About
Us
We're a contemporary art gallery bridging traditional and digital practices to reflect the emotional and cultural realities of our time.
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We work with artists, emerging and established, who use both new and time-honored tools to ask sharper questions: about truth, memory, identity, and how we make meaning in a rapidly changing world.
Our program champions rigorous work with lasting impact, whether rendered in oil or code, pigment or pixel.
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Based just outside Philadelphia and engaged globally, we present exhibitions, limited editions, and conceptual projects that speak to where art, and culture, are headed.
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Welcome to the conversation

Featured Artist
Peter Nitsch
Peter Nitsch
Designer on-air and off-air, photographer, producer, and founder of DRAWLIGHTS, Peter Nitsch has always worn many hats. But at the heart of everything that he does Nitsch is first and foremost an artist and a photographer. He was born and raised in the Upper Palatinate, in eastern Bavaria. Nitsch received his BA in communication design from the Department of Design at the Munich University of Applied Sciences (MUAS)... continues

A Trusted
Destination
Featured work by Heather N. Stout
Collectors consistently rate Colonna Contemporary 5 stars for its vision and integrity. We're A trusted destination for art at the intersection of tradition and technology. From pigment to pixel, trusted by collectors worldwide

Young Americans
coming December, 2025
"They didn’t call ahead. They didn’t know what came next.
They packed their life into the back of a car, taped shut a box labeled “HOPE,” and drove toward the idea of a city."
Young Americans is a cinematic NFT series chronicling the quiet heroism of leaving home and moving to the big city. Told through eight surreal film-still moments, the collection captures the dreamlike, disjointed clarity of transition, when your whole life is reduced to boxes, car rides, and unfamiliar ceilings.
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Rooted in realism but filtered through the poetic logic of memory, each scene draws from the emotional grammar of leaving: a parent’s last hug, a best friend’s laughter, the fluorescent glow of a gas station in Pennsylvania. Somewhere between a David Byrne lyric and a coming-of-age indie film, Young Americans doesn’t ask you to look back, but to remember how it felt to look forward.





















