Sublet Available: Art Studio in Crown Heights!

Art Studios for Sublet

$700/month

Location

crown heights, brooklyn

Available

June 13, 2025 - March 13, 2026

Transportation

Eastern Parkway–Brooklyn Museum; Franklin Ave Station; Clinton - Washington Station; Park Place; 7av; Botanic Gardens, Nostrand

Size

260 sq. ft.

Join our artist-run space at 823 Bergen Street in Crown Heights! We have a 250-square-foot art studio available for sublet from June 13, 2025, to March 13, 2026, with the option for shorter sublets.

It’s a 260 sq. ft. private studio in a vibrant, friendly community of 15 professional artists. The space is on the first floor (note: no elevator), and there’s a common area with a shared fridge, kitchen, two bathrooms, and a utility sink.

The studio can be shared, and the monthly rent is $700, with all utilities (gas & electric) included.

The building is located at 823 Bergen Street, steps from the C at Clinton–Washington, the 2/3/4/5 at Franklin, and near the 7 and S trains. It’s a very well-connected and central spot in Crown Heights, with great restaurants, cafes, and bars nearby.

About This Lister

Marcela Florido (b. 1988, Rio de Janeiro, B.R.) is a Brazilian visual artist based in Brooklyn, NY. After her studies at the Foundation in Art and Design, Central Saint Martins (London, UK), she achieved in 2013 a BFA from Slade School of Art (London, UK) and completed her academic career in 2015, earning the MFA from Yale School of Art, in the Painting Department (New Heaven, US). The artist was awarded a MASA Artist Award from Yale University (2015) and the Viridian Artist Prize, selected by Lauren Hinkson, the Senior Curator at The Guggenheim Museum (2015). Her practice has been the subject of solo exhibitions in contemporary art institutions in England, Italy, UAE, Hong Kong, Seoul, Brazil, and New York. She is represented in public collections such as Sharjah Art Foundation and IBEU. Marcela Flórido’s work presents the female form through self-portraits. Steeped in memories, place, and identity, her figures are always female – hybrids of herself and the women in her life. She begins by drawing freestyle onto a canvas and then repeatedly repainting it with oil as her memories combine, constantly redefining the composition. Colors are inventive, intuitive, and applied through trial and error. Inspired by artists like Beatriz González, Luchita Hurtado, and Terezinha, she questions “how we inhabit or imagine identity, and place, in our constant redefinition of home.”

Lister's Relationship to the Space

tenant

Rental requirements

Zoom or inperson meeting prior to agreement.

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