About the Artist

Adele Moore Yonchak holds a BA in Studio Art from Hollins University, with additional study at the Lorenzo de' Medici Art Institute in Florence. She lives in Charlotte, North Carolina with her husband and three children.

Her work has been featured in the New York Times, Southern Living, and Washington Post, and is held in permanent collections at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and Pinnacle Bank.



Where You Lead
A collection of abstract landscapes and gathered memories

Adele Yonchak paints from feeling first — emotional impressions of the natural world, built in layers that echo the way memory actually works. The trees that move through her work have become something more than landscape elements. They stand for people — families, communities, the particular geometry of belonging. Collectors find themselves in them instinctively: counting figures, recognizing groupings, seeing their own people reflected in the work.

Where You Lead
holds the weight of connection, the warmth of return, the places we carry with us long after we've left.

 

Where You Lead

Regular price $ 3,000.00
Unit price
per 
original art

Medium: Acrylic, oil and charcoal on canvas

Dimensions: 30" x 30" x 1.5"

Ready to hang

Charlotte, North Carolina, USA

This collection remains on view through June 16th. Purchased works will ship or be available for pickup shortly after — you'll receive an update when your piece is on its way.

About the Artist

Adele Moore Yonchak holds a BA in Studio Art from Hollins University, with additional study at the Lorenzo de' Medici Art Institute in Florence. She lives in Charlotte, North Carolina with her husband and three children.

Her work has been featured in the New York Times, Southern Living, and Washington Post, and is held in permanent collections at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and Pinnacle Bank.



Where You Lead
A collection of abstract landscapes and gathered memories

Adele Yonchak paints from feeling first — emotional impressions of the natural world, built in layers that echo the way memory actually works. The trees that move through her work have become something more than landscape elements. They stand for people — families, communities, the particular geometry of belonging. Collectors find themselves in them instinctively: counting figures, recognizing groupings, seeing their own people reflected in the work.

Where You Lead
holds the weight of connection, the warmth of return, the places we carry with us long after we've left.