Isabella Amram (*1995) is a Turkish and Venezuelan painter based in London. Her work explores the intersection of presence and absence, transformation, and embodiment through the immediacy of mark-making. Using iterative, script-like lines, she creates dynamic compositions that evoke language without fixed meaning, embodying tension and fluidity. Her physical process—rubbing, erasing, stabbing—treats the surface as a collaborator in a visceral exchange. Influenced by phenomenology, fractal philosophy, tantric energy work, and occult imagery, Amram draws inspiration from artists like Ithell Colquhoun, Carolee Schneemann, and Joan Mitchell.