Our Artists
Pecorino is a collaborative platform founded by a group of artists with a shared commitment to culture, historical craft traditions, and process-driven work. Drawing inspiration from art history, and a more intentional creative rhythm, we develop projects that emphasize material integrity, dialogue, and collective exchange.
Evan Morse
Evan Morse is a sculptor working in marble, bronze and plaster. He has exhibited his work internationally and has completed several large-scale public pieces in the United States, Italy and China. He is the recipient of numerous grants, including two from the Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation and a fellowship from the Massachusetts Cultural Council. Morse frequently works in relief sculpture and was recognized by the National Sculpture Society with the Dexter Jones Award in both 2018 and 2023. Based in Massachusetts, Morse makes frequent returns to Italy, where he has previously studied in Florence and Carrara. He holds an MFA from Boston University.
SculpturePainting, Mosaics
Andrew M. Slezak is a Boston-based artist, conservator, and woodworker. He holds a BFA from Syracuse University and an MFA from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University. Working across painting and mirrored mosaic, Slezak explores color, geometry, and reflection as compositional forces. His paintings are structured yet fluid, while his mosaics fracture and multiply light through cut glass and reflective surfaces mounted on hand-crafted supports.
Rooted in material discipline, his work brings together graphic clarity, whimsy and spatial play.
Andrew Slezak
Taylor Apostol
Based in Massachusetts, Taylor Apostol is a sculptor working in stone, plaster and clay. Born in Washington, D.C., Apostol spent her formative years living in Saudi Arabia, the Philippines, and the suburbs of Philadelphia. She studied marble carving in Florence and Carrara, Italy, and earned an MFA in Sculpture at Boston University. Apostol has attended residencies at The Factory on Willow, The Studios at MASS MoCA and Vermont Studio Center. Her work is in the permanent collections of the Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center, Hotel Commonwealth, The Factory on Willow, Mine Falls Park, Northern New England Museum of Contemporary Art, The Carving Studio & Sculpture Center, and Sias International University in China.
SculptureDrawing, Stained Glass, Photography
Hillary Irvine works across drawing, gilded surfaces, stained glass, and photography. Her practice is shaped by a sustained engagement with history—particularly the material intelligence embedded in traditional craft. Detail, light, and structure guide her compositions. Whether cutting glass, or constructing tonal graphite fields, or composing a photograph, she builds each piece through deliberate, process-driven steps. Color is treated architecturally; light is handled as a compositional force rather than an effect. Her work bridges historical influence and contemporary restraint, grounded in an ongoing commitment to making things carefully and well. She has traveled broadly to create and display art, as well as garnered grants and prizes for the work in her field. She earned her MFA from SMFA Tufts lives and works in Boston, MA.