A R T C U B E
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#artcubeloves #DanielleMckinney who paints exclusively Black women in moody, dimly lit domestic interiors, building her compositions from a black canvas outward in the style of Caravaggio, with chiaroscuro lighting that lets figures emerge from darkness in quiet acts of smoking, reading, or rest. Trained as a photographer, she constructs her scenes by collaging sourced images from magazines, Pinterest, and vintage photography, drawing on the cinematic sensibility of Edward Hopper and the old masters to depict moments of solitude as quiet assertions of autonomy and agency. Her practice reclaims the historically marginalized Black female figure as a subject of introspection and strength, with influences ranging from Barkley Hendricks and Jacob Lawrence to Henri Matisse and Alfred Hitchcock’s voyeuristic lens. Mckinney currently has a solo show at Marianne Boesky in New York. @danielle_mckinney_ @marianneboeskygallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Mckinney’s work: Black female identity, examination of voyeurism, spiritual introspection
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Ekow Eshun (Curator, London) @ekoweshun
+ Max Edouard Hetzler (Director at Galerie Max Hetzler, London) @maxedouardhetzler
+ Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo (Collector, Turin) @patriziasandrettorerebaudengo
#artcube

#artcubeloves #DanielleMckinney who paints exclusively Black women in moody, dimly lit domestic interiors, building her compositions from a black canvas outward in the style of Caravaggio, with chiaroscuro lighting that lets figures emerge from darkness in quiet acts of smoking, reading, or rest. Trained as a photographer, she constructs her scenes by collaging sourced images from magazines, Pinterest, and vintage photography, drawing on the cinematic sensibility of Edward Hopper and the old masters to depict moments of solitude as quiet assertions of autonomy and agency. Her practice reclaims the historically marginalized Black female figure as a subject of introspection and strength, with influences ranging from Barkley Hendricks and Jacob Lawrence to Henri Matisse and Alfred Hitchcock’s voyeuristic lens. Mckinney currently has a solo show at Marianne Boesky in New York. @danielle_mckinney_ @marianneboeskygallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Mckinney’s work: Black female identity, examination of voyeurism, spiritual introspection
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Ekow Eshun (Curator, London) @ekoweshun
+ Max Edouard Hetzler (Director at Galerie Max Hetzler, London) @maxedouardhetzler
+ Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo (Collector, Turin) @patriziasandrettorerebaudengo
#artcube

#artcubeloves #DanielleMckinney who paints exclusively Black women in moody, dimly lit domestic interiors, building her compositions from a black canvas outward in the style of Caravaggio, with chiaroscuro lighting that lets figures emerge from darkness in quiet acts of smoking, reading, or rest. Trained as a photographer, she constructs her scenes by collaging sourced images from magazines, Pinterest, and vintage photography, drawing on the cinematic sensibility of Edward Hopper and the old masters to depict moments of solitude as quiet assertions of autonomy and agency. Her practice reclaims the historically marginalized Black female figure as a subject of introspection and strength, with influences ranging from Barkley Hendricks and Jacob Lawrence to Henri Matisse and Alfred Hitchcock’s voyeuristic lens. Mckinney currently has a solo show at Marianne Boesky in New York. @danielle_mckinney_ @marianneboeskygallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Mckinney’s work: Black female identity, examination of voyeurism, spiritual introspection
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Ekow Eshun (Curator, London) @ekoweshun
+ Max Edouard Hetzler (Director at Galerie Max Hetzler, London) @maxedouardhetzler
+ Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo (Collector, Turin) @patriziasandrettorerebaudengo
#artcube

#artcubeloves #DanielleMckinney who paints exclusively Black women in moody, dimly lit domestic interiors, building her compositions from a black canvas outward in the style of Caravaggio, with chiaroscuro lighting that lets figures emerge from darkness in quiet acts of smoking, reading, or rest. Trained as a photographer, she constructs her scenes by collaging sourced images from magazines, Pinterest, and vintage photography, drawing on the cinematic sensibility of Edward Hopper and the old masters to depict moments of solitude as quiet assertions of autonomy and agency. Her practice reclaims the historically marginalized Black female figure as a subject of introspection and strength, with influences ranging from Barkley Hendricks and Jacob Lawrence to Henri Matisse and Alfred Hitchcock’s voyeuristic lens. Mckinney currently has a solo show at Marianne Boesky in New York. @danielle_mckinney_ @marianneboeskygallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Mckinney’s work: Black female identity, examination of voyeurism, spiritual introspection
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Ekow Eshun (Curator, London) @ekoweshun
+ Max Edouard Hetzler (Director at Galerie Max Hetzler, London) @maxedouardhetzler
+ Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo (Collector, Turin) @patriziasandrettorerebaudengo
#artcube

#artcubeloves #DanielleMckinney who paints exclusively Black women in moody, dimly lit domestic interiors, building her compositions from a black canvas outward in the style of Caravaggio, with chiaroscuro lighting that lets figures emerge from darkness in quiet acts of smoking, reading, or rest. Trained as a photographer, she constructs her scenes by collaging sourced images from magazines, Pinterest, and vintage photography, drawing on the cinematic sensibility of Edward Hopper and the old masters to depict moments of solitude as quiet assertions of autonomy and agency. Her practice reclaims the historically marginalized Black female figure as a subject of introspection and strength, with influences ranging from Barkley Hendricks and Jacob Lawrence to Henri Matisse and Alfred Hitchcock’s voyeuristic lens. Mckinney currently has a solo show at Marianne Boesky in New York. @danielle_mckinney_ @marianneboeskygallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Mckinney’s work: Black female identity, examination of voyeurism, spiritual introspection
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Ekow Eshun (Curator, London) @ekoweshun
+ Max Edouard Hetzler (Director at Galerie Max Hetzler, London) @maxedouardhetzler
+ Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo (Collector, Turin) @patriziasandrettorerebaudengo
#artcube

#artcubeloves #DanielleMckinney who paints exclusively Black women in moody, dimly lit domestic interiors, building her compositions from a black canvas outward in the style of Caravaggio, with chiaroscuro lighting that lets figures emerge from darkness in quiet acts of smoking, reading, or rest. Trained as a photographer, she constructs her scenes by collaging sourced images from magazines, Pinterest, and vintage photography, drawing on the cinematic sensibility of Edward Hopper and the old masters to depict moments of solitude as quiet assertions of autonomy and agency. Her practice reclaims the historically marginalized Black female figure as a subject of introspection and strength, with influences ranging from Barkley Hendricks and Jacob Lawrence to Henri Matisse and Alfred Hitchcock’s voyeuristic lens. Mckinney currently has a solo show at Marianne Boesky in New York. @danielle_mckinney_ @marianneboeskygallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Mckinney’s work: Black female identity, examination of voyeurism, spiritual introspection
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Ekow Eshun (Curator, London) @ekoweshun
+ Max Edouard Hetzler (Director at Galerie Max Hetzler, London) @maxedouardhetzler
+ Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo (Collector, Turin) @patriziasandrettorerebaudengo
#artcube

#artcubeloves #DanielleMckinney who paints exclusively Black women in moody, dimly lit domestic interiors, building her compositions from a black canvas outward in the style of Caravaggio, with chiaroscuro lighting that lets figures emerge from darkness in quiet acts of smoking, reading, or rest. Trained as a photographer, she constructs her scenes by collaging sourced images from magazines, Pinterest, and vintage photography, drawing on the cinematic sensibility of Edward Hopper and the old masters to depict moments of solitude as quiet assertions of autonomy and agency. Her practice reclaims the historically marginalized Black female figure as a subject of introspection and strength, with influences ranging from Barkley Hendricks and Jacob Lawrence to Henri Matisse and Alfred Hitchcock’s voyeuristic lens. Mckinney currently has a solo show at Marianne Boesky in New York. @danielle_mckinney_ @marianneboeskygallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Mckinney’s work: Black female identity, examination of voyeurism, spiritual introspection
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Ekow Eshun (Curator, London) @ekoweshun
+ Max Edouard Hetzler (Director at Galerie Max Hetzler, London) @maxedouardhetzler
+ Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo (Collector, Turin) @patriziasandrettorerebaudengo
#artcube

#artcubeloves #DanielleMckinney who paints exclusively Black women in moody, dimly lit domestic interiors, building her compositions from a black canvas outward in the style of Caravaggio, with chiaroscuro lighting that lets figures emerge from darkness in quiet acts of smoking, reading, or rest. Trained as a photographer, she constructs her scenes by collaging sourced images from magazines, Pinterest, and vintage photography, drawing on the cinematic sensibility of Edward Hopper and the old masters to depict moments of solitude as quiet assertions of autonomy and agency. Her practice reclaims the historically marginalized Black female figure as a subject of introspection and strength, with influences ranging from Barkley Hendricks and Jacob Lawrence to Henri Matisse and Alfred Hitchcock’s voyeuristic lens. Mckinney currently has a solo show at Marianne Boesky in New York. @danielle_mckinney_ @marianneboeskygallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Mckinney’s work: Black female identity, examination of voyeurism, spiritual introspection
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Ekow Eshun (Curator, London) @ekoweshun
+ Max Edouard Hetzler (Director at Galerie Max Hetzler, London) @maxedouardhetzler
+ Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo (Collector, Turin) @patriziasandrettorerebaudengo
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today:
1. Alia Swastika (Curator, Jakarta) – Swastika is director of Biennale Jogja & one of Southeast Asia’s leading curators, building a practice rooted in decoloniality, feminism, and Global South art histories. @alia.swastika
2. Çağla Ilk (Curator, Berlin) – Ilk is a curator & architect whose transdisciplinary practice across art, theatre, and architecture is leading to her upcoming directorship of Maxim Gorki Theater. @ilkcagla
3. Diane Lima (Curator, São Paulo) – Lima is a curator and leading voice of Black feminism in Latin American art, curating both the Brazilian Pavilion at Venice & MAM São Paulo’s Panorama. @dianelima
4. Flavin Judd (Artistic director, NY) – Judd is a curator & artistic director of Judd Foundation, shaping how Donald Judd’s minimalist legacy is curated, published, and spatially preserved. @flavinjudd
5. Fredrik Liew (Curator, Stockholm) – Liew is chief curator & director of exhibitions at Moderna Museet, known for shaping its collection and curating the landmark Nan Goldin touring retrospective. @fredrikliew
6. Peggy Gou (Collector, Berlin) – Gou is a DJ, collector, and cultural entrepreneur whose global reach across music, fashion, and art fairs makes her a crossover force in contemporary culture. @peggygou_
7. Polly Staple (Curator, London) – Staple is a curator & Tate’s former director of collection for British Art, known for championing emerging artists & expanding access to art across the UK. @polly.staple
8. Thomas Dane (Gallerist, London) – Dane is a gallerist whose program is distinguished by its commitment to film, curatorial experimentation, and a genuinely cross-continental ambition. @thomasdanegallery
9. Thomas Conchou (Curator, Paris) – Conchou is director of Ferme du Buisson, developing a socially engaged, queer-informed curatorial practice rooted in collaboration and emerging artistic voices. @tconch
10. Toby Webster (Gallerist, Glasgow) – Webster founded The Modern Institute, building one of the UK’s most internationally respected galleries entirely outside London over nearly 30 years. @themoderninstitute
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today:
1. Alia Swastika (Curator, Jakarta) – Swastika is director of Biennale Jogja & one of Southeast Asia’s leading curators, building a practice rooted in decoloniality, feminism, and Global South art histories. @alia.swastika
2. Çağla Ilk (Curator, Berlin) – Ilk is a curator & architect whose transdisciplinary practice across art, theatre, and architecture is leading to her upcoming directorship of Maxim Gorki Theater. @ilkcagla
3. Diane Lima (Curator, São Paulo) – Lima is a curator and leading voice of Black feminism in Latin American art, curating both the Brazilian Pavilion at Venice & MAM São Paulo’s Panorama. @dianelima
4. Flavin Judd (Artistic director, NY) – Judd is a curator & artistic director of Judd Foundation, shaping how Donald Judd’s minimalist legacy is curated, published, and spatially preserved. @flavinjudd
5. Fredrik Liew (Curator, Stockholm) – Liew is chief curator & director of exhibitions at Moderna Museet, known for shaping its collection and curating the landmark Nan Goldin touring retrospective. @fredrikliew
6. Peggy Gou (Collector, Berlin) – Gou is a DJ, collector, and cultural entrepreneur whose global reach across music, fashion, and art fairs makes her a crossover force in contemporary culture. @peggygou_
7. Polly Staple (Curator, London) – Staple is a curator & Tate’s former director of collection for British Art, known for championing emerging artists & expanding access to art across the UK. @polly.staple
8. Thomas Dane (Gallerist, London) – Dane is a gallerist whose program is distinguished by its commitment to film, curatorial experimentation, and a genuinely cross-continental ambition. @thomasdanegallery
9. Thomas Conchou (Curator, Paris) – Conchou is director of Ferme du Buisson, developing a socially engaged, queer-informed curatorial practice rooted in collaboration and emerging artistic voices. @tconch
10. Toby Webster (Gallerist, Glasgow) – Webster founded The Modern Institute, building one of the UK’s most internationally respected galleries entirely outside London over nearly 30 years. @themoderninstitute
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today:
1. Alia Swastika (Curator, Jakarta) – Swastika is director of Biennale Jogja & one of Southeast Asia’s leading curators, building a practice rooted in decoloniality, feminism, and Global South art histories. @alia.swastika
2. Çağla Ilk (Curator, Berlin) – Ilk is a curator & architect whose transdisciplinary practice across art, theatre, and architecture is leading to her upcoming directorship of Maxim Gorki Theater. @ilkcagla
3. Diane Lima (Curator, São Paulo) – Lima is a curator and leading voice of Black feminism in Latin American art, curating both the Brazilian Pavilion at Venice & MAM São Paulo’s Panorama. @dianelima
4. Flavin Judd (Artistic director, NY) – Judd is a curator & artistic director of Judd Foundation, shaping how Donald Judd’s minimalist legacy is curated, published, and spatially preserved. @flavinjudd
5. Fredrik Liew (Curator, Stockholm) – Liew is chief curator & director of exhibitions at Moderna Museet, known for shaping its collection and curating the landmark Nan Goldin touring retrospective. @fredrikliew
6. Peggy Gou (Collector, Berlin) – Gou is a DJ, collector, and cultural entrepreneur whose global reach across music, fashion, and art fairs makes her a crossover force in contemporary culture. @peggygou_
7. Polly Staple (Curator, London) – Staple is a curator & Tate’s former director of collection for British Art, known for championing emerging artists & expanding access to art across the UK. @polly.staple
8. Thomas Dane (Gallerist, London) – Dane is a gallerist whose program is distinguished by its commitment to film, curatorial experimentation, and a genuinely cross-continental ambition. @thomasdanegallery
9. Thomas Conchou (Curator, Paris) – Conchou is director of Ferme du Buisson, developing a socially engaged, queer-informed curatorial practice rooted in collaboration and emerging artistic voices. @tconch
10. Toby Webster (Gallerist, Glasgow) – Webster founded The Modern Institute, building one of the UK’s most internationally respected galleries entirely outside London over nearly 30 years. @themoderninstitute
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today:
1. Alia Swastika (Curator, Jakarta) – Swastika is director of Biennale Jogja & one of Southeast Asia’s leading curators, building a practice rooted in decoloniality, feminism, and Global South art histories. @alia.swastika
2. Çağla Ilk (Curator, Berlin) – Ilk is a curator & architect whose transdisciplinary practice across art, theatre, and architecture is leading to her upcoming directorship of Maxim Gorki Theater. @ilkcagla
3. Diane Lima (Curator, São Paulo) – Lima is a curator and leading voice of Black feminism in Latin American art, curating both the Brazilian Pavilion at Venice & MAM São Paulo’s Panorama. @dianelima
4. Flavin Judd (Artistic director, NY) – Judd is a curator & artistic director of Judd Foundation, shaping how Donald Judd’s minimalist legacy is curated, published, and spatially preserved. @flavinjudd
5. Fredrik Liew (Curator, Stockholm) – Liew is chief curator & director of exhibitions at Moderna Museet, known for shaping its collection and curating the landmark Nan Goldin touring retrospective. @fredrikliew
6. Peggy Gou (Collector, Berlin) – Gou is a DJ, collector, and cultural entrepreneur whose global reach across music, fashion, and art fairs makes her a crossover force in contemporary culture. @peggygou_
7. Polly Staple (Curator, London) – Staple is a curator & Tate’s former director of collection for British Art, known for championing emerging artists & expanding access to art across the UK. @polly.staple
8. Thomas Dane (Gallerist, London) – Dane is a gallerist whose program is distinguished by its commitment to film, curatorial experimentation, and a genuinely cross-continental ambition. @thomasdanegallery
9. Thomas Conchou (Curator, Paris) – Conchou is director of Ferme du Buisson, developing a socially engaged, queer-informed curatorial practice rooted in collaboration and emerging artistic voices. @tconch
10. Toby Webster (Gallerist, Glasgow) – Webster founded The Modern Institute, building one of the UK’s most internationally respected galleries entirely outside London over nearly 30 years. @themoderninstitute
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today:
1. Alia Swastika (Curator, Jakarta) – Swastika is director of Biennale Jogja & one of Southeast Asia’s leading curators, building a practice rooted in decoloniality, feminism, and Global South art histories. @alia.swastika
2. Çağla Ilk (Curator, Berlin) – Ilk is a curator & architect whose transdisciplinary practice across art, theatre, and architecture is leading to her upcoming directorship of Maxim Gorki Theater. @ilkcagla
3. Diane Lima (Curator, São Paulo) – Lima is a curator and leading voice of Black feminism in Latin American art, curating both the Brazilian Pavilion at Venice & MAM São Paulo’s Panorama. @dianelima
4. Flavin Judd (Artistic director, NY) – Judd is a curator & artistic director of Judd Foundation, shaping how Donald Judd’s minimalist legacy is curated, published, and spatially preserved. @flavinjudd
5. Fredrik Liew (Curator, Stockholm) – Liew is chief curator & director of exhibitions at Moderna Museet, known for shaping its collection and curating the landmark Nan Goldin touring retrospective. @fredrikliew
6. Peggy Gou (Collector, Berlin) – Gou is a DJ, collector, and cultural entrepreneur whose global reach across music, fashion, and art fairs makes her a crossover force in contemporary culture. @peggygou_
7. Polly Staple (Curator, London) – Staple is a curator & Tate’s former director of collection for British Art, known for championing emerging artists & expanding access to art across the UK. @polly.staple
8. Thomas Dane (Gallerist, London) – Dane is a gallerist whose program is distinguished by its commitment to film, curatorial experimentation, and a genuinely cross-continental ambition. @thomasdanegallery
9. Thomas Conchou (Curator, Paris) – Conchou is director of Ferme du Buisson, developing a socially engaged, queer-informed curatorial practice rooted in collaboration and emerging artistic voices. @tconch
10. Toby Webster (Gallerist, Glasgow) – Webster founded The Modern Institute, building one of the UK’s most internationally respected galleries entirely outside London over nearly 30 years. @themoderninstitute
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today:
1. Alia Swastika (Curator, Jakarta) – Swastika is director of Biennale Jogja & one of Southeast Asia’s leading curators, building a practice rooted in decoloniality, feminism, and Global South art histories. @alia.swastika
2. Çağla Ilk (Curator, Berlin) – Ilk is a curator & architect whose transdisciplinary practice across art, theatre, and architecture is leading to her upcoming directorship of Maxim Gorki Theater. @ilkcagla
3. Diane Lima (Curator, São Paulo) – Lima is a curator and leading voice of Black feminism in Latin American art, curating both the Brazilian Pavilion at Venice & MAM São Paulo’s Panorama. @dianelima
4. Flavin Judd (Artistic director, NY) – Judd is a curator & artistic director of Judd Foundation, shaping how Donald Judd’s minimalist legacy is curated, published, and spatially preserved. @flavinjudd
5. Fredrik Liew (Curator, Stockholm) – Liew is chief curator & director of exhibitions at Moderna Museet, known for shaping its collection and curating the landmark Nan Goldin touring retrospective. @fredrikliew
6. Peggy Gou (Collector, Berlin) – Gou is a DJ, collector, and cultural entrepreneur whose global reach across music, fashion, and art fairs makes her a crossover force in contemporary culture. @peggygou_
7. Polly Staple (Curator, London) – Staple is a curator & Tate’s former director of collection for British Art, known for championing emerging artists & expanding access to art across the UK. @polly.staple
8. Thomas Dane (Gallerist, London) – Dane is a gallerist whose program is distinguished by its commitment to film, curatorial experimentation, and a genuinely cross-continental ambition. @thomasdanegallery
9. Thomas Conchou (Curator, Paris) – Conchou is director of Ferme du Buisson, developing a socially engaged, queer-informed curatorial practice rooted in collaboration and emerging artistic voices. @tconch
10. Toby Webster (Gallerist, Glasgow) – Webster founded The Modern Institute, building one of the UK’s most internationally respected galleries entirely outside London over nearly 30 years. @themoderninstitute
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today:
1. Alia Swastika (Curator, Jakarta) – Swastika is director of Biennale Jogja & one of Southeast Asia’s leading curators, building a practice rooted in decoloniality, feminism, and Global South art histories. @alia.swastika
2. Çağla Ilk (Curator, Berlin) – Ilk is a curator & architect whose transdisciplinary practice across art, theatre, and architecture is leading to her upcoming directorship of Maxim Gorki Theater. @ilkcagla
3. Diane Lima (Curator, São Paulo) – Lima is a curator and leading voice of Black feminism in Latin American art, curating both the Brazilian Pavilion at Venice & MAM São Paulo’s Panorama. @dianelima
4. Flavin Judd (Artistic director, NY) – Judd is a curator & artistic director of Judd Foundation, shaping how Donald Judd’s minimalist legacy is curated, published, and spatially preserved. @flavinjudd
5. Fredrik Liew (Curator, Stockholm) – Liew is chief curator & director of exhibitions at Moderna Museet, known for shaping its collection and curating the landmark Nan Goldin touring retrospective. @fredrikliew
6. Peggy Gou (Collector, Berlin) – Gou is a DJ, collector, and cultural entrepreneur whose global reach across music, fashion, and art fairs makes her a crossover force in contemporary culture. @peggygou_
7. Polly Staple (Curator, London) – Staple is a curator & Tate’s former director of collection for British Art, known for championing emerging artists & expanding access to art across the UK. @polly.staple
8. Thomas Dane (Gallerist, London) – Dane is a gallerist whose program is distinguished by its commitment to film, curatorial experimentation, and a genuinely cross-continental ambition. @thomasdanegallery
9. Thomas Conchou (Curator, Paris) – Conchou is director of Ferme du Buisson, developing a socially engaged, queer-informed curatorial practice rooted in collaboration and emerging artistic voices. @tconch
10. Toby Webster (Gallerist, Glasgow) – Webster founded The Modern Institute, building one of the UK’s most internationally respected galleries entirely outside London over nearly 30 years. @themoderninstitute
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today:
1. Alia Swastika (Curator, Jakarta) – Swastika is director of Biennale Jogja & one of Southeast Asia’s leading curators, building a practice rooted in decoloniality, feminism, and Global South art histories. @alia.swastika
2. Çağla Ilk (Curator, Berlin) – Ilk is a curator & architect whose transdisciplinary practice across art, theatre, and architecture is leading to her upcoming directorship of Maxim Gorki Theater. @ilkcagla
3. Diane Lima (Curator, São Paulo) – Lima is a curator and leading voice of Black feminism in Latin American art, curating both the Brazilian Pavilion at Venice & MAM São Paulo’s Panorama. @dianelima
4. Flavin Judd (Artistic director, NY) – Judd is a curator & artistic director of Judd Foundation, shaping how Donald Judd’s minimalist legacy is curated, published, and spatially preserved. @flavinjudd
5. Fredrik Liew (Curator, Stockholm) – Liew is chief curator & director of exhibitions at Moderna Museet, known for shaping its collection and curating the landmark Nan Goldin touring retrospective. @fredrikliew
6. Peggy Gou (Collector, Berlin) – Gou is a DJ, collector, and cultural entrepreneur whose global reach across music, fashion, and art fairs makes her a crossover force in contemporary culture. @peggygou_
7. Polly Staple (Curator, London) – Staple is a curator & Tate’s former director of collection for British Art, known for championing emerging artists & expanding access to art across the UK. @polly.staple
8. Thomas Dane (Gallerist, London) – Dane is a gallerist whose program is distinguished by its commitment to film, curatorial experimentation, and a genuinely cross-continental ambition. @thomasdanegallery
9. Thomas Conchou (Curator, Paris) – Conchou is director of Ferme du Buisson, developing a socially engaged, queer-informed curatorial practice rooted in collaboration and emerging artistic voices. @tconch
10. Toby Webster (Gallerist, Glasgow) – Webster founded The Modern Institute, building one of the UK’s most internationally respected galleries entirely outside London over nearly 30 years. @themoderninstitute
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today:
1. Alia Swastika (Curator, Jakarta) – Swastika is director of Biennale Jogja & one of Southeast Asia’s leading curators, building a practice rooted in decoloniality, feminism, and Global South art histories. @alia.swastika
2. Çağla Ilk (Curator, Berlin) – Ilk is a curator & architect whose transdisciplinary practice across art, theatre, and architecture is leading to her upcoming directorship of Maxim Gorki Theater. @ilkcagla
3. Diane Lima (Curator, São Paulo) – Lima is a curator and leading voice of Black feminism in Latin American art, curating both the Brazilian Pavilion at Venice & MAM São Paulo’s Panorama. @dianelima
4. Flavin Judd (Artistic director, NY) – Judd is a curator & artistic director of Judd Foundation, shaping how Donald Judd’s minimalist legacy is curated, published, and spatially preserved. @flavinjudd
5. Fredrik Liew (Curator, Stockholm) – Liew is chief curator & director of exhibitions at Moderna Museet, known for shaping its collection and curating the landmark Nan Goldin touring retrospective. @fredrikliew
6. Peggy Gou (Collector, Berlin) – Gou is a DJ, collector, and cultural entrepreneur whose global reach across music, fashion, and art fairs makes her a crossover force in contemporary culture. @peggygou_
7. Polly Staple (Curator, London) – Staple is a curator & Tate’s former director of collection for British Art, known for championing emerging artists & expanding access to art across the UK. @polly.staple
8. Thomas Dane (Gallerist, London) – Dane is a gallerist whose program is distinguished by its commitment to film, curatorial experimentation, and a genuinely cross-continental ambition. @thomasdanegallery
9. Thomas Conchou (Curator, Paris) – Conchou is director of Ferme du Buisson, developing a socially engaged, queer-informed curatorial practice rooted in collaboration and emerging artistic voices. @tconch
10. Toby Webster (Gallerist, Glasgow) – Webster founded The Modern Institute, building one of the UK’s most internationally respected galleries entirely outside London over nearly 30 years. @themoderninstitute
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today:
1. Alia Swastika (Curator, Jakarta) – Swastika is director of Biennale Jogja & one of Southeast Asia’s leading curators, building a practice rooted in decoloniality, feminism, and Global South art histories. @alia.swastika
2. Çağla Ilk (Curator, Berlin) – Ilk is a curator & architect whose transdisciplinary practice across art, theatre, and architecture is leading to her upcoming directorship of Maxim Gorki Theater. @ilkcagla
3. Diane Lima (Curator, São Paulo) – Lima is a curator and leading voice of Black feminism in Latin American art, curating both the Brazilian Pavilion at Venice & MAM São Paulo’s Panorama. @dianelima
4. Flavin Judd (Artistic director, NY) – Judd is a curator & artistic director of Judd Foundation, shaping how Donald Judd’s minimalist legacy is curated, published, and spatially preserved. @flavinjudd
5. Fredrik Liew (Curator, Stockholm) – Liew is chief curator & director of exhibitions at Moderna Museet, known for shaping its collection and curating the landmark Nan Goldin touring retrospective. @fredrikliew
6. Peggy Gou (Collector, Berlin) – Gou is a DJ, collector, and cultural entrepreneur whose global reach across music, fashion, and art fairs makes her a crossover force in contemporary culture. @peggygou_
7. Polly Staple (Curator, London) – Staple is a curator & Tate’s former director of collection for British Art, known for championing emerging artists & expanding access to art across the UK. @polly.staple
8. Thomas Dane (Gallerist, London) – Dane is a gallerist whose program is distinguished by its commitment to film, curatorial experimentation, and a genuinely cross-continental ambition. @thomasdanegallery
9. Thomas Conchou (Curator, Paris) – Conchou is director of Ferme du Buisson, developing a socially engaged, queer-informed curatorial practice rooted in collaboration and emerging artistic voices. @tconch
10. Toby Webster (Gallerist, Glasgow) – Webster founded The Modern Institute, building one of the UK’s most internationally respected galleries entirely outside London over nearly 30 years. @themoderninstitute
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today:
1. Alia Swastika (Curator, Jakarta) – Swastika is director of Biennale Jogja & one of Southeast Asia’s leading curators, building a practice rooted in decoloniality, feminism, and Global South art histories. @alia.swastika
2. Çağla Ilk (Curator, Berlin) – Ilk is a curator & architect whose transdisciplinary practice across art, theatre, and architecture is leading to her upcoming directorship of Maxim Gorki Theater. @ilkcagla
3. Diane Lima (Curator, São Paulo) – Lima is a curator and leading voice of Black feminism in Latin American art, curating both the Brazilian Pavilion at Venice & MAM São Paulo’s Panorama. @dianelima
4. Flavin Judd (Artistic director, NY) – Judd is a curator & artistic director of Judd Foundation, shaping how Donald Judd’s minimalist legacy is curated, published, and spatially preserved. @flavinjudd
5. Fredrik Liew (Curator, Stockholm) – Liew is chief curator & director of exhibitions at Moderna Museet, known for shaping its collection and curating the landmark Nan Goldin touring retrospective. @fredrikliew
6. Peggy Gou (Collector, Berlin) – Gou is a DJ, collector, and cultural entrepreneur whose global reach across music, fashion, and art fairs makes her a crossover force in contemporary culture. @peggygou_
7. Polly Staple (Curator, London) – Staple is a curator & Tate’s former director of collection for British Art, known for championing emerging artists & expanding access to art across the UK. @polly.staple
8. Thomas Dane (Gallerist, London) – Dane is a gallerist whose program is distinguished by its commitment to film, curatorial experimentation, and a genuinely cross-continental ambition. @thomasdanegallery
9. Thomas Conchou (Curator, Paris) – Conchou is director of Ferme du Buisson, developing a socially engaged, queer-informed curatorial practice rooted in collaboration and emerging artistic voices. @tconch
10. Toby Webster (Gallerist, Glasgow) – Webster founded The Modern Institute, building one of the UK’s most internationally respected galleries entirely outside London over nearly 30 years. @themoderninstitute
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubeloves #SedrickChisom whose practice is rooted in world-building, constructing an apocalyptic, dystopian universe that fuses the iconography of the American Civil War, medieval mythology, Greek myth, and speculative sci-fi to confound racial origin myths and white supremacist narratives. His large-scale, unstretched paintings layer spray paint, acrylic, and oil through repeated washing and scraping, creating hazy, atmospheric surfaces where figures hover between legibility and illegibility in a palette of muddy blues and tropical pinks. Inspired by Octavia Butler, Francisco Goya, Color Field painting, and Japanese anime, his canvases serve as an ongoing, pro-Black mythmaking project in which history, fantasy, and prophecy collapse into one another. Chisom currently has a solo show at Matthew Brown in New York. @sedrickchisom @matthewbrowngallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Chisom’s work: medieval Christian iconography, mythmaking, unhinged humor
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Edwin Oostmeijer (Collector, Amsterdam) @edwinoostmeijer
+ Karen Ziegler Smith (Collector, New York) kzieglersmith
+ Tabish Khan (Critic, London) @londonartcritic
#artcube

#artcubeloves #SedrickChisom whose practice is rooted in world-building, constructing an apocalyptic, dystopian universe that fuses the iconography of the American Civil War, medieval mythology, Greek myth, and speculative sci-fi to confound racial origin myths and white supremacist narratives. His large-scale, unstretched paintings layer spray paint, acrylic, and oil through repeated washing and scraping, creating hazy, atmospheric surfaces where figures hover between legibility and illegibility in a palette of muddy blues and tropical pinks. Inspired by Octavia Butler, Francisco Goya, Color Field painting, and Japanese anime, his canvases serve as an ongoing, pro-Black mythmaking project in which history, fantasy, and prophecy collapse into one another. Chisom currently has a solo show at Matthew Brown in New York. @sedrickchisom @matthewbrowngallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Chisom’s work: medieval Christian iconography, mythmaking, unhinged humor
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Edwin Oostmeijer (Collector, Amsterdam) @edwinoostmeijer
+ Karen Ziegler Smith (Collector, New York) kzieglersmith
+ Tabish Khan (Critic, London) @londonartcritic
#artcube

#artcubeloves #SedrickChisom whose practice is rooted in world-building, constructing an apocalyptic, dystopian universe that fuses the iconography of the American Civil War, medieval mythology, Greek myth, and speculative sci-fi to confound racial origin myths and white supremacist narratives. His large-scale, unstretched paintings layer spray paint, acrylic, and oil through repeated washing and scraping, creating hazy, atmospheric surfaces where figures hover between legibility and illegibility in a palette of muddy blues and tropical pinks. Inspired by Octavia Butler, Francisco Goya, Color Field painting, and Japanese anime, his canvases serve as an ongoing, pro-Black mythmaking project in which history, fantasy, and prophecy collapse into one another. Chisom currently has a solo show at Matthew Brown in New York. @sedrickchisom @matthewbrowngallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Chisom’s work: medieval Christian iconography, mythmaking, unhinged humor
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Edwin Oostmeijer (Collector, Amsterdam) @edwinoostmeijer
+ Karen Ziegler Smith (Collector, New York) kzieglersmith
+ Tabish Khan (Critic, London) @londonartcritic
#artcube

#artcubeloves #SedrickChisom whose practice is rooted in world-building, constructing an apocalyptic, dystopian universe that fuses the iconography of the American Civil War, medieval mythology, Greek myth, and speculative sci-fi to confound racial origin myths and white supremacist narratives. His large-scale, unstretched paintings layer spray paint, acrylic, and oil through repeated washing and scraping, creating hazy, atmospheric surfaces where figures hover between legibility and illegibility in a palette of muddy blues and tropical pinks. Inspired by Octavia Butler, Francisco Goya, Color Field painting, and Japanese anime, his canvases serve as an ongoing, pro-Black mythmaking project in which history, fantasy, and prophecy collapse into one another. Chisom currently has a solo show at Matthew Brown in New York. @sedrickchisom @matthewbrowngallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Chisom’s work: medieval Christian iconography, mythmaking, unhinged humor
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Edwin Oostmeijer (Collector, Amsterdam) @edwinoostmeijer
+ Karen Ziegler Smith (Collector, New York) kzieglersmith
+ Tabish Khan (Critic, London) @londonartcritic
#artcube

#artcubeloves #SedrickChisom whose practice is rooted in world-building, constructing an apocalyptic, dystopian universe that fuses the iconography of the American Civil War, medieval mythology, Greek myth, and speculative sci-fi to confound racial origin myths and white supremacist narratives. His large-scale, unstretched paintings layer spray paint, acrylic, and oil through repeated washing and scraping, creating hazy, atmospheric surfaces where figures hover between legibility and illegibility in a palette of muddy blues and tropical pinks. Inspired by Octavia Butler, Francisco Goya, Color Field painting, and Japanese anime, his canvases serve as an ongoing, pro-Black mythmaking project in which history, fantasy, and prophecy collapse into one another. Chisom currently has a solo show at Matthew Brown in New York. @sedrickchisom @matthewbrowngallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Chisom’s work: medieval Christian iconography, mythmaking, unhinged humor
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Edwin Oostmeijer (Collector, Amsterdam) @edwinoostmeijer
+ Karen Ziegler Smith (Collector, New York) kzieglersmith
+ Tabish Khan (Critic, London) @londonartcritic
#artcube

#artcubeloves #SedrickChisom whose practice is rooted in world-building, constructing an apocalyptic, dystopian universe that fuses the iconography of the American Civil War, medieval mythology, Greek myth, and speculative sci-fi to confound racial origin myths and white supremacist narratives. His large-scale, unstretched paintings layer spray paint, acrylic, and oil through repeated washing and scraping, creating hazy, atmospheric surfaces where figures hover between legibility and illegibility in a palette of muddy blues and tropical pinks. Inspired by Octavia Butler, Francisco Goya, Color Field painting, and Japanese anime, his canvases serve as an ongoing, pro-Black mythmaking project in which history, fantasy, and prophecy collapse into one another. Chisom currently has a solo show at Matthew Brown in New York. @sedrickchisom @matthewbrowngallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Chisom’s work: medieval Christian iconography, mythmaking, unhinged humor
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Edwin Oostmeijer (Collector, Amsterdam) @edwinoostmeijer
+ Karen Ziegler Smith (Collector, New York) kzieglersmith
+ Tabish Khan (Critic, London) @londonartcritic
#artcube

#artcubeloves #SedrickChisom whose practice is rooted in world-building, constructing an apocalyptic, dystopian universe that fuses the iconography of the American Civil War, medieval mythology, Greek myth, and speculative sci-fi to confound racial origin myths and white supremacist narratives. His large-scale, unstretched paintings layer spray paint, acrylic, and oil through repeated washing and scraping, creating hazy, atmospheric surfaces where figures hover between legibility and illegibility in a palette of muddy blues and tropical pinks. Inspired by Octavia Butler, Francisco Goya, Color Field painting, and Japanese anime, his canvases serve as an ongoing, pro-Black mythmaking project in which history, fantasy, and prophecy collapse into one another. Chisom currently has a solo show at Matthew Brown in New York. @sedrickchisom @matthewbrowngallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Chisom’s work: medieval Christian iconography, mythmaking, unhinged humor
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Edwin Oostmeijer (Collector, Amsterdam) @edwinoostmeijer
+ Karen Ziegler Smith (Collector, New York) kzieglersmith
+ Tabish Khan (Critic, London) @londonartcritic
#artcube

#artcubeloves #SedrickChisom whose practice is rooted in world-building, constructing an apocalyptic, dystopian universe that fuses the iconography of the American Civil War, medieval mythology, Greek myth, and speculative sci-fi to confound racial origin myths and white supremacist narratives. His large-scale, unstretched paintings layer spray paint, acrylic, and oil through repeated washing and scraping, creating hazy, atmospheric surfaces where figures hover between legibility and illegibility in a palette of muddy blues and tropical pinks. Inspired by Octavia Butler, Francisco Goya, Color Field painting, and Japanese anime, his canvases serve as an ongoing, pro-Black mythmaking project in which history, fantasy, and prophecy collapse into one another. Chisom currently has a solo show at Matthew Brown in New York. @sedrickchisom @matthewbrowngallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Chisom’s work: medieval Christian iconography, mythmaking, unhinged humor
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Edwin Oostmeijer (Collector, Amsterdam) @edwinoostmeijer
+ Karen Ziegler Smith (Collector, New York) kzieglersmith
+ Tabish Khan (Critic, London) @londonartcritic
#artcube

#artcubeloves #SedrickChisom whose practice is rooted in world-building, constructing an apocalyptic, dystopian universe that fuses the iconography of the American Civil War, medieval mythology, Greek myth, and speculative sci-fi to confound racial origin myths and white supremacist narratives. His large-scale, unstretched paintings layer spray paint, acrylic, and oil through repeated washing and scraping, creating hazy, atmospheric surfaces where figures hover between legibility and illegibility in a palette of muddy blues and tropical pinks. Inspired by Octavia Butler, Francisco Goya, Color Field painting, and Japanese anime, his canvases serve as an ongoing, pro-Black mythmaking project in which history, fantasy, and prophecy collapse into one another. Chisom currently has a solo show at Matthew Brown in New York. @sedrickchisom @matthewbrowngallery
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Chisom’s work: medieval Christian iconography, mythmaking, unhinged humor
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Edwin Oostmeijer (Collector, Amsterdam) @edwinoostmeijer
+ Karen Ziegler Smith (Collector, New York) kzieglersmith
+ Tabish Khan (Critic, London) @londonartcritic
#artcube

#artcubeloves #Lisa Yuskavage who has developed her own genre of portraiture in which lavish, erotic, and angelic women inhabit fantastical landscapes or dramatically lit interiors, blending pop cultural imagery, color theory, and Renaissance painting techniques. Her figures oscillate between liberation and objectification, their exaggerated nudity inspired by classical High Renaissance methods while probing the complicated gaze of contemporary sexual mores and gender politics. Color is her primary vehicle, used as a conduit for complex psychological states, with influences ranging from Bellini and Vermeer to Degas and Color Field painting informing her deeply layered approach to the female form. Yuskavage currently has a solo show at David Zwirner in New York. @davidzwirner
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Yuskavage’s work: angelic women, candy colors, mixed subliminal messages
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Christopher Yin (Collector, Los Angeles) @christopheryin
+ Claire Gilman (Curator at The Morgan Library, New York) @clairesgilman
+ Tarka Russell (Art advisor, Miami) @tarkarussell
#artcube

#artcubeloves #Lisa Yuskavage who has developed her own genre of portraiture in which lavish, erotic, and angelic women inhabit fantastical landscapes or dramatically lit interiors, blending pop cultural imagery, color theory, and Renaissance painting techniques. Her figures oscillate between liberation and objectification, their exaggerated nudity inspired by classical High Renaissance methods while probing the complicated gaze of contemporary sexual mores and gender politics. Color is her primary vehicle, used as a conduit for complex psychological states, with influences ranging from Bellini and Vermeer to Degas and Color Field painting informing her deeply layered approach to the female form. Yuskavage currently has a solo show at David Zwirner in New York. @davidzwirner
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Yuskavage’s work: angelic women, candy colors, mixed subliminal messages
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Christopher Yin (Collector, Los Angeles) @christopheryin
+ Claire Gilman (Curator at The Morgan Library, New York) @clairesgilman
+ Tarka Russell (Art advisor, Miami) @tarkarussell
#artcube

#artcubeloves #Lisa Yuskavage who has developed her own genre of portraiture in which lavish, erotic, and angelic women inhabit fantastical landscapes or dramatically lit interiors, blending pop cultural imagery, color theory, and Renaissance painting techniques. Her figures oscillate between liberation and objectification, their exaggerated nudity inspired by classical High Renaissance methods while probing the complicated gaze of contemporary sexual mores and gender politics. Color is her primary vehicle, used as a conduit for complex psychological states, with influences ranging from Bellini and Vermeer to Degas and Color Field painting informing her deeply layered approach to the female form. Yuskavage currently has a solo show at David Zwirner in New York. @davidzwirner
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Yuskavage’s work: angelic women, candy colors, mixed subliminal messages
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Christopher Yin (Collector, Los Angeles) @christopheryin
+ Claire Gilman (Curator at The Morgan Library, New York) @clairesgilman
+ Tarka Russell (Art advisor, Miami) @tarkarussell
#artcube

#artcubeloves #Lisa Yuskavage who has developed her own genre of portraiture in which lavish, erotic, and angelic women inhabit fantastical landscapes or dramatically lit interiors, blending pop cultural imagery, color theory, and Renaissance painting techniques. Her figures oscillate between liberation and objectification, their exaggerated nudity inspired by classical High Renaissance methods while probing the complicated gaze of contemporary sexual mores and gender politics. Color is her primary vehicle, used as a conduit for complex psychological states, with influences ranging from Bellini and Vermeer to Degas and Color Field painting informing her deeply layered approach to the female form. Yuskavage currently has a solo show at David Zwirner in New York. @davidzwirner
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Yuskavage’s work: angelic women, candy colors, mixed subliminal messages
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Christopher Yin (Collector, Los Angeles) @christopheryin
+ Claire Gilman (Curator at The Morgan Library, New York) @clairesgilman
+ Tarka Russell (Art advisor, Miami) @tarkarussell
#artcube

#artcubeloves #Lisa Yuskavage who has developed her own genre of portraiture in which lavish, erotic, and angelic women inhabit fantastical landscapes or dramatically lit interiors, blending pop cultural imagery, color theory, and Renaissance painting techniques. Her figures oscillate between liberation and objectification, their exaggerated nudity inspired by classical High Renaissance methods while probing the complicated gaze of contemporary sexual mores and gender politics. Color is her primary vehicle, used as a conduit for complex psychological states, with influences ranging from Bellini and Vermeer to Degas and Color Field painting informing her deeply layered approach to the female form. Yuskavage currently has a solo show at David Zwirner in New York. @davidzwirner
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Yuskavage’s work: angelic women, candy colors, mixed subliminal messages
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Christopher Yin (Collector, Los Angeles) @christopheryin
+ Claire Gilman (Curator at The Morgan Library, New York) @clairesgilman
+ Tarka Russell (Art advisor, Miami) @tarkarussell
#artcube

#artcubeloves #Lisa Yuskavage who has developed her own genre of portraiture in which lavish, erotic, and angelic women inhabit fantastical landscapes or dramatically lit interiors, blending pop cultural imagery, color theory, and Renaissance painting techniques. Her figures oscillate between liberation and objectification, their exaggerated nudity inspired by classical High Renaissance methods while probing the complicated gaze of contemporary sexual mores and gender politics. Color is her primary vehicle, used as a conduit for complex psychological states, with influences ranging from Bellini and Vermeer to Degas and Color Field painting informing her deeply layered approach to the female form. Yuskavage currently has a solo show at David Zwirner in New York. @davidzwirner
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Yuskavage’s work: angelic women, candy colors, mixed subliminal messages
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Christopher Yin (Collector, Los Angeles) @christopheryin
+ Claire Gilman (Curator at The Morgan Library, New York) @clairesgilman
+ Tarka Russell (Art advisor, Miami) @tarkarussell
#artcube

#artcubeloves #Lisa Yuskavage who has developed her own genre of portraiture in which lavish, erotic, and angelic women inhabit fantastical landscapes or dramatically lit interiors, blending pop cultural imagery, color theory, and Renaissance painting techniques. Her figures oscillate between liberation and objectification, their exaggerated nudity inspired by classical High Renaissance methods while probing the complicated gaze of contemporary sexual mores and gender politics. Color is her primary vehicle, used as a conduit for complex psychological states, with influences ranging from Bellini and Vermeer to Degas and Color Field painting informing her deeply layered approach to the female form. Yuskavage currently has a solo show at David Zwirner in New York. @davidzwirner
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Yuskavage’s work: angelic women, candy colors, mixed subliminal messages
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Christopher Yin (Collector, Los Angeles) @christopheryin
+ Claire Gilman (Curator at The Morgan Library, New York) @clairesgilman
+ Tarka Russell (Art advisor, Miami) @tarkarussell
#artcube

#artcubeloves #Lisa Yuskavage who has developed her own genre of portraiture in which lavish, erotic, and angelic women inhabit fantastical landscapes or dramatically lit interiors, blending pop cultural imagery, color theory, and Renaissance painting techniques. Her figures oscillate between liberation and objectification, their exaggerated nudity inspired by classical High Renaissance methods while probing the complicated gaze of contemporary sexual mores and gender politics. Color is her primary vehicle, used as a conduit for complex psychological states, with influences ranging from Bellini and Vermeer to Degas and Color Field painting informing her deeply layered approach to the female form. Yuskavage currently has a solo show at David Zwirner in New York. @davidzwirner
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Yuskavage’s work: angelic women, candy colors, mixed subliminal messages
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Christopher Yin (Collector, Los Angeles) @christopheryin
+ Claire Gilman (Curator at The Morgan Library, New York) @clairesgilman
+ Tarka Russell (Art advisor, Miami) @tarkarussell
#artcube

#artcubeloves #Lisa Yuskavage who has developed her own genre of portraiture in which lavish, erotic, and angelic women inhabit fantastical landscapes or dramatically lit interiors, blending pop cultural imagery, color theory, and Renaissance painting techniques. Her figures oscillate between liberation and objectification, their exaggerated nudity inspired by classical High Renaissance methods while probing the complicated gaze of contemporary sexual mores and gender politics. Color is her primary vehicle, used as a conduit for complex psychological states, with influences ranging from Bellini and Vermeer to Degas and Color Field painting informing her deeply layered approach to the female form. Yuskavage currently has a solo show at David Zwirner in New York. @davidzwirner
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Yuskavage’s work: angelic women, candy colors, mixed subliminal messages
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Christopher Yin (Collector, Los Angeles) @christopheryin
+ Claire Gilman (Curator at The Morgan Library, New York) @clairesgilman
+ Tarka Russell (Art advisor, Miami) @tarkarussell
#artcube

#artcubeloves #Lisa Yuskavage who has developed her own genre of portraiture in which lavish, erotic, and angelic women inhabit fantastical landscapes or dramatically lit interiors, blending pop cultural imagery, color theory, and Renaissance painting techniques. Her figures oscillate between liberation and objectification, their exaggerated nudity inspired by classical High Renaissance methods while probing the complicated gaze of contemporary sexual mores and gender politics. Color is her primary vehicle, used as a conduit for complex psychological states, with influences ranging from Bellini and Vermeer to Degas and Color Field painting informing her deeply layered approach to the female form. Yuskavage currently has a solo show at David Zwirner in New York. @davidzwirner
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Yuskavage’s work: angelic women, candy colors, mixed subliminal messages
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Christopher Yin (Collector, Los Angeles) @christopheryin
+ Claire Gilman (Curator at The Morgan Library, New York) @clairesgilman
+ Tarka Russell (Art advisor, Miami) @tarkarussell
#artcube

#artcubeloves #Lisa Yuskavage who has developed her own genre of portraiture in which lavish, erotic, and angelic women inhabit fantastical landscapes or dramatically lit interiors, blending pop cultural imagery, color theory, and Renaissance painting techniques. Her figures oscillate between liberation and objectification, their exaggerated nudity inspired by classical High Renaissance methods while probing the complicated gaze of contemporary sexual mores and gender politics. Color is her primary vehicle, used as a conduit for complex psychological states, with influences ranging from Bellini and Vermeer to Degas and Color Field painting informing her deeply layered approach to the female form. Yuskavage currently has a solo show at David Zwirner in New York. @davidzwirner
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Yuskavage’s work: angelic women, candy colors, mixed subliminal messages
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Christopher Yin (Collector, Los Angeles) @christopheryin
+ Claire Gilman (Curator at The Morgan Library, New York) @clairesgilman
+ Tarka Russell (Art advisor, Miami) @tarkarussell
#artcube

#artcubeloves #Lisa Yuskavage who has developed her own genre of portraiture in which lavish, erotic, and angelic women inhabit fantastical landscapes or dramatically lit interiors, blending pop cultural imagery, color theory, and Renaissance painting techniques. Her figures oscillate between liberation and objectification, their exaggerated nudity inspired by classical High Renaissance methods while probing the complicated gaze of contemporary sexual mores and gender politics. Color is her primary vehicle, used as a conduit for complex psychological states, with influences ranging from Bellini and Vermeer to Degas and Color Field painting informing her deeply layered approach to the female form. Yuskavage currently has a solo show at David Zwirner in New York. @davidzwirner
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Yuskavage’s work: angelic women, candy colors, mixed subliminal messages
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Christopher Yin (Collector, Los Angeles) @christopheryin
+ Claire Gilman (Curator at The Morgan Library, New York) @clairesgilman
+ Tarka Russell (Art advisor, Miami) @tarkarussell
#artcube

#artcubeloves #Lisa Yuskavage who has developed her own genre of portraiture in which lavish, erotic, and angelic women inhabit fantastical landscapes or dramatically lit interiors, blending pop cultural imagery, color theory, and Renaissance painting techniques. Her figures oscillate between liberation and objectification, their exaggerated nudity inspired by classical High Renaissance methods while probing the complicated gaze of contemporary sexual mores and gender politics. Color is her primary vehicle, used as a conduit for complex psychological states, with influences ranging from Bellini and Vermeer to Degas and Color Field painting informing her deeply layered approach to the female form. Yuskavage currently has a solo show at David Zwirner in New York. @davidzwirner
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Yuskavage’s work: angelic women, candy colors, mixed subliminal messages
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Christopher Yin (Collector, Los Angeles) @christopheryin
+ Claire Gilman (Curator at The Morgan Library, New York) @clairesgilman
+ Tarka Russell (Art advisor, Miami) @tarkarussell
#artcube

#artcubeloves a good discovery! Here are our top 6 discoveries at Frieze:
1. Beatrice Arraes @biaarraesc at @almeidaedale
2. Dabin Ahn @dabinahn at @francoisghebaly
3. Emil Sands @emil.sands at @victoriamirogallery
4. Libasse Ka @libasseka at @carlos_ishikawa
5. Livien Yin @livienyin at @tinakimgallery
6. Nada Elkalaawy @nadaelkalaawy at @lawrieshabibi
Which artists did you discover at the fair?
#FriezeArtFair @friezeofficial #artcube

#artcubeloves a good discovery! Here are our top 6 discoveries at Frieze:
1. Beatrice Arraes @biaarraesc at @almeidaedale
2. Dabin Ahn @dabinahn at @francoisghebaly
3. Emil Sands @emil.sands at @victoriamirogallery
4. Libasse Ka @libasseka at @carlos_ishikawa
5. Livien Yin @livienyin at @tinakimgallery
6. Nada Elkalaawy @nadaelkalaawy at @lawrieshabibi
Which artists did you discover at the fair?
#FriezeArtFair @friezeofficial #artcube

#artcubeloves a good discovery! Here are our top 6 discoveries at Frieze:
1. Beatrice Arraes @biaarraesc at @almeidaedale
2. Dabin Ahn @dabinahn at @francoisghebaly
3. Emil Sands @emil.sands at @victoriamirogallery
4. Libasse Ka @libasseka at @carlos_ishikawa
5. Livien Yin @livienyin at @tinakimgallery
6. Nada Elkalaawy @nadaelkalaawy at @lawrieshabibi
Which artists did you discover at the fair?
#FriezeArtFair @friezeofficial #artcube

#artcubeloves a good discovery! Here are our top 6 discoveries at Frieze:
1. Beatrice Arraes @biaarraesc at @almeidaedale
2. Dabin Ahn @dabinahn at @francoisghebaly
3. Emil Sands @emil.sands at @victoriamirogallery
4. Libasse Ka @libasseka at @carlos_ishikawa
5. Livien Yin @livienyin at @tinakimgallery
6. Nada Elkalaawy @nadaelkalaawy at @lawrieshabibi
Which artists did you discover at the fair?
#FriezeArtFair @friezeofficial #artcube

#artcubeloves a good discovery! Here are our top 6 discoveries at Frieze:
1. Beatrice Arraes @biaarraesc at @almeidaedale
2. Dabin Ahn @dabinahn at @francoisghebaly
3. Emil Sands @emil.sands at @victoriamirogallery
4. Libasse Ka @libasseka at @carlos_ishikawa
5. Livien Yin @livienyin at @tinakimgallery
6. Nada Elkalaawy @nadaelkalaawy at @lawrieshabibi
Which artists did you discover at the fair?
#FriezeArtFair @friezeofficial #artcube

#artcubeloves a good discovery! Here are our top 6 discoveries at Frieze:
1. Beatrice Arraes @biaarraesc at @almeidaedale
2. Dabin Ahn @dabinahn at @francoisghebaly
3. Emil Sands @emil.sands at @victoriamirogallery
4. Libasse Ka @libasseka at @carlos_ishikawa
5. Livien Yin @livienyin at @tinakimgallery
6. Nada Elkalaawy @nadaelkalaawy at @lawrieshabibi
Which artists did you discover at the fair?
#FriezeArtFair @friezeofficial #artcube

#artcubeloves a good discovery! Here are our top 6 discoveries at Frieze:
1. Beatrice Arraes @biaarraesc at @almeidaedale
2. Dabin Ahn @dabinahn at @francoisghebaly
3. Emil Sands @emil.sands at @victoriamirogallery
4. Libasse Ka @libasseka at @carlos_ishikawa
5. Livien Yin @livienyin at @tinakimgallery
6. Nada Elkalaawy @nadaelkalaawy at @lawrieshabibi
Which artists did you discover at the fair?
#FriezeArtFair @friezeofficial #artcube

#artcubeloves a good discovery! Here are our top 6 discoveries at NADA:
1. Effie Wanyi Li @effiewanyi.li at @foundryseoul
2. Esai Alfredo @esai_alfredo at @spinelloprojects
3. Kelly Tapia-Chuning @kelly_chuning at @milkmoongallery
4. Margaret R. Thompson @margaret_r_thompson at @redarrowgallery
5. TJ Rinoski @tj_rinoski at @meganmulrooneygallery
6. Yam Shalev @yam.shalev at @room57gallery
Which artists did you discover at the fair?
#NADA @newartdealers #artcube

#artcubeloves a good discovery! Here are our top 6 discoveries at NADA:
1. Effie Wanyi Li @effiewanyi.li at @foundryseoul
2. Esai Alfredo @esai_alfredo at @spinelloprojects
3. Kelly Tapia-Chuning @kelly_chuning at @milkmoongallery
4. Margaret R. Thompson @margaret_r_thompson at @redarrowgallery
5. TJ Rinoski @tj_rinoski at @meganmulrooneygallery
6. Yam Shalev @yam.shalev at @room57gallery
Which artists did you discover at the fair?
#NADA @newartdealers #artcube

#artcubeloves a good discovery! Here are our top 6 discoveries at NADA:
1. Effie Wanyi Li @effiewanyi.li at @foundryseoul
2. Esai Alfredo @esai_alfredo at @spinelloprojects
3. Kelly Tapia-Chuning @kelly_chuning at @milkmoongallery
4. Margaret R. Thompson @margaret_r_thompson at @redarrowgallery
5. TJ Rinoski @tj_rinoski at @meganmulrooneygallery
6. Yam Shalev @yam.shalev at @room57gallery
Which artists did you discover at the fair?
#NADA @newartdealers #artcube

#artcubeloves a good discovery! Here are our top 6 discoveries at NADA:
1. Effie Wanyi Li @effiewanyi.li at @foundryseoul
2. Esai Alfredo @esai_alfredo at @spinelloprojects
3. Kelly Tapia-Chuning @kelly_chuning at @milkmoongallery
4. Margaret R. Thompson @margaret_r_thompson at @redarrowgallery
5. TJ Rinoski @tj_rinoski at @meganmulrooneygallery
6. Yam Shalev @yam.shalev at @room57gallery
Which artists did you discover at the fair?
#NADA @newartdealers #artcube

#artcubeloves a good discovery! Here are our top 6 discoveries at NADA:
1. Effie Wanyi Li @effiewanyi.li at @foundryseoul
2. Esai Alfredo @esai_alfredo at @spinelloprojects
3. Kelly Tapia-Chuning @kelly_chuning at @milkmoongallery
4. Margaret R. Thompson @margaret_r_thompson at @redarrowgallery
5. TJ Rinoski @tj_rinoski at @meganmulrooneygallery
6. Yam Shalev @yam.shalev at @room57gallery
Which artists did you discover at the fair?
#NADA @newartdealers #artcube

#artcubeloves a good discovery! Here are our top 6 discoveries at NADA:
1. Effie Wanyi Li @effiewanyi.li at @foundryseoul
2. Esai Alfredo @esai_alfredo at @spinelloprojects
3. Kelly Tapia-Chuning @kelly_chuning at @milkmoongallery
4. Margaret R. Thompson @margaret_r_thompson at @redarrowgallery
5. TJ Rinoski @tj_rinoski at @meganmulrooneygallery
6. Yam Shalev @yam.shalev at @room57gallery
Which artists did you discover at the fair?
#NADA @newartdealers #artcube

#artcubeloves a good discovery! Here are our top 6 discoveries at NADA:
1. Effie Wanyi Li @effiewanyi.li at @foundryseoul
2. Esai Alfredo @esai_alfredo at @spinelloprojects
3. Kelly Tapia-Chuning @kelly_chuning at @milkmoongallery
4. Margaret R. Thompson @margaret_r_thompson at @redarrowgallery
5. TJ Rinoski @tj_rinoski at @meganmulrooneygallery
6. Yam Shalev @yam.shalev at @room57gallery
Which artists did you discover at the fair?
#NADA @newartdealers #artcube

#artcubeevents ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at Room57 Gallery in New York presents a group exhibition featuring paintings by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant.
In a world where so little seems to make sense, we turn to art for joy, perspective, knowledge, and connection. This exhibition features works by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant, four artists with distinct, signature styles that differ greatly from one another.
These differences should be celebrated, not scolded. They are what create beauty in the world, and that beauty can be seen throughout this exhibition. While each artist’s work may not appear directly related to one another, they perfectly complement one another.
From Callum Eaton’s photorealistic Tulip, dramatically blown out of proportion, to Daniel Roibal’s serene abstractions exploring beauty through color and motion, a connection emerges when viewed with imagination. Up close, Callum’s painting reveals details so clear and enlarged that the image begins to feel abstract. From afar, Daniel Roibal’s paintings evoke the feeling of looking out onto a lush landscape, and somewhere within that imagined landscape, the tulip exists.
In contrast, Olivier Souffrant and Marco Paul Lorenzetti create lively, layered scenes filled with detail, drawing the viewer deeply into their worlds. Together, these artists remind us that meaning does not always come from similarity. Sometimes, it comes from contrast, imagination, and the beauty of things that should not make sense but somehow do.
‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ opens today at Room57 Gallery in New York and is on view until July 3rd.
Featured artists include: Callum Eaton (@callumeats), Daniel Roibal (@daniroibal), Marco Paul Lorenzetti (@_marcopaull), and Olivier Souffrant (@0livier_).
#Room57Gallery @room57gallery #artcube

#artcubeevents ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at Room57 Gallery in New York presents a group exhibition featuring paintings by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant.
In a world where so little seems to make sense, we turn to art for joy, perspective, knowledge, and connection. This exhibition features works by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant, four artists with distinct, signature styles that differ greatly from one another.
These differences should be celebrated, not scolded. They are what create beauty in the world, and that beauty can be seen throughout this exhibition. While each artist’s work may not appear directly related to one another, they perfectly complement one another.
From Callum Eaton’s photorealistic Tulip, dramatically blown out of proportion, to Daniel Roibal’s serene abstractions exploring beauty through color and motion, a connection emerges when viewed with imagination. Up close, Callum’s painting reveals details so clear and enlarged that the image begins to feel abstract. From afar, Daniel Roibal’s paintings evoke the feeling of looking out onto a lush landscape, and somewhere within that imagined landscape, the tulip exists.
In contrast, Olivier Souffrant and Marco Paul Lorenzetti create lively, layered scenes filled with detail, drawing the viewer deeply into their worlds. Together, these artists remind us that meaning does not always come from similarity. Sometimes, it comes from contrast, imagination, and the beauty of things that should not make sense but somehow do.
‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ opens today at Room57 Gallery in New York and is on view until July 3rd.
Featured artists include: Callum Eaton (@callumeats), Daniel Roibal (@daniroibal), Marco Paul Lorenzetti (@_marcopaull), and Olivier Souffrant (@0livier_).
#Room57Gallery @room57gallery #artcube

#artcubeevents ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at Room57 Gallery in New York presents a group exhibition featuring paintings by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant.
In a world where so little seems to make sense, we turn to art for joy, perspective, knowledge, and connection. This exhibition features works by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant, four artists with distinct, signature styles that differ greatly from one another.
These differences should be celebrated, not scolded. They are what create beauty in the world, and that beauty can be seen throughout this exhibition. While each artist’s work may not appear directly related to one another, they perfectly complement one another.
From Callum Eaton’s photorealistic Tulip, dramatically blown out of proportion, to Daniel Roibal’s serene abstractions exploring beauty through color and motion, a connection emerges when viewed with imagination. Up close, Callum’s painting reveals details so clear and enlarged that the image begins to feel abstract. From afar, Daniel Roibal’s paintings evoke the feeling of looking out onto a lush landscape, and somewhere within that imagined landscape, the tulip exists.
In contrast, Olivier Souffrant and Marco Paul Lorenzetti create lively, layered scenes filled with detail, drawing the viewer deeply into their worlds. Together, these artists remind us that meaning does not always come from similarity. Sometimes, it comes from contrast, imagination, and the beauty of things that should not make sense but somehow do.
‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ opens today at Room57 Gallery in New York and is on view until July 3rd.
Featured artists include: Callum Eaton (@callumeats), Daniel Roibal (@daniroibal), Marco Paul Lorenzetti (@_marcopaull), and Olivier Souffrant (@0livier_).
#Room57Gallery @room57gallery #artcube

#artcubeevents ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at Room57 Gallery in New York presents a group exhibition featuring paintings by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant.
In a world where so little seems to make sense, we turn to art for joy, perspective, knowledge, and connection. This exhibition features works by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant, four artists with distinct, signature styles that differ greatly from one another.
These differences should be celebrated, not scolded. They are what create beauty in the world, and that beauty can be seen throughout this exhibition. While each artist’s work may not appear directly related to one another, they perfectly complement one another.
From Callum Eaton’s photorealistic Tulip, dramatically blown out of proportion, to Daniel Roibal’s serene abstractions exploring beauty through color and motion, a connection emerges when viewed with imagination. Up close, Callum’s painting reveals details so clear and enlarged that the image begins to feel abstract. From afar, Daniel Roibal’s paintings evoke the feeling of looking out onto a lush landscape, and somewhere within that imagined landscape, the tulip exists.
In contrast, Olivier Souffrant and Marco Paul Lorenzetti create lively, layered scenes filled with detail, drawing the viewer deeply into their worlds. Together, these artists remind us that meaning does not always come from similarity. Sometimes, it comes from contrast, imagination, and the beauty of things that should not make sense but somehow do.
‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ opens today at Room57 Gallery in New York and is on view until July 3rd.
Featured artists include: Callum Eaton (@callumeats), Daniel Roibal (@daniroibal), Marco Paul Lorenzetti (@_marcopaull), and Olivier Souffrant (@0livier_).
#Room57Gallery @room57gallery #artcube

#artcubeevents ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at Room57 Gallery in New York presents a group exhibition featuring paintings by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant.
In a world where so little seems to make sense, we turn to art for joy, perspective, knowledge, and connection. This exhibition features works by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant, four artists with distinct, signature styles that differ greatly from one another.
These differences should be celebrated, not scolded. They are what create beauty in the world, and that beauty can be seen throughout this exhibition. While each artist’s work may not appear directly related to one another, they perfectly complement one another.
From Callum Eaton’s photorealistic Tulip, dramatically blown out of proportion, to Daniel Roibal’s serene abstractions exploring beauty through color and motion, a connection emerges when viewed with imagination. Up close, Callum’s painting reveals details so clear and enlarged that the image begins to feel abstract. From afar, Daniel Roibal’s paintings evoke the feeling of looking out onto a lush landscape, and somewhere within that imagined landscape, the tulip exists.
In contrast, Olivier Souffrant and Marco Paul Lorenzetti create lively, layered scenes filled with detail, drawing the viewer deeply into their worlds. Together, these artists remind us that meaning does not always come from similarity. Sometimes, it comes from contrast, imagination, and the beauty of things that should not make sense but somehow do.
‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ opens today at Room57 Gallery in New York and is on view until July 3rd.
Featured artists include: Callum Eaton (@callumeats), Daniel Roibal (@daniroibal), Marco Paul Lorenzetti (@_marcopaull), and Olivier Souffrant (@0livier_).
#Room57Gallery @room57gallery #artcube

#artcubeevents ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at Room57 Gallery in New York presents a group exhibition featuring paintings by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant.
In a world where so little seems to make sense, we turn to art for joy, perspective, knowledge, and connection. This exhibition features works by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant, four artists with distinct, signature styles that differ greatly from one another.
These differences should be celebrated, not scolded. They are what create beauty in the world, and that beauty can be seen throughout this exhibition. While each artist’s work may not appear directly related to one another, they perfectly complement one another.
From Callum Eaton’s photorealistic Tulip, dramatically blown out of proportion, to Daniel Roibal’s serene abstractions exploring beauty through color and motion, a connection emerges when viewed with imagination. Up close, Callum’s painting reveals details so clear and enlarged that the image begins to feel abstract. From afar, Daniel Roibal’s paintings evoke the feeling of looking out onto a lush landscape, and somewhere within that imagined landscape, the tulip exists.
In contrast, Olivier Souffrant and Marco Paul Lorenzetti create lively, layered scenes filled with detail, drawing the viewer deeply into their worlds. Together, these artists remind us that meaning does not always come from similarity. Sometimes, it comes from contrast, imagination, and the beauty of things that should not make sense but somehow do.
‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ opens today at Room57 Gallery in New York and is on view until July 3rd.
Featured artists include: Callum Eaton (@callumeats), Daniel Roibal (@daniroibal), Marco Paul Lorenzetti (@_marcopaull), and Olivier Souffrant (@0livier_).
#Room57Gallery @room57gallery #artcube

#artcubeevents ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at Room57 Gallery in New York presents a group exhibition featuring paintings by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant.
In a world where so little seems to make sense, we turn to art for joy, perspective, knowledge, and connection. This exhibition features works by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant, four artists with distinct, signature styles that differ greatly from one another.
These differences should be celebrated, not scolded. They are what create beauty in the world, and that beauty can be seen throughout this exhibition. While each artist’s work may not appear directly related to one another, they perfectly complement one another.
From Callum Eaton’s photorealistic Tulip, dramatically blown out of proportion, to Daniel Roibal’s serene abstractions exploring beauty through color and motion, a connection emerges when viewed with imagination. Up close, Callum’s painting reveals details so clear and enlarged that the image begins to feel abstract. From afar, Daniel Roibal’s paintings evoke the feeling of looking out onto a lush landscape, and somewhere within that imagined landscape, the tulip exists.
In contrast, Olivier Souffrant and Marco Paul Lorenzetti create lively, layered scenes filled with detail, drawing the viewer deeply into their worlds. Together, these artists remind us that meaning does not always come from similarity. Sometimes, it comes from contrast, imagination, and the beauty of things that should not make sense but somehow do.
‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ opens today at Room57 Gallery in New York and is on view until July 3rd.
Featured artists include: Callum Eaton (@callumeats), Daniel Roibal (@daniroibal), Marco Paul Lorenzetti (@_marcopaull), and Olivier Souffrant (@0livier_).
#Room57Gallery @room57gallery #artcube

#artcubeevents ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at Room57 Gallery in New York presents a group exhibition featuring paintings by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant.
In a world where so little seems to make sense, we turn to art for joy, perspective, knowledge, and connection. This exhibition features works by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant, four artists with distinct, signature styles that differ greatly from one another.
These differences should be celebrated, not scolded. They are what create beauty in the world, and that beauty can be seen throughout this exhibition. While each artist’s work may not appear directly related to one another, they perfectly complement one another.
From Callum Eaton’s photorealistic Tulip, dramatically blown out of proportion, to Daniel Roibal’s serene abstractions exploring beauty through color and motion, a connection emerges when viewed with imagination. Up close, Callum’s painting reveals details so clear and enlarged that the image begins to feel abstract. From afar, Daniel Roibal’s paintings evoke the feeling of looking out onto a lush landscape, and somewhere within that imagined landscape, the tulip exists.
In contrast, Olivier Souffrant and Marco Paul Lorenzetti create lively, layered scenes filled with detail, drawing the viewer deeply into their worlds. Together, these artists remind us that meaning does not always come from similarity. Sometimes, it comes from contrast, imagination, and the beauty of things that should not make sense but somehow do.
‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ opens today at Room57 Gallery in New York and is on view until July 3rd.
Featured artists include: Callum Eaton (@callumeats), Daniel Roibal (@daniroibal), Marco Paul Lorenzetti (@_marcopaull), and Olivier Souffrant (@0livier_).
#Room57Gallery @room57gallery #artcube

#artcubeevents ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at Room57 Gallery in New York presents a group exhibition featuring paintings by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant.
In a world where so little seems to make sense, we turn to art for joy, perspective, knowledge, and connection. This exhibition features works by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant, four artists with distinct, signature styles that differ greatly from one another.
These differences should be celebrated, not scolded. They are what create beauty in the world, and that beauty can be seen throughout this exhibition. While each artist’s work may not appear directly related to one another, they perfectly complement one another.
From Callum Eaton’s photorealistic Tulip, dramatically blown out of proportion, to Daniel Roibal’s serene abstractions exploring beauty through color and motion, a connection emerges when viewed with imagination. Up close, Callum’s painting reveals details so clear and enlarged that the image begins to feel abstract. From afar, Daniel Roibal’s paintings evoke the feeling of looking out onto a lush landscape, and somewhere within that imagined landscape, the tulip exists.
In contrast, Olivier Souffrant and Marco Paul Lorenzetti create lively, layered scenes filled with detail, drawing the viewer deeply into their worlds. Together, these artists remind us that meaning does not always come from similarity. Sometimes, it comes from contrast, imagination, and the beauty of things that should not make sense but somehow do.
‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ opens today at Room57 Gallery in New York and is on view until July 3rd.
Featured artists include: Callum Eaton (@callumeats), Daniel Roibal (@daniroibal), Marco Paul Lorenzetti (@_marcopaull), and Olivier Souffrant (@0livier_).
#Room57Gallery @room57gallery #artcube

#artcubeevents ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at Room57 Gallery in New York presents a group exhibition featuring paintings by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant.
In a world where so little seems to make sense, we turn to art for joy, perspective, knowledge, and connection. This exhibition features works by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant, four artists with distinct, signature styles that differ greatly from one another.
These differences should be celebrated, not scolded. They are what create beauty in the world, and that beauty can be seen throughout this exhibition. While each artist’s work may not appear directly related to one another, they perfectly complement one another.
From Callum Eaton’s photorealistic Tulip, dramatically blown out of proportion, to Daniel Roibal’s serene abstractions exploring beauty through color and motion, a connection emerges when viewed with imagination. Up close, Callum’s painting reveals details so clear and enlarged that the image begins to feel abstract. From afar, Daniel Roibal’s paintings evoke the feeling of looking out onto a lush landscape, and somewhere within that imagined landscape, the tulip exists.
In contrast, Olivier Souffrant and Marco Paul Lorenzetti create lively, layered scenes filled with detail, drawing the viewer deeply into their worlds. Together, these artists remind us that meaning does not always come from similarity. Sometimes, it comes from contrast, imagination, and the beauty of things that should not make sense but somehow do.
‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ opens today at Room57 Gallery in New York and is on view until July 3rd.
Featured artists include: Callum Eaton (@callumeats), Daniel Roibal (@daniroibal), Marco Paul Lorenzetti (@_marcopaull), and Olivier Souffrant (@0livier_).
#Room57Gallery @room57gallery #artcube

#artcubeevents ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at Room57 Gallery in New York presents a group exhibition featuring paintings by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant.
In a world where so little seems to make sense, we turn to art for joy, perspective, knowledge, and connection. This exhibition features works by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant, four artists with distinct, signature styles that differ greatly from one another.
These differences should be celebrated, not scolded. They are what create beauty in the world, and that beauty can be seen throughout this exhibition. While each artist’s work may not appear directly related to one another, they perfectly complement one another.
From Callum Eaton’s photorealistic Tulip, dramatically blown out of proportion, to Daniel Roibal’s serene abstractions exploring beauty through color and motion, a connection emerges when viewed with imagination. Up close, Callum’s painting reveals details so clear and enlarged that the image begins to feel abstract. From afar, Daniel Roibal’s paintings evoke the feeling of looking out onto a lush landscape, and somewhere within that imagined landscape, the tulip exists.
In contrast, Olivier Souffrant and Marco Paul Lorenzetti create lively, layered scenes filled with detail, drawing the viewer deeply into their worlds. Together, these artists remind us that meaning does not always come from similarity. Sometimes, it comes from contrast, imagination, and the beauty of things that should not make sense but somehow do.
‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ opens today at Room57 Gallery in New York and is on view until July 3rd.
Featured artists include: Callum Eaton (@callumeats), Daniel Roibal (@daniroibal), Marco Paul Lorenzetti (@_marcopaull), and Olivier Souffrant (@0livier_).
#Room57Gallery @room57gallery #artcube

#artcubeevents ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at Room57 Gallery in New York presents a group exhibition featuring paintings by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant.
In a world where so little seems to make sense, we turn to art for joy, perspective, knowledge, and connection. This exhibition features works by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant, four artists with distinct, signature styles that differ greatly from one another.
These differences should be celebrated, not scolded. They are what create beauty in the world, and that beauty can be seen throughout this exhibition. While each artist’s work may not appear directly related to one another, they perfectly complement one another.
From Callum Eaton’s photorealistic Tulip, dramatically blown out of proportion, to Daniel Roibal’s serene abstractions exploring beauty through color and motion, a connection emerges when viewed with imagination. Up close, Callum’s painting reveals details so clear and enlarged that the image begins to feel abstract. From afar, Daniel Roibal’s paintings evoke the feeling of looking out onto a lush landscape, and somewhere within that imagined landscape, the tulip exists.
In contrast, Olivier Souffrant and Marco Paul Lorenzetti create lively, layered scenes filled with detail, drawing the viewer deeply into their worlds. Together, these artists remind us that meaning does not always come from similarity. Sometimes, it comes from contrast, imagination, and the beauty of things that should not make sense but somehow do.
‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ opens today at Room57 Gallery in New York and is on view until July 3rd.
Featured artists include: Callum Eaton (@callumeats), Daniel Roibal (@daniroibal), Marco Paul Lorenzetti (@_marcopaull), and Olivier Souffrant (@0livier_).
#Room57Gallery @room57gallery #artcube

#artcubeevents ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at Room57 Gallery in New York presents a group exhibition featuring paintings by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant.
In a world where so little seems to make sense, we turn to art for joy, perspective, knowledge, and connection. This exhibition features works by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant, four artists with distinct, signature styles that differ greatly from one another.
These differences should be celebrated, not scolded. They are what create beauty in the world, and that beauty can be seen throughout this exhibition. While each artist’s work may not appear directly related to one another, they perfectly complement one another.
From Callum Eaton’s photorealistic Tulip, dramatically blown out of proportion, to Daniel Roibal’s serene abstractions exploring beauty through color and motion, a connection emerges when viewed with imagination. Up close, Callum’s painting reveals details so clear and enlarged that the image begins to feel abstract. From afar, Daniel Roibal’s paintings evoke the feeling of looking out onto a lush landscape, and somewhere within that imagined landscape, the tulip exists.
In contrast, Olivier Souffrant and Marco Paul Lorenzetti create lively, layered scenes filled with detail, drawing the viewer deeply into their worlds. Together, these artists remind us that meaning does not always come from similarity. Sometimes, it comes from contrast, imagination, and the beauty of things that should not make sense but somehow do.
‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ opens today at Room57 Gallery in New York and is on view until July 3rd.
Featured artists include: Callum Eaton (@callumeats), Daniel Roibal (@daniroibal), Marco Paul Lorenzetti (@_marcopaull), and Olivier Souffrant (@0livier_).
#Room57Gallery @room57gallery #artcube

#artcubeevents ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at Room57 Gallery in New York presents a group exhibition featuring paintings by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant.
In a world where so little seems to make sense, we turn to art for joy, perspective, knowledge, and connection. This exhibition features works by Callum Eaton, Daniel Roibal, Marco Paul Lorenzetti, and Olivier Souffrant, four artists with distinct, signature styles that differ greatly from one another.
These differences should be celebrated, not scolded. They are what create beauty in the world, and that beauty can be seen throughout this exhibition. While each artist’s work may not appear directly related to one another, they perfectly complement one another.
From Callum Eaton’s photorealistic Tulip, dramatically blown out of proportion, to Daniel Roibal’s serene abstractions exploring beauty through color and motion, a connection emerges when viewed with imagination. Up close, Callum’s painting reveals details so clear and enlarged that the image begins to feel abstract. From afar, Daniel Roibal’s paintings evoke the feeling of looking out onto a lush landscape, and somewhere within that imagined landscape, the tulip exists.
In contrast, Olivier Souffrant and Marco Paul Lorenzetti create lively, layered scenes filled with detail, drawing the viewer deeply into their worlds. Together, these artists remind us that meaning does not always come from similarity. Sometimes, it comes from contrast, imagination, and the beauty of things that should not make sense but somehow do.
‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ opens today at Room57 Gallery in New York and is on view until July 3rd.
Featured artists include: Callum Eaton (@callumeats), Daniel Roibal (@daniroibal), Marco Paul Lorenzetti (@_marcopaull), and Olivier Souffrant (@0livier_).
#Room57Gallery @room57gallery #artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubeevents in New York this week (15 must-see shows and other events):
1. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair @154artfair
2. Aiza Ahmed @aizaahmedstudio at @halfgallery
3. Emma Webster @emma_webstah at @petzelgallery
4. Esther @esther.newyork
5. Firelei Baez @fireleibaez at @hauserwirth
6. Frieze at @friezeofficial
7. Giuseppe Penone at @gagosian
8. Independent @independent_hq
9. Kelly Akashi @citizenbong at @lisson_gallery
10. Lindsay Adams @lindsaybriadams at @seankellygallery
11. Lisa Yuskavage at @davidzwirner
12. ‘MAKE IT MAKE SENSE’ at @room57gallery
13. Martin Wong at @ppowgallery
14.NADA @newartdealers
15. TEFAF @tefaf
Did we miss an event? Let us know in the comments.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today (New York edition):
1. Alison Coplan (Curator) – Coplan is chief curator at Swiss Institute, building an intellectually wide-ranging program across ecology, institutional critique, and experimental publishing. @alicopes
2. Amy Griffin (Collector) – Griffin is a collector, Met trustee, and Gagosian board member whose cross-industry influence bridges art, philanthropy, and female-led entrepreneurship. @amygriffin
3. Claire Kim (Curator) – Kim is director of programs & exhibitions at Asia Art Archive in America, building a curatorial practice centered on diasporic identity, ancestral memory, and Asian art histories. @mediumrareclaire
4. Josh Fayer (Gallerist) – Fayer founded Room57 Gallery to democratize the gallery experience, showing art & design works in a home-like setting and providing emerging artists with exhibition opportunities. @jfayer @room57gallery
5. Lauren Wittels (Gallerist) – Wittels is a principal of Luhring Augustine, building its next chapter on long-term artist relationships and institutional depth. @laurenwittels
6. Megan Fox Kelly (Advisor) – Fox Kelly is an art advisor managing billions in assets for collectors, foundations, and estates, specializing in collection stewardship & artist legacy planning. @meganfoxkelly
7. Michi Jigarjian (Cultural entrepreneur) – Jigarjian is founder of WOAH, using art & community investment to drive social impact & equity across New York’s cultural institutions. @michijig
8. Sonya May Tamaddon (Curator) – Tamaddon is a curator & art advisor working across contemporary art and collectible design, bridging institutions & fairs with a cross-cultural curatorial lens. @sonyamay
9. Stephanie Sparling Williams (Curator) – Sparling Williams is a curator at the Brooklyn Museum, reframing the US art canon through Black feminist scholarship & collection reinstallation. @ssparlingwilliams
10. Tamsin Dillon (Curator) – Dillon is founder of Art in Public and one of the UK & US’s leading public art commissioners, with a practice spanning the London Underground to coastal commissions. @tamsindillon
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today (New York edition):
1. Alison Coplan (Curator) – Coplan is chief curator at Swiss Institute, building an intellectually wide-ranging program across ecology, institutional critique, and experimental publishing. @alicopes
2. Amy Griffin (Collector) – Griffin is a collector, Met trustee, and Gagosian board member whose cross-industry influence bridges art, philanthropy, and female-led entrepreneurship. @amygriffin
3. Claire Kim (Curator) – Kim is director of programs & exhibitions at Asia Art Archive in America, building a curatorial practice centered on diasporic identity, ancestral memory, and Asian art histories. @mediumrareclaire
4. Josh Fayer (Gallerist) – Fayer founded Room57 Gallery to democratize the gallery experience, showing art & design works in a home-like setting and providing emerging artists with exhibition opportunities. @jfayer @room57gallery
5. Lauren Wittels (Gallerist) – Wittels is a principal of Luhring Augustine, building its next chapter on long-term artist relationships and institutional depth. @laurenwittels
6. Megan Fox Kelly (Advisor) – Fox Kelly is an art advisor managing billions in assets for collectors, foundations, and estates, specializing in collection stewardship & artist legacy planning. @meganfoxkelly
7. Michi Jigarjian (Cultural entrepreneur) – Jigarjian is founder of WOAH, using art & community investment to drive social impact & equity across New York’s cultural institutions. @michijig
8. Sonya May Tamaddon (Curator) – Tamaddon is a curator & art advisor working across contemporary art and collectible design, bridging institutions & fairs with a cross-cultural curatorial lens. @sonyamay
9. Stephanie Sparling Williams (Curator) – Sparling Williams is a curator at the Brooklyn Museum, reframing the US art canon through Black feminist scholarship & collection reinstallation. @ssparlingwilliams
10. Tamsin Dillon (Curator) – Dillon is founder of Art in Public and one of the UK & US’s leading public art commissioners, with a practice spanning the London Underground to coastal commissions. @tamsindillon
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today (New York edition):
1. Alison Coplan (Curator) – Coplan is chief curator at Swiss Institute, building an intellectually wide-ranging program across ecology, institutional critique, and experimental publishing. @alicopes
2. Amy Griffin (Collector) – Griffin is a collector, Met trustee, and Gagosian board member whose cross-industry influence bridges art, philanthropy, and female-led entrepreneurship. @amygriffin
3. Claire Kim (Curator) – Kim is director of programs & exhibitions at Asia Art Archive in America, building a curatorial practice centered on diasporic identity, ancestral memory, and Asian art histories. @mediumrareclaire
4. Josh Fayer (Gallerist) – Fayer founded Room57 Gallery to democratize the gallery experience, showing art & design works in a home-like setting and providing emerging artists with exhibition opportunities. @jfayer @room57gallery
5. Lauren Wittels (Gallerist) – Wittels is a principal of Luhring Augustine, building its next chapter on long-term artist relationships and institutional depth. @laurenwittels
6. Megan Fox Kelly (Advisor) – Fox Kelly is an art advisor managing billions in assets for collectors, foundations, and estates, specializing in collection stewardship & artist legacy planning. @meganfoxkelly
7. Michi Jigarjian (Cultural entrepreneur) – Jigarjian is founder of WOAH, using art & community investment to drive social impact & equity across New York’s cultural institutions. @michijig
8. Sonya May Tamaddon (Curator) – Tamaddon is a curator & art advisor working across contemporary art and collectible design, bridging institutions & fairs with a cross-cultural curatorial lens. @sonyamay
9. Stephanie Sparling Williams (Curator) – Sparling Williams is a curator at the Brooklyn Museum, reframing the US art canon through Black feminist scholarship & collection reinstallation. @ssparlingwilliams
10. Tamsin Dillon (Curator) – Dillon is founder of Art in Public and one of the UK & US’s leading public art commissioners, with a practice spanning the London Underground to coastal commissions. @tamsindillon
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today (New York edition):
1. Alison Coplan (Curator) – Coplan is chief curator at Swiss Institute, building an intellectually wide-ranging program across ecology, institutional critique, and experimental publishing. @alicopes
2. Amy Griffin (Collector) – Griffin is a collector, Met trustee, and Gagosian board member whose cross-industry influence bridges art, philanthropy, and female-led entrepreneurship. @amygriffin
3. Claire Kim (Curator) – Kim is director of programs & exhibitions at Asia Art Archive in America, building a curatorial practice centered on diasporic identity, ancestral memory, and Asian art histories. @mediumrareclaire
4. Josh Fayer (Gallerist) – Fayer founded Room57 Gallery to democratize the gallery experience, showing art & design works in a home-like setting and providing emerging artists with exhibition opportunities. @jfayer @room57gallery
5. Lauren Wittels (Gallerist) – Wittels is a principal of Luhring Augustine, building its next chapter on long-term artist relationships and institutional depth. @laurenwittels
6. Megan Fox Kelly (Advisor) – Fox Kelly is an art advisor managing billions in assets for collectors, foundations, and estates, specializing in collection stewardship & artist legacy planning. @meganfoxkelly
7. Michi Jigarjian (Cultural entrepreneur) – Jigarjian is founder of WOAH, using art & community investment to drive social impact & equity across New York’s cultural institutions. @michijig
8. Sonya May Tamaddon (Curator) – Tamaddon is a curator & art advisor working across contemporary art and collectible design, bridging institutions & fairs with a cross-cultural curatorial lens. @sonyamay
9. Stephanie Sparling Williams (Curator) – Sparling Williams is a curator at the Brooklyn Museum, reframing the US art canon through Black feminist scholarship & collection reinstallation. @ssparlingwilliams
10. Tamsin Dillon (Curator) – Dillon is founder of Art in Public and one of the UK & US’s leading public art commissioners, with a practice spanning the London Underground to coastal commissions. @tamsindillon
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today (New York edition):
1. Alison Coplan (Curator) – Coplan is chief curator at Swiss Institute, building an intellectually wide-ranging program across ecology, institutional critique, and experimental publishing. @alicopes
2. Amy Griffin (Collector) – Griffin is a collector, Met trustee, and Gagosian board member whose cross-industry influence bridges art, philanthropy, and female-led entrepreneurship. @amygriffin
3. Claire Kim (Curator) – Kim is director of programs & exhibitions at Asia Art Archive in America, building a curatorial practice centered on diasporic identity, ancestral memory, and Asian art histories. @mediumrareclaire
4. Josh Fayer (Gallerist) – Fayer founded Room57 Gallery to democratize the gallery experience, showing art & design works in a home-like setting and providing emerging artists with exhibition opportunities. @jfayer @room57gallery
5. Lauren Wittels (Gallerist) – Wittels is a principal of Luhring Augustine, building its next chapter on long-term artist relationships and institutional depth. @laurenwittels
6. Megan Fox Kelly (Advisor) – Fox Kelly is an art advisor managing billions in assets for collectors, foundations, and estates, specializing in collection stewardship & artist legacy planning. @meganfoxkelly
7. Michi Jigarjian (Cultural entrepreneur) – Jigarjian is founder of WOAH, using art & community investment to drive social impact & equity across New York’s cultural institutions. @michijig
8. Sonya May Tamaddon (Curator) – Tamaddon is a curator & art advisor working across contemporary art and collectible design, bridging institutions & fairs with a cross-cultural curatorial lens. @sonyamay
9. Stephanie Sparling Williams (Curator) – Sparling Williams is a curator at the Brooklyn Museum, reframing the US art canon through Black feminist scholarship & collection reinstallation. @ssparlingwilliams
10. Tamsin Dillon (Curator) – Dillon is founder of Art in Public and one of the UK & US’s leading public art commissioners, with a practice spanning the London Underground to coastal commissions. @tamsindillon
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today (New York edition):
1. Alison Coplan (Curator) – Coplan is chief curator at Swiss Institute, building an intellectually wide-ranging program across ecology, institutional critique, and experimental publishing. @alicopes
2. Amy Griffin (Collector) – Griffin is a collector, Met trustee, and Gagosian board member whose cross-industry influence bridges art, philanthropy, and female-led entrepreneurship. @amygriffin
3. Claire Kim (Curator) – Kim is director of programs & exhibitions at Asia Art Archive in America, building a curatorial practice centered on diasporic identity, ancestral memory, and Asian art histories. @mediumrareclaire
4. Josh Fayer (Gallerist) – Fayer founded Room57 Gallery to democratize the gallery experience, showing art & design works in a home-like setting and providing emerging artists with exhibition opportunities. @jfayer @room57gallery
5. Lauren Wittels (Gallerist) – Wittels is a principal of Luhring Augustine, building its next chapter on long-term artist relationships and institutional depth. @laurenwittels
6. Megan Fox Kelly (Advisor) – Fox Kelly is an art advisor managing billions in assets for collectors, foundations, and estates, specializing in collection stewardship & artist legacy planning. @meganfoxkelly
7. Michi Jigarjian (Cultural entrepreneur) – Jigarjian is founder of WOAH, using art & community investment to drive social impact & equity across New York’s cultural institutions. @michijig
8. Sonya May Tamaddon (Curator) – Tamaddon is a curator & art advisor working across contemporary art and collectible design, bridging institutions & fairs with a cross-cultural curatorial lens. @sonyamay
9. Stephanie Sparling Williams (Curator) – Sparling Williams is a curator at the Brooklyn Museum, reframing the US art canon through Black feminist scholarship & collection reinstallation. @ssparlingwilliams
10. Tamsin Dillon (Curator) – Dillon is founder of Art in Public and one of the UK & US’s leading public art commissioners, with a practice spanning the London Underground to coastal commissions. @tamsindillon
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today (New York edition):
1. Alison Coplan (Curator) – Coplan is chief curator at Swiss Institute, building an intellectually wide-ranging program across ecology, institutional critique, and experimental publishing. @alicopes
2. Amy Griffin (Collector) – Griffin is a collector, Met trustee, and Gagosian board member whose cross-industry influence bridges art, philanthropy, and female-led entrepreneurship. @amygriffin
3. Claire Kim (Curator) – Kim is director of programs & exhibitions at Asia Art Archive in America, building a curatorial practice centered on diasporic identity, ancestral memory, and Asian art histories. @mediumrareclaire
4. Josh Fayer (Gallerist) – Fayer founded Room57 Gallery to democratize the gallery experience, showing art & design works in a home-like setting and providing emerging artists with exhibition opportunities. @jfayer @room57gallery
5. Lauren Wittels (Gallerist) – Wittels is a principal of Luhring Augustine, building its next chapter on long-term artist relationships and institutional depth. @laurenwittels
6. Megan Fox Kelly (Advisor) – Fox Kelly is an art advisor managing billions in assets for collectors, foundations, and estates, specializing in collection stewardship & artist legacy planning. @meganfoxkelly
7. Michi Jigarjian (Cultural entrepreneur) – Jigarjian is founder of WOAH, using art & community investment to drive social impact & equity across New York’s cultural institutions. @michijig
8. Sonya May Tamaddon (Curator) – Tamaddon is a curator & art advisor working across contemporary art and collectible design, bridging institutions & fairs with a cross-cultural curatorial lens. @sonyamay
9. Stephanie Sparling Williams (Curator) – Sparling Williams is a curator at the Brooklyn Museum, reframing the US art canon through Black feminist scholarship & collection reinstallation. @ssparlingwilliams
10. Tamsin Dillon (Curator) – Dillon is founder of Art in Public and one of the UK & US’s leading public art commissioners, with a practice spanning the London Underground to coastal commissions. @tamsindillon
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today (New York edition):
1. Alison Coplan (Curator) – Coplan is chief curator at Swiss Institute, building an intellectually wide-ranging program across ecology, institutional critique, and experimental publishing. @alicopes
2. Amy Griffin (Collector) – Griffin is a collector, Met trustee, and Gagosian board member whose cross-industry influence bridges art, philanthropy, and female-led entrepreneurship. @amygriffin
3. Claire Kim (Curator) – Kim is director of programs & exhibitions at Asia Art Archive in America, building a curatorial practice centered on diasporic identity, ancestral memory, and Asian art histories. @mediumrareclaire
4. Josh Fayer (Gallerist) – Fayer founded Room57 Gallery to democratize the gallery experience, showing art & design works in a home-like setting and providing emerging artists with exhibition opportunities. @jfayer @room57gallery
5. Lauren Wittels (Gallerist) – Wittels is a principal of Luhring Augustine, building its next chapter on long-term artist relationships and institutional depth. @laurenwittels
6. Megan Fox Kelly (Advisor) – Fox Kelly is an art advisor managing billions in assets for collectors, foundations, and estates, specializing in collection stewardship & artist legacy planning. @meganfoxkelly
7. Michi Jigarjian (Cultural entrepreneur) – Jigarjian is founder of WOAH, using art & community investment to drive social impact & equity across New York’s cultural institutions. @michijig
8. Sonya May Tamaddon (Curator) – Tamaddon is a curator & art advisor working across contemporary art and collectible design, bridging institutions & fairs with a cross-cultural curatorial lens. @sonyamay
9. Stephanie Sparling Williams (Curator) – Sparling Williams is a curator at the Brooklyn Museum, reframing the US art canon through Black feminist scholarship & collection reinstallation. @ssparlingwilliams
10. Tamsin Dillon (Curator) – Dillon is founder of Art in Public and one of the UK & US’s leading public art commissioners, with a practice spanning the London Underground to coastal commissions. @tamsindillon
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today (New York edition):
1. Alison Coplan (Curator) – Coplan is chief curator at Swiss Institute, building an intellectually wide-ranging program across ecology, institutional critique, and experimental publishing. @alicopes
2. Amy Griffin (Collector) – Griffin is a collector, Met trustee, and Gagosian board member whose cross-industry influence bridges art, philanthropy, and female-led entrepreneurship. @amygriffin
3. Claire Kim (Curator) – Kim is director of programs & exhibitions at Asia Art Archive in America, building a curatorial practice centered on diasporic identity, ancestral memory, and Asian art histories. @mediumrareclaire
4. Josh Fayer (Gallerist) – Fayer founded Room57 Gallery to democratize the gallery experience, showing art & design works in a home-like setting and providing emerging artists with exhibition opportunities. @jfayer @room57gallery
5. Lauren Wittels (Gallerist) – Wittels is a principal of Luhring Augustine, building its next chapter on long-term artist relationships and institutional depth. @laurenwittels
6. Megan Fox Kelly (Advisor) – Fox Kelly is an art advisor managing billions in assets for collectors, foundations, and estates, specializing in collection stewardship & artist legacy planning. @meganfoxkelly
7. Michi Jigarjian (Cultural entrepreneur) – Jigarjian is founder of WOAH, using art & community investment to drive social impact & equity across New York’s cultural institutions. @michijig
8. Sonya May Tamaddon (Curator) – Tamaddon is a curator & art advisor working across contemporary art and collectible design, bridging institutions & fairs with a cross-cultural curatorial lens. @sonyamay
9. Stephanie Sparling Williams (Curator) – Sparling Williams is a curator at the Brooklyn Museum, reframing the US art canon through Black feminist scholarship & collection reinstallation. @ssparlingwilliams
10. Tamsin Dillon (Curator) – Dillon is founder of Art in Public and one of the UK & US’s leading public art commissioners, with a practice spanning the London Underground to coastal commissions. @tamsindillon
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today (New York edition):
1. Alison Coplan (Curator) – Coplan is chief curator at Swiss Institute, building an intellectually wide-ranging program across ecology, institutional critique, and experimental publishing. @alicopes
2. Amy Griffin (Collector) – Griffin is a collector, Met trustee, and Gagosian board member whose cross-industry influence bridges art, philanthropy, and female-led entrepreneurship. @amygriffin
3. Claire Kim (Curator) – Kim is director of programs & exhibitions at Asia Art Archive in America, building a curatorial practice centered on diasporic identity, ancestral memory, and Asian art histories. @mediumrareclaire
4. Josh Fayer (Gallerist) – Fayer founded Room57 Gallery to democratize the gallery experience, showing art & design works in a home-like setting and providing emerging artists with exhibition opportunities. @jfayer @room57gallery
5. Lauren Wittels (Gallerist) – Wittels is a principal of Luhring Augustine, building its next chapter on long-term artist relationships and institutional depth. @laurenwittels
6. Megan Fox Kelly (Advisor) – Fox Kelly is an art advisor managing billions in assets for collectors, foundations, and estates, specializing in collection stewardship & artist legacy planning. @meganfoxkelly
7. Michi Jigarjian (Cultural entrepreneur) – Jigarjian is founder of WOAH, using art & community investment to drive social impact & equity across New York’s cultural institutions. @michijig
8. Sonya May Tamaddon (Curator) – Tamaddon is a curator & art advisor working across contemporary art and collectible design, bridging institutions & fairs with a cross-cultural curatorial lens. @sonyamay
9. Stephanie Sparling Williams (Curator) – Sparling Williams is a curator at the Brooklyn Museum, reframing the US art canon through Black feminist scholarship & collection reinstallation. @ssparlingwilliams
10. Tamsin Dillon (Curator) – Dillon is founder of Art in Public and one of the UK & US’s leading public art commissioners, with a practice spanning the London Underground to coastal commissions. @tamsindillon
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubepeople our weekly feature of 10 individuals shaping the art world today (New York edition):
1. Alison Coplan (Curator) – Coplan is chief curator at Swiss Institute, building an intellectually wide-ranging program across ecology, institutional critique, and experimental publishing. @alicopes
2. Amy Griffin (Collector) – Griffin is a collector, Met trustee, and Gagosian board member whose cross-industry influence bridges art, philanthropy, and female-led entrepreneurship. @amygriffin
3. Claire Kim (Curator) – Kim is director of programs & exhibitions at Asia Art Archive in America, building a curatorial practice centered on diasporic identity, ancestral memory, and Asian art histories. @mediumrareclaire
4. Josh Fayer (Gallerist) – Fayer founded Room57 Gallery to democratize the gallery experience, showing art & design works in a home-like setting and providing emerging artists with exhibition opportunities. @jfayer @room57gallery
5. Lauren Wittels (Gallerist) – Wittels is a principal of Luhring Augustine, building its next chapter on long-term artist relationships and institutional depth. @laurenwittels
6. Megan Fox Kelly (Advisor) – Fox Kelly is an art advisor managing billions in assets for collectors, foundations, and estates, specializing in collection stewardship & artist legacy planning. @meganfoxkelly
7. Michi Jigarjian (Cultural entrepreneur) – Jigarjian is founder of WOAH, using art & community investment to drive social impact & equity across New York’s cultural institutions. @michijig
8. Sonya May Tamaddon (Curator) – Tamaddon is a curator & art advisor working across contemporary art and collectible design, bridging institutions & fairs with a cross-cultural curatorial lens. @sonyamay
9. Stephanie Sparling Williams (Curator) – Sparling Williams is a curator at the Brooklyn Museum, reframing the US art canon through Black feminist scholarship & collection reinstallation. @ssparlingwilliams
10. Tamsin Dillon (Curator) – Dillon is founder of Art in Public and one of the UK & US’s leading public art commissioners, with a practice spanning the London Underground to coastal commissions. @tamsindillon
Give them a follow.
#artcube

#artcubeloves #MatthewWong (1984-2019) who was a self-taught painter whose richly textured, dreamlike landscapes fuse Eastern and Western art history, with compulsive mark-making recalling the dotwork of Seurat and Kusama, while his compression of space draws on Chinese scroll painting traditions. Drawing on Van Gogh, Matisse, Bonnard, and Chinese literati painters like Shitao and Bada Shanren, his signature style blends radiant color, intricate mark-making, and motifs of solitude, featuring nocturnal scenes, winding paths, and lone figures. Loneliness, isolation, and mental health struggles marked his life and permeated his work, with painting functioning for him as what he called a ‘last resort,’ a deeply personal means of channeling emotional and psychological experience. Wong currently has a solo show at Palazzo Tiepolo Passi in Venice. matthewwongfoundation
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wong’s work: dreamlike landscapes, vibrating Fauvist hues, emotional seismographs
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Cris McCall (Art advisor, New York) @mccallartadvisory
+ Dennis Freedman (Collector, New York) @dennisfreedmannyc10
+ Leslie Gerber-Seid (Art advisor, New York) @gerberseid
#artcube

#artcubeloves #MatthewWong (1984-2019) who was a self-taught painter whose richly textured, dreamlike landscapes fuse Eastern and Western art history, with compulsive mark-making recalling the dotwork of Seurat and Kusama, while his compression of space draws on Chinese scroll painting traditions. Drawing on Van Gogh, Matisse, Bonnard, and Chinese literati painters like Shitao and Bada Shanren, his signature style blends radiant color, intricate mark-making, and motifs of solitude, featuring nocturnal scenes, winding paths, and lone figures. Loneliness, isolation, and mental health struggles marked his life and permeated his work, with painting functioning for him as what he called a ‘last resort,’ a deeply personal means of channeling emotional and psychological experience. Wong currently has a solo show at Palazzo Tiepolo Passi in Venice. matthewwongfoundation
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wong’s work: dreamlike landscapes, vibrating Fauvist hues, emotional seismographs
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Cris McCall (Art advisor, New York) @mccallartadvisory
+ Dennis Freedman (Collector, New York) @dennisfreedmannyc10
+ Leslie Gerber-Seid (Art advisor, New York) @gerberseid
#artcube

#artcubeloves #MatthewWong (1984-2019) who was a self-taught painter whose richly textured, dreamlike landscapes fuse Eastern and Western art history, with compulsive mark-making recalling the dotwork of Seurat and Kusama, while his compression of space draws on Chinese scroll painting traditions. Drawing on Van Gogh, Matisse, Bonnard, and Chinese literati painters like Shitao and Bada Shanren, his signature style blends radiant color, intricate mark-making, and motifs of solitude, featuring nocturnal scenes, winding paths, and lone figures. Loneliness, isolation, and mental health struggles marked his life and permeated his work, with painting functioning for him as what he called a ‘last resort,’ a deeply personal means of channeling emotional and psychological experience. Wong currently has a solo show at Palazzo Tiepolo Passi in Venice. matthewwongfoundation
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wong’s work: dreamlike landscapes, vibrating Fauvist hues, emotional seismographs
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Cris McCall (Art advisor, New York) @mccallartadvisory
+ Dennis Freedman (Collector, New York) @dennisfreedmannyc10
+ Leslie Gerber-Seid (Art advisor, New York) @gerberseid
#artcube

#artcubeloves #MatthewWong (1984-2019) who was a self-taught painter whose richly textured, dreamlike landscapes fuse Eastern and Western art history, with compulsive mark-making recalling the dotwork of Seurat and Kusama, while his compression of space draws on Chinese scroll painting traditions. Drawing on Van Gogh, Matisse, Bonnard, and Chinese literati painters like Shitao and Bada Shanren, his signature style blends radiant color, intricate mark-making, and motifs of solitude, featuring nocturnal scenes, winding paths, and lone figures. Loneliness, isolation, and mental health struggles marked his life and permeated his work, with painting functioning for him as what he called a ‘last resort,’ a deeply personal means of channeling emotional and psychological experience. Wong currently has a solo show at Palazzo Tiepolo Passi in Venice. matthewwongfoundation
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wong’s work: dreamlike landscapes, vibrating Fauvist hues, emotional seismographs
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Cris McCall (Art advisor, New York) @mccallartadvisory
+ Dennis Freedman (Collector, New York) @dennisfreedmannyc10
+ Leslie Gerber-Seid (Art advisor, New York) @gerberseid
#artcube

#artcubeloves #MatthewWong (1984-2019) who was a self-taught painter whose richly textured, dreamlike landscapes fuse Eastern and Western art history, with compulsive mark-making recalling the dotwork of Seurat and Kusama, while his compression of space draws on Chinese scroll painting traditions. Drawing on Van Gogh, Matisse, Bonnard, and Chinese literati painters like Shitao and Bada Shanren, his signature style blends radiant color, intricate mark-making, and motifs of solitude, featuring nocturnal scenes, winding paths, and lone figures. Loneliness, isolation, and mental health struggles marked his life and permeated his work, with painting functioning for him as what he called a ‘last resort,’ a deeply personal means of channeling emotional and psychological experience. Wong currently has a solo show at Palazzo Tiepolo Passi in Venice. matthewwongfoundation
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wong’s work: dreamlike landscapes, vibrating Fauvist hues, emotional seismographs
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Cris McCall (Art advisor, New York) @mccallartadvisory
+ Dennis Freedman (Collector, New York) @dennisfreedmannyc10
+ Leslie Gerber-Seid (Art advisor, New York) @gerberseid
#artcube

#artcubeloves #MatthewWong (1984-2019) who was a self-taught painter whose richly textured, dreamlike landscapes fuse Eastern and Western art history, with compulsive mark-making recalling the dotwork of Seurat and Kusama, while his compression of space draws on Chinese scroll painting traditions. Drawing on Van Gogh, Matisse, Bonnard, and Chinese literati painters like Shitao and Bada Shanren, his signature style blends radiant color, intricate mark-making, and motifs of solitude, featuring nocturnal scenes, winding paths, and lone figures. Loneliness, isolation, and mental health struggles marked his life and permeated his work, with painting functioning for him as what he called a ‘last resort,’ a deeply personal means of channeling emotional and psychological experience. Wong currently has a solo show at Palazzo Tiepolo Passi in Venice. matthewwongfoundation
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wong’s work: dreamlike landscapes, vibrating Fauvist hues, emotional seismographs
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Cris McCall (Art advisor, New York) @mccallartadvisory
+ Dennis Freedman (Collector, New York) @dennisfreedmannyc10
+ Leslie Gerber-Seid (Art advisor, New York) @gerberseid
#artcube

#artcubeloves #MatthewWong (1984-2019) who was a self-taught painter whose richly textured, dreamlike landscapes fuse Eastern and Western art history, with compulsive mark-making recalling the dotwork of Seurat and Kusama, while his compression of space draws on Chinese scroll painting traditions. Drawing on Van Gogh, Matisse, Bonnard, and Chinese literati painters like Shitao and Bada Shanren, his signature style blends radiant color, intricate mark-making, and motifs of solitude, featuring nocturnal scenes, winding paths, and lone figures. Loneliness, isolation, and mental health struggles marked his life and permeated his work, with painting functioning for him as what he called a ‘last resort,’ a deeply personal means of channeling emotional and psychological experience. Wong currently has a solo show at Palazzo Tiepolo Passi in Venice. matthewwongfoundation
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wong’s work: dreamlike landscapes, vibrating Fauvist hues, emotional seismographs
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Cris McCall (Art advisor, New York) @mccallartadvisory
+ Dennis Freedman (Collector, New York) @dennisfreedmannyc10
+ Leslie Gerber-Seid (Art advisor, New York) @gerberseid
#artcube

#artcubeloves #MatthewWong (1984-2019) who was a self-taught painter whose richly textured, dreamlike landscapes fuse Eastern and Western art history, with compulsive mark-making recalling the dotwork of Seurat and Kusama, while his compression of space draws on Chinese scroll painting traditions. Drawing on Van Gogh, Matisse, Bonnard, and Chinese literati painters like Shitao and Bada Shanren, his signature style blends radiant color, intricate mark-making, and motifs of solitude, featuring nocturnal scenes, winding paths, and lone figures. Loneliness, isolation, and mental health struggles marked his life and permeated his work, with painting functioning for him as what he called a ‘last resort,’ a deeply personal means of channeling emotional and psychological experience. Wong currently has a solo show at Palazzo Tiepolo Passi in Venice. matthewwongfoundation
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wong’s work: dreamlike landscapes, vibrating Fauvist hues, emotional seismographs
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Cris McCall (Art advisor, New York) @mccallartadvisory
+ Dennis Freedman (Collector, New York) @dennisfreedmannyc10
+ Leslie Gerber-Seid (Art advisor, New York) @gerberseid
#artcube

#artcubeloves #MatthewWong (1984-2019) who was a self-taught painter whose richly textured, dreamlike landscapes fuse Eastern and Western art history, with compulsive mark-making recalling the dotwork of Seurat and Kusama, while his compression of space draws on Chinese scroll painting traditions. Drawing on Van Gogh, Matisse, Bonnard, and Chinese literati painters like Shitao and Bada Shanren, his signature style blends radiant color, intricate mark-making, and motifs of solitude, featuring nocturnal scenes, winding paths, and lone figures. Loneliness, isolation, and mental health struggles marked his life and permeated his work, with painting functioning for him as what he called a ‘last resort,’ a deeply personal means of channeling emotional and psychological experience. Wong currently has a solo show at Palazzo Tiepolo Passi in Venice. matthewwongfoundation
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wong’s work: dreamlike landscapes, vibrating Fauvist hues, emotional seismographs
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Cris McCall (Art advisor, New York) @mccallartadvisory
+ Dennis Freedman (Collector, New York) @dennisfreedmannyc10
+ Leslie Gerber-Seid (Art advisor, New York) @gerberseid
#artcube

#artcubeloves #MatthewWong (1984-2019) who was a self-taught painter whose richly textured, dreamlike landscapes fuse Eastern and Western art history, with compulsive mark-making recalling the dotwork of Seurat and Kusama, while his compression of space draws on Chinese scroll painting traditions. Drawing on Van Gogh, Matisse, Bonnard, and Chinese literati painters like Shitao and Bada Shanren, his signature style blends radiant color, intricate mark-making, and motifs of solitude, featuring nocturnal scenes, winding paths, and lone figures. Loneliness, isolation, and mental health struggles marked his life and permeated his work, with painting functioning for him as what he called a ‘last resort,’ a deeply personal means of channeling emotional and psychological experience. Wong currently has a solo show at Palazzo Tiepolo Passi in Venice. matthewwongfoundation
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wong’s work: dreamlike landscapes, vibrating Fauvist hues, emotional seismographs
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Cris McCall (Art advisor, New York) @mccallartadvisory
+ Dennis Freedman (Collector, New York) @dennisfreedmannyc10
+ Leslie Gerber-Seid (Art advisor, New York) @gerberseid
#artcube

#artcubeloves #HernanBas who creates paintings, works on paper, and installations that weave adolescent adventures with classical poetry, mythology, the paranormal, and literature, drawing on the Romantic era’s glorification of nature and the Decadent movement’s nihilism and excess. His androgynous male protagonists, suspended between adolescence and adulthood in a state he calls ‘fag limbo,’ inhabit lush, dreamlike landscapes charged with implicit eroticism, reinterpreting classical painting from a queer perspective. His process involves deep research through reading and film, after which he ‘remixes’ his influences, sampling literary and visual sources until they become entirely his own. Bas currently has a solo show at Ca’ Pesaro in Venice. @hernanbas @museocapesaro
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Bas’s work: male androgynous dandy, romantic nihilism, Southern Gothic tradition
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Glenn Scott Wright (Partner at Victoria Miro, London) @glennscottwright
+ Jang-Uk Lee (Chief Curator at Space K, Seoul) @janguklee.art
+ Ralph Tawil (Collector, New York) @ralphtawil_
#artcube

#artcubeloves #HernanBas who creates paintings, works on paper, and installations that weave adolescent adventures with classical poetry, mythology, the paranormal, and literature, drawing on the Romantic era’s glorification of nature and the Decadent movement’s nihilism and excess. His androgynous male protagonists, suspended between adolescence and adulthood in a state he calls ‘fag limbo,’ inhabit lush, dreamlike landscapes charged with implicit eroticism, reinterpreting classical painting from a queer perspective. His process involves deep research through reading and film, after which he ‘remixes’ his influences, sampling literary and visual sources until they become entirely his own. Bas currently has a solo show at Ca’ Pesaro in Venice. @hernanbas @museocapesaro
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Bas’s work: male androgynous dandy, romantic nihilism, Southern Gothic tradition
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Glenn Scott Wright (Partner at Victoria Miro, London) @glennscottwright
+ Jang-Uk Lee (Chief Curator at Space K, Seoul) @janguklee.art
+ Ralph Tawil (Collector, New York) @ralphtawil_
#artcube

#artcubeloves #HernanBas who creates paintings, works on paper, and installations that weave adolescent adventures with classical poetry, mythology, the paranormal, and literature, drawing on the Romantic era’s glorification of nature and the Decadent movement’s nihilism and excess. His androgynous male protagonists, suspended between adolescence and adulthood in a state he calls ‘fag limbo,’ inhabit lush, dreamlike landscapes charged with implicit eroticism, reinterpreting classical painting from a queer perspective. His process involves deep research through reading and film, after which he ‘remixes’ his influences, sampling literary and visual sources until they become entirely his own. Bas currently has a solo show at Ca’ Pesaro in Venice. @hernanbas @museocapesaro
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Bas’s work: male androgynous dandy, romantic nihilism, Southern Gothic tradition
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Glenn Scott Wright (Partner at Victoria Miro, London) @glennscottwright
+ Jang-Uk Lee (Chief Curator at Space K, Seoul) @janguklee.art
+ Ralph Tawil (Collector, New York) @ralphtawil_
#artcube

#artcubeloves #HernanBas who creates paintings, works on paper, and installations that weave adolescent adventures with classical poetry, mythology, the paranormal, and literature, drawing on the Romantic era’s glorification of nature and the Decadent movement’s nihilism and excess. His androgynous male protagonists, suspended between adolescence and adulthood in a state he calls ‘fag limbo,’ inhabit lush, dreamlike landscapes charged with implicit eroticism, reinterpreting classical painting from a queer perspective. His process involves deep research through reading and film, after which he ‘remixes’ his influences, sampling literary and visual sources until they become entirely his own. Bas currently has a solo show at Ca’ Pesaro in Venice. @hernanbas @museocapesaro
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Bas’s work: male androgynous dandy, romantic nihilism, Southern Gothic tradition
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Glenn Scott Wright (Partner at Victoria Miro, London) @glennscottwright
+ Jang-Uk Lee (Chief Curator at Space K, Seoul) @janguklee.art
+ Ralph Tawil (Collector, New York) @ralphtawil_
#artcube

#artcubeloves #HernanBas who creates paintings, works on paper, and installations that weave adolescent adventures with classical poetry, mythology, the paranormal, and literature, drawing on the Romantic era’s glorification of nature and the Decadent movement’s nihilism and excess. His androgynous male protagonists, suspended between adolescence and adulthood in a state he calls ‘fag limbo,’ inhabit lush, dreamlike landscapes charged with implicit eroticism, reinterpreting classical painting from a queer perspective. His process involves deep research through reading and film, after which he ‘remixes’ his influences, sampling literary and visual sources until they become entirely his own. Bas currently has a solo show at Ca’ Pesaro in Venice. @hernanbas @museocapesaro
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Bas’s work: male androgynous dandy, romantic nihilism, Southern Gothic tradition
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Glenn Scott Wright (Partner at Victoria Miro, London) @glennscottwright
+ Jang-Uk Lee (Chief Curator at Space K, Seoul) @janguklee.art
+ Ralph Tawil (Collector, New York) @ralphtawil_
#artcube

#artcubeloves #HernanBas who creates paintings, works on paper, and installations that weave adolescent adventures with classical poetry, mythology, the paranormal, and literature, drawing on the Romantic era’s glorification of nature and the Decadent movement’s nihilism and excess. His androgynous male protagonists, suspended between adolescence and adulthood in a state he calls ‘fag limbo,’ inhabit lush, dreamlike landscapes charged with implicit eroticism, reinterpreting classical painting from a queer perspective. His process involves deep research through reading and film, after which he ‘remixes’ his influences, sampling literary and visual sources until they become entirely his own. Bas currently has a solo show at Ca’ Pesaro in Venice. @hernanbas @museocapesaro
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Bas’s work: male androgynous dandy, romantic nihilism, Southern Gothic tradition
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Glenn Scott Wright (Partner at Victoria Miro, London) @glennscottwright
+ Jang-Uk Lee (Chief Curator at Space K, Seoul) @janguklee.art
+ Ralph Tawil (Collector, New York) @ralphtawil_
#artcube

#artcubeloves #HernanBas who creates paintings, works on paper, and installations that weave adolescent adventures with classical poetry, mythology, the paranormal, and literature, drawing on the Romantic era’s glorification of nature and the Decadent movement’s nihilism and excess. His androgynous male protagonists, suspended between adolescence and adulthood in a state he calls ‘fag limbo,’ inhabit lush, dreamlike landscapes charged with implicit eroticism, reinterpreting classical painting from a queer perspective. His process involves deep research through reading and film, after which he ‘remixes’ his influences, sampling literary and visual sources until they become entirely his own. Bas currently has a solo show at Ca’ Pesaro in Venice. @hernanbas @museocapesaro
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Bas’s work: male androgynous dandy, romantic nihilism, Southern Gothic tradition
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Glenn Scott Wright (Partner at Victoria Miro, London) @glennscottwright
+ Jang-Uk Lee (Chief Curator at Space K, Seoul) @janguklee.art
+ Ralph Tawil (Collector, New York) @ralphtawil_
#artcube

#artcubeloves #HernanBas who creates paintings, works on paper, and installations that weave adolescent adventures with classical poetry, mythology, the paranormal, and literature, drawing on the Romantic era’s glorification of nature and the Decadent movement’s nihilism and excess. His androgynous male protagonists, suspended between adolescence and adulthood in a state he calls ‘fag limbo,’ inhabit lush, dreamlike landscapes charged with implicit eroticism, reinterpreting classical painting from a queer perspective. His process involves deep research through reading and film, after which he ‘remixes’ his influences, sampling literary and visual sources until they become entirely his own. Bas currently has a solo show at Ca’ Pesaro in Venice. @hernanbas @museocapesaro
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Bas’s work: male androgynous dandy, romantic nihilism, Southern Gothic tradition
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Glenn Scott Wright (Partner at Victoria Miro, London) @glennscottwright
+ Jang-Uk Lee (Chief Curator at Space K, Seoul) @janguklee.art
+ Ralph Tawil (Collector, New York) @ralphtawil_
#artcube

#artcubeloves #HernanBas who creates paintings, works on paper, and installations that weave adolescent adventures with classical poetry, mythology, the paranormal, and literature, drawing on the Romantic era’s glorification of nature and the Decadent movement’s nihilism and excess. His androgynous male protagonists, suspended between adolescence and adulthood in a state he calls ‘fag limbo,’ inhabit lush, dreamlike landscapes charged with implicit eroticism, reinterpreting classical painting from a queer perspective. His process involves deep research through reading and film, after which he ‘remixes’ his influences, sampling literary and visual sources until they become entirely his own. Bas currently has a solo show at Ca’ Pesaro in Venice. @hernanbas @museocapesaro
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Bas’s work: male androgynous dandy, romantic nihilism, Southern Gothic tradition
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Glenn Scott Wright (Partner at Victoria Miro, London) @glennscottwright
+ Jang-Uk Lee (Chief Curator at Space K, Seoul) @janguklee.art
+ Ralph Tawil (Collector, New York) @ralphtawil_
#artcube

#artcubeloves #HernanBas who creates paintings, works on paper, and installations that weave adolescent adventures with classical poetry, mythology, the paranormal, and literature, drawing on the Romantic era’s glorification of nature and the Decadent movement’s nihilism and excess. His androgynous male protagonists, suspended between adolescence and adulthood in a state he calls ‘fag limbo,’ inhabit lush, dreamlike landscapes charged with implicit eroticism, reinterpreting classical painting from a queer perspective. His process involves deep research through reading and film, after which he ‘remixes’ his influences, sampling literary and visual sources until they become entirely his own. Bas currently has a solo show at Ca’ Pesaro in Venice. @hernanbas @museocapesaro
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Bas’s work: male androgynous dandy, romantic nihilism, Southern Gothic tradition
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Glenn Scott Wright (Partner at Victoria Miro, London) @glennscottwright
+ Jang-Uk Lee (Chief Curator at Space K, Seoul) @janguklee.art
+ Ralph Tawil (Collector, New York) @ralphtawil_
#artcube

#artcubeloves #HernanBas who creates paintings, works on paper, and installations that weave adolescent adventures with classical poetry, mythology, the paranormal, and literature, drawing on the Romantic era’s glorification of nature and the Decadent movement’s nihilism and excess. His androgynous male protagonists, suspended between adolescence and adulthood in a state he calls ‘fag limbo,’ inhabit lush, dreamlike landscapes charged with implicit eroticism, reinterpreting classical painting from a queer perspective. His process involves deep research through reading and film, after which he ‘remixes’ his influences, sampling literary and visual sources until they become entirely his own. Bas currently has a solo show at Ca’ Pesaro in Venice. @hernanbas @museocapesaro
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Bas’s work: male androgynous dandy, romantic nihilism, Southern Gothic tradition
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Glenn Scott Wright (Partner at Victoria Miro, London) @glennscottwright
+ Jang-Uk Lee (Chief Curator at Space K, Seoul) @janguklee.art
+ Ralph Tawil (Collector, New York) @ralphtawil_
#artcube

#artcubeloves #ErwinWurm who came to prominence with his One Minute Sculptures, in which participants follow written instructions to pose with everyday objects, rendering sculpture ephemeral and blurring the line between performance and daily life. Humor is his primary material, using absurdity to comment on Western attitudes toward consumerism and philosophy, distorting familiar forms through skewed scale, anthropomorphism, and grotesque exaggeration. Inspired by Beckett, Ionesco, Freud, and Wittgenstein, his practice treats sculpture as a medium for exposing the arbitrary and farcical nature of social norms and everyday life. Wurm currently has a solo show at Museo Fortuny in Venice. @erwinwurm @palazzofortuny_venezia
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wurm’s work: invented reality, human body as sculpture, wry humour
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Antoine de Galbert (Collector, Paris) @antoinedegalbert
+ Jérôme Sans (Curator & Critic, Paris) @jeromesans
+ Matthias Arndt (Art expert & advisor, Berlin & Melbourne) @m.arndt
#artcube

#artcubeloves #ErwinWurm who came to prominence with his One Minute Sculptures, in which participants follow written instructions to pose with everyday objects, rendering sculpture ephemeral and blurring the line between performance and daily life. Humor is his primary material, using absurdity to comment on Western attitudes toward consumerism and philosophy, distorting familiar forms through skewed scale, anthropomorphism, and grotesque exaggeration. Inspired by Beckett, Ionesco, Freud, and Wittgenstein, his practice treats sculpture as a medium for exposing the arbitrary and farcical nature of social norms and everyday life. Wurm currently has a solo show at Museo Fortuny in Venice. @erwinwurm @palazzofortuny_venezia
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wurm’s work: invented reality, human body as sculpture, wry humour
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Antoine de Galbert (Collector, Paris) @antoinedegalbert
+ Jérôme Sans (Curator & Critic, Paris) @jeromesans
+ Matthias Arndt (Art expert & advisor, Berlin & Melbourne) @m.arndt
#artcube

#artcubeloves #ErwinWurm who came to prominence with his One Minute Sculptures, in which participants follow written instructions to pose with everyday objects, rendering sculpture ephemeral and blurring the line between performance and daily life. Humor is his primary material, using absurdity to comment on Western attitudes toward consumerism and philosophy, distorting familiar forms through skewed scale, anthropomorphism, and grotesque exaggeration. Inspired by Beckett, Ionesco, Freud, and Wittgenstein, his practice treats sculpture as a medium for exposing the arbitrary and farcical nature of social norms and everyday life. Wurm currently has a solo show at Museo Fortuny in Venice. @erwinwurm @palazzofortuny_venezia
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wurm’s work: invented reality, human body as sculpture, wry humour
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Antoine de Galbert (Collector, Paris) @antoinedegalbert
+ Jérôme Sans (Curator & Critic, Paris) @jeromesans
+ Matthias Arndt (Art expert & advisor, Berlin & Melbourne) @m.arndt
#artcube

#artcubeloves #ErwinWurm who came to prominence with his One Minute Sculptures, in which participants follow written instructions to pose with everyday objects, rendering sculpture ephemeral and blurring the line between performance and daily life. Humor is his primary material, using absurdity to comment on Western attitudes toward consumerism and philosophy, distorting familiar forms through skewed scale, anthropomorphism, and grotesque exaggeration. Inspired by Beckett, Ionesco, Freud, and Wittgenstein, his practice treats sculpture as a medium for exposing the arbitrary and farcical nature of social norms and everyday life. Wurm currently has a solo show at Museo Fortuny in Venice. @erwinwurm @palazzofortuny_venezia
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wurm’s work: invented reality, human body as sculpture, wry humour
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Antoine de Galbert (Collector, Paris) @antoinedegalbert
+ Jérôme Sans (Curator & Critic, Paris) @jeromesans
+ Matthias Arndt (Art expert & advisor, Berlin & Melbourne) @m.arndt
#artcube

#artcubeloves #ErwinWurm who came to prominence with his One Minute Sculptures, in which participants follow written instructions to pose with everyday objects, rendering sculpture ephemeral and blurring the line between performance and daily life. Humor is his primary material, using absurdity to comment on Western attitudes toward consumerism and philosophy, distorting familiar forms through skewed scale, anthropomorphism, and grotesque exaggeration. Inspired by Beckett, Ionesco, Freud, and Wittgenstein, his practice treats sculpture as a medium for exposing the arbitrary and farcical nature of social norms and everyday life. Wurm currently has a solo show at Museo Fortuny in Venice. @erwinwurm @palazzofortuny_venezia
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wurm’s work: invented reality, human body as sculpture, wry humour
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Antoine de Galbert (Collector, Paris) @antoinedegalbert
+ Jérôme Sans (Curator & Critic, Paris) @jeromesans
+ Matthias Arndt (Art expert & advisor, Berlin & Melbourne) @m.arndt
#artcube

#artcubeloves #ErwinWurm who came to prominence with his One Minute Sculptures, in which participants follow written instructions to pose with everyday objects, rendering sculpture ephemeral and blurring the line between performance and daily life. Humor is his primary material, using absurdity to comment on Western attitudes toward consumerism and philosophy, distorting familiar forms through skewed scale, anthropomorphism, and grotesque exaggeration. Inspired by Beckett, Ionesco, Freud, and Wittgenstein, his practice treats sculpture as a medium for exposing the arbitrary and farcical nature of social norms and everyday life. Wurm currently has a solo show at Museo Fortuny in Venice. @erwinwurm @palazzofortuny_venezia
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wurm’s work: invented reality, human body as sculpture, wry humour
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Antoine de Galbert (Collector, Paris) @antoinedegalbert
+ Jérôme Sans (Curator & Critic, Paris) @jeromesans
+ Matthias Arndt (Art expert & advisor, Berlin & Melbourne) @m.arndt
#artcube

#artcubeloves #ErwinWurm who came to prominence with his One Minute Sculptures, in which participants follow written instructions to pose with everyday objects, rendering sculpture ephemeral and blurring the line between performance and daily life. Humor is his primary material, using absurdity to comment on Western attitudes toward consumerism and philosophy, distorting familiar forms through skewed scale, anthropomorphism, and grotesque exaggeration. Inspired by Beckett, Ionesco, Freud, and Wittgenstein, his practice treats sculpture as a medium for exposing the arbitrary and farcical nature of social norms and everyday life. Wurm currently has a solo show at Museo Fortuny in Venice. @erwinwurm @palazzofortuny_venezia
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wurm’s work: invented reality, human body as sculpture, wry humour
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Antoine de Galbert (Collector, Paris) @antoinedegalbert
+ Jérôme Sans (Curator & Critic, Paris) @jeromesans
+ Matthias Arndt (Art expert & advisor, Berlin & Melbourne) @m.arndt
#artcube

#artcubeloves #ErwinWurm who came to prominence with his One Minute Sculptures, in which participants follow written instructions to pose with everyday objects, rendering sculpture ephemeral and blurring the line between performance and daily life. Humor is his primary material, using absurdity to comment on Western attitudes toward consumerism and philosophy, distorting familiar forms through skewed scale, anthropomorphism, and grotesque exaggeration. Inspired by Beckett, Ionesco, Freud, and Wittgenstein, his practice treats sculpture as a medium for exposing the arbitrary and farcical nature of social norms and everyday life. Wurm currently has a solo show at Museo Fortuny in Venice. @erwinwurm @palazzofortuny_venezia
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wurm’s work: invented reality, human body as sculpture, wry humour
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Antoine de Galbert (Collector, Paris) @antoinedegalbert
+ Jérôme Sans (Curator & Critic, Paris) @jeromesans
+ Matthias Arndt (Art expert & advisor, Berlin & Melbourne) @m.arndt
#artcube

#artcubeloves #ErwinWurm who came to prominence with his One Minute Sculptures, in which participants follow written instructions to pose with everyday objects, rendering sculpture ephemeral and blurring the line between performance and daily life. Humor is his primary material, using absurdity to comment on Western attitudes toward consumerism and philosophy, distorting familiar forms through skewed scale, anthropomorphism, and grotesque exaggeration. Inspired by Beckett, Ionesco, Freud, and Wittgenstein, his practice treats sculpture as a medium for exposing the arbitrary and farcical nature of social norms and everyday life. Wurm currently has a solo show at Museo Fortuny in Venice. @erwinwurm @palazzofortuny_venezia
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wurm’s work: invented reality, human body as sculpture, wry humour
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Antoine de Galbert (Collector, Paris) @antoinedegalbert
+ Jérôme Sans (Curator & Critic, Paris) @jeromesans
+ Matthias Arndt (Art expert & advisor, Berlin & Melbourne) @m.arndt
#artcube

#artcubeloves #ErwinWurm who came to prominence with his One Minute Sculptures, in which participants follow written instructions to pose with everyday objects, rendering sculpture ephemeral and blurring the line between performance and daily life. Humor is his primary material, using absurdity to comment on Western attitudes toward consumerism and philosophy, distorting familiar forms through skewed scale, anthropomorphism, and grotesque exaggeration. Inspired by Beckett, Ionesco, Freud, and Wittgenstein, his practice treats sculpture as a medium for exposing the arbitrary and farcical nature of social norms and everyday life. Wurm currently has a solo show at Museo Fortuny in Venice. @erwinwurm @palazzofortuny_venezia
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wurm’s work: invented reality, human body as sculpture, wry humour
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Antoine de Galbert (Collector, Paris) @antoinedegalbert
+ Jérôme Sans (Curator & Critic, Paris) @jeromesans
+ Matthias Arndt (Art expert & advisor, Berlin & Melbourne) @m.arndt
#artcube

#artcubeloves #ErwinWurm who came to prominence with his One Minute Sculptures, in which participants follow written instructions to pose with everyday objects, rendering sculpture ephemeral and blurring the line between performance and daily life. Humor is his primary material, using absurdity to comment on Western attitudes toward consumerism and philosophy, distorting familiar forms through skewed scale, anthropomorphism, and grotesque exaggeration. Inspired by Beckett, Ionesco, Freud, and Wittgenstein, his practice treats sculpture as a medium for exposing the arbitrary and farcical nature of social norms and everyday life. Wurm currently has a solo show at Museo Fortuny in Venice. @erwinwurm @palazzofortuny_venezia
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wurm’s work: invented reality, human body as sculpture, wry humour
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Antoine de Galbert (Collector, Paris) @antoinedegalbert
+ Jérôme Sans (Curator & Critic, Paris) @jeromesans
+ Matthias Arndt (Art expert & advisor, Berlin & Melbourne) @m.arndt
#artcube

#artcubeloves #ErwinWurm who came to prominence with his One Minute Sculptures, in which participants follow written instructions to pose with everyday objects, rendering sculpture ephemeral and blurring the line between performance and daily life. Humor is his primary material, using absurdity to comment on Western attitudes toward consumerism and philosophy, distorting familiar forms through skewed scale, anthropomorphism, and grotesque exaggeration. Inspired by Beckett, Ionesco, Freud, and Wittgenstein, his practice treats sculpture as a medium for exposing the arbitrary and farcical nature of social norms and everyday life. Wurm currently has a solo show at Museo Fortuny in Venice. @erwinwurm @palazzofortuny_venezia
Three terms that are themes in or have been used to describe Wurm’s work: invented reality, human body as sculpture, wry humour
#artcubepeople meet some of the tastemakers highlighting the artist and give them a follow if you haven’t already:
+ Antoine de Galbert (Collector, Paris) @antoinedegalbert
+ Jérôme Sans (Curator & Critic, Paris) @jeromesans
+ Matthias Arndt (Art expert & advisor, Berlin & Melbourne) @m.arndt
#artcube
The Instagram Story Viewer is an easy tool that lets you secretly watch and save Instagram stories, videos, photos, or IGTV. With this service, you can download content and enjoy it offline whenever you like. If you find something interesting on Instagram that you’d like to check out later or want to view stories while staying anonymous, our Viewer is perfect for you. Anonstories offers an excellent solution for keeping your identity hidden. Instagram first launched the Stories feature in August 2023, which was quickly adopted by other platforms due to its engaging, time-sensitive format. Stories let users share quick updates, whether photos, videos, or selfies, enhanced with text, emojis, or filters, and are visible for only 24 hours. This limited time frame creates high engagement compared to regular posts. In today’s world, Stories are one of the most popular ways to connect and communicate on social media. However, when you view a Story, the creator can see your name in their viewer list, which may be a privacy concern. What if you wish to browse Stories without being noticed? Here’s where Anonstories becomes useful. It allows you to watch public Instagram content without revealing your identity. Simply enter the username of the profile you’re curious about, and the tool will display their latest Stories. Features of Anonstories Viewer: - Anonymous Browsing: Watch Stories without showing up on the viewer list. - No Account Needed: View public content without signing up for an Instagram account. - Content Download: Save any Stories content directly to your device for offline use. - View Highlights: Access Instagram Highlights, even beyond the 24-hour window. - Repost Monitoring: Track the reposts or engagement levels on Stories for personal profiles. Limitations: - This tool works only with public accounts; private accounts remain inaccessible. Benefits: - Privacy-Friendly: Watch any Instagram content without being noticed. - Simple and Easy: No app installation or registration required. - Exclusive Tools: Download and manage content in ways Instagram doesn’t offer.
Keep track of Instagram updates discreetly while protecting your privacy and staying anonymous.
View profiles and photos anonymously with ease using the Private Profile Viewer.
This free tool allows you to view Instagram Stories anonymously, ensuring your activity remains hidden from the story uploader.
Anonstories lets users view Instagram stories without alerting the creator.
Works seamlessly on iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, and modern browsers like Chrome and Safari.
Prioritizes secure, anonymous browsing without requiring login credentials.
Users can view public stories by simply entering a username—no account needed.
Downloads photos (JPEG) and videos (MP4) with ease.
The service is free to use.
Content from private accounts can only be accessed by followers.
Files are for personal or educational use only and must comply with copyright rules.
Enter a public username to view or download stories. The service generates direct links for saving content locally.