music, live painting bonfire & fire spinning and interactive art experiences.
About Supernal Light:
Supernal Light, a group exhibition opening at the All One Gallery in Entheon on the Vernal Equinox, March 21, 2026, features nine accomplished Visionary artists, works by M.C. Escher, Fred Tomaselli, Aleah Chapin, Miles Johnston, Rebecca Leveille Guay, Vibrata Chromadoris, A. Andrew Gonzalez, Isaac Abrams, and Domenico Zindata.
Mystic visionaries recall spiritual journeys, describing worlds or beings of Transcendental Light. In accounts of these experiences, the smaller self burns away and a new illuminated being, a higher self, emerges, identified with the light of the Divine.
The Light body, a recurring archetype in the history of Visionary Art, appears in ancient petroglyphs, portraying solarized figures with symbolic rays emanating from the body, imagery that is ubiquitous in shamanic art. Sacred figurative art traditionally depicts holy people resplendent with glory, glowing with haloes and auras. The supernal light of awareness reveals the appearance of visionary worlds, and artists make perceptible the intangible glow of the soul.
Featured Artist Panel:
Aleah Chapin

Aleah Chapin (b. 1986 Whidbey Island, WA) is a painter whose direct portrayals of the human form have expanded the conversation around western culture's representations of the body in art.
She has exhibited throughout the world, including Flowers Gallery (New York, London, Hong Kong), The Belvedere Museum (Vienna), and the National Portrait Gallery (London).
Chapin has attended residencies at the Leipzig International Art Program (Leipzig, Germany) and MacDowell (Peterborough, NH).
She is a recipient of the Willard L. Metcalf Promising Young Painters Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters (New York), the Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation Grant (Canada), a Postgraduate Fellowship from the New York Academy of Art, and the BP Portrait Award at the National Portrait Gallery (London).
She holds an MFA from the New York Academy of Art (New York) and a BFA from Cornish College of the Arts (Seattle).
Chapin's work has been published extensively, including New American Paintings, Juxtapoz, Art Maze Magazine, London Sunday Times, the Seattle Times and the BBC.
She lives and works in Los Angeles, CA.
Isaac Abrams

Isaac Abrams was born and raised in New York City. He is a self-taught artist who started painting in 1965. Based in Upstate New York, he continues to paint every day.
He first discovered psychedelics in 1962. He then discovered psychedelics again and again. He decided there had to be such a thing as psychedelic art and founded the Coda Gallery - the first gallery of Psychedelic Art in NYC in 1965. He had his first one man show in 1968 at Galerie Bischofberger in Zurich.
Other memorable moments include climbing a tree with Timothy Leary to discuss business, meeting Salvador Dali, shooting a film at Mickey Hart's Ranch in 1971 featuring Jerry Garcia and The New Riders of the Purple Sage, Reality One Group and David Crosby.
He’s worked across several mediums from oil to acrylic, sculpture to animation. From brushes to airbrushes, canvas to board, glass to bronze.
Vibrata Chromodoris
Vibrata Chromodoris (Canadian, b. 1967) creates symmetrical, geometrically patterned abstract paintings and sculptures in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Formally trained in traditional fine art techniques and self-taught in digital graphic arts, she has recently settled into a studio practice after years of contributing art at multimedia events and festivals. From 2012 to 2019, she was regularly awarded production grants by False Profit LLC, the Do Lab, and CFAEA.
As a lecturer and presenter, Vibrata was featured at CoSM Visionary Painting Intensive in New York in 2015 and Bicycle Day in San Francisco in 2012. Her work has been featured in such publications as the Entheogen Review, and the CoSM Journal of Visionary Culture.
Vibrata practices in a transitional zone where low-tech analog and high-tech digital media intersect, mixing paint, wood, and paper with Adobe Illustrator, and employing machines as familiar as an office laser printer or as imposing as an industrial CNC router.
Rhythm, repetitive patterning and beguiling perceptual distortions appear in 2D and 3D pieces that are hypnotic and vibrating. The imagery gives an understated nod to 60s op art and post-painterly abstraction, while incorporating narrative elements.
In observing her work, symbols often emerge, suggesting letters from an alien alphabet. This phenomenon hints at Vibrata's graphic design influence, creating an intriguing visual language.
A. Andrew Gonzalez
A. Andrew Gonzalez is an internationally renowned, self-taught artist from San Antonio, Texas USA and currently living in France.
His work can be found in museums, galleries and collections, both public and private. He’s known for the unique sculptural look of his paintings, as well as their power to move and inspire the viewer.
As a recognized master of airbrushing, Andrew Gonzalez brings together a unique subtractive painting technique with the classical idealization of the human figure and animal spirits to create exalted imagery with spiritual and visionary themes. The artist describes his process as “soul work” and much like the poets of the Fedeli d' Amore, he inspires to create “mystical love poems to the soul”.
Andrew Gonzalez developed his own signature style, pursuing transfigurative themes in graceful figure drawing where the body reflects the elevation of the soul. Through synchronistic experiences, profound dreams and lucid dreaming, he experienced a deep creative transformation, intensifying his exploration into esoteric symbolism, comparative mythology and all subjects related to the sacred imagination.
The artist describes his style as “a visionary revival of the Romantic, the Symbolist and the Idealist Art aesthetic”. His focus is on the figure as both temple and vessel, sublimed by transformative forces. He captures his subjects suspended in an ecstatic moment; poised on the threshold of a new birth.
Getting To CoSM:
CoSM is 65 miles north of New York City and accessible by Metro North Train leaving hourly from Grand Central Station.
Parking Arrangements:
Limited on-site parking is available. Once on-site parking is full, our team will direct you to the New Hamburg Train Station, a mile away, for free parking. A free shuttle will transport you to the grounds and will be running from 3pm until the end of the event. Carpoolers can drop off passengers on-site before parking remotely.
Things to Note:
- No pets of any kind are allowed on CoSM property.
- No food or open liquids are allowed in Entheon. Small backpacks must be worn on the front of the body or left in the coatroom. XL bags are not permitted in the building.
Questions? Visit our FAQ Page or contact [email protected] for more information.