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Dimensions Variable

Dimensions Variable is an exhibition space in Miami committed to the presentation and support of contemporary art and artists.

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A Distant Blue by Marisabela Tellería, curated by Sophie Bonet at Fundacion Pablo Atchugarry Miami.

Opens this Saturday May 23, 7-9 pm.

The exhibition unfolds through questions of distance, memory, and what it means to remain connected to a place that cannot be easily returned to. In this exhibition, Marisa Tellería moves across sky, map, and material, tracing how identity is shaped not only by geography, but by what is carried—through memory, through the body, and over time.

Marisabela Tellería (b. Nicaragua) is a Nicaraguan- born multidisciplinary artist based in Miami whose practice spans sculpture, painting, and installation. Through a minimalist and contemplative approach, her work explores perception, memory, displacement, and belonging. Tellería has exhibited internationally at institutions including the Brooklyn Museum, El Museo del Barrio, and Pérez Art Museum Miami, and her work is held in major public collections such as PAMM and the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. Tellería is a resident at Dimensions Variable.

Sophie Bonet (b. 1986) is a South Florida-based curator whose practice is informed by social and cultural anthropology. She currently serves as Chief Curator of The Frank C. Ortis Gallery and has organized exhibitions at institutions including CAMH, MACBA, and MOCA North Miami.

@marisabelatelleria @bonet.hekit @fpatchugarry.miami

#marisatelleria #sophiebonet #fundacionpabloatchugarry


51
5
13 hours ago


A Distant Blue by Marisabela Tellería, curated by Sophie Bonet at Fundacion Pablo Atchugarry Miami.

Opens this Saturday May 23, 7-9 pm.

The exhibition unfolds through questions of distance, memory, and what it means to remain connected to a place that cannot be easily returned to. In this exhibition, Marisa Tellería moves across sky, map, and material, tracing how identity is shaped not only by geography, but by what is carried—through memory, through the body, and over time.

Marisabela Tellería (b. Nicaragua) is a Nicaraguan- born multidisciplinary artist based in Miami whose practice spans sculpture, painting, and installation. Through a minimalist and contemplative approach, her work explores perception, memory, displacement, and belonging. Tellería has exhibited internationally at institutions including the Brooklyn Museum, El Museo del Barrio, and Pérez Art Museum Miami, and her work is held in major public collections such as PAMM and the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. Tellería is a resident at Dimensions Variable.

Sophie Bonet (b. 1986) is a South Florida-based curator whose practice is informed by social and cultural anthropology. She currently serves as Chief Curator of The Frank C. Ortis Gallery and has organized exhibitions at institutions including CAMH, MACBA, and MOCA North Miami.

@marisabelatelleria @bonet.hekit @fpatchugarry.miami

#marisatelleria #sophiebonet #fundacionpabloatchugarry


51
5
13 hours ago

A Distant Blue by Marisabela Tellería, curated by Sophie Bonet at Fundacion Pablo Atchugarry Miami.

Opens this Saturday May 23, 7-9 pm.

The exhibition unfolds through questions of distance, memory, and what it means to remain connected to a place that cannot be easily returned to. In this exhibition, Marisa Tellería moves across sky, map, and material, tracing how identity is shaped not only by geography, but by what is carried—through memory, through the body, and over time.

Marisabela Tellería (b. Nicaragua) is a Nicaraguan- born multidisciplinary artist based in Miami whose practice spans sculpture, painting, and installation. Through a minimalist and contemplative approach, her work explores perception, memory, displacement, and belonging. Tellería has exhibited internationally at institutions including the Brooklyn Museum, El Museo del Barrio, and Pérez Art Museum Miami, and her work is held in major public collections such as PAMM and the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. Tellería is a resident at Dimensions Variable.

Sophie Bonet (b. 1986) is a South Florida-based curator whose practice is informed by social and cultural anthropology. She currently serves as Chief Curator of The Frank C. Ortis Gallery and has organized exhibitions at institutions including CAMH, MACBA, and MOCA North Miami.

@marisabelatelleria @bonet.hekit @fpatchugarry.miami

#marisatelleria #sophiebonet #fundacionpabloatchugarry


51
5
13 hours ago

Frances Trombly: What Holds

Opens May 30, 2026
Shoshana Wayne Gallery, Los Angeles

Shoshana Wayne Gallery is pleased to present What Holds, a solo exhibition by Miami-based artist Frances Trombly. Marking Trombly’s return to the gallery following her 2016 solo exhibition, this body of work continues her investigation into weaving, labor, and the structures that make visibility possible.

Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Leah Ollman described Trombly’s sculptures, weavings, and installations as “confident trespassers,” works that “meander into all sorts of territory, straddling genre lines and tunneling through hierarchical divides.” Nearly a decade later, that trespass has become more deliberate. In What Holds, the works resist a fixed category. They move across painting and sculpture, appearing as supports, tools, remnants, and propositions. The works seem to have arrived from the studio still carrying the pressure of their own making. At the center of the exhibition is the warp, the longitudinal threads that carry tension and give structure to woven cloth. Trombly brings this underlying system forward, where it operates as both subject and support. Warps hang exposed. Textiles slip from wooden frames. Handwoven surfaces are suspended, layered, or left partially formed. The conditions of making are not concealed or smoothed over. They remain. Process is not a step toward something else. It is the work.

Her structures recall looms, stretcher bars, warping boards, and scaffolds. They hold and distribute tension. They point toward painting while refusing the stability of the canvas. They remain tied to the logic of cloth even as they occupy space. In What Holds, Trombly returns painting to its material condition: a woven support shaped by tension, labor, and time.

@frances_trombly @shoshanawayne @leahollman @latimes

#francestrombly #shoshanawayne #losangeles #sculpture #weaving #textile


107
12
3 days ago

Frances Trombly: What Holds

Opens May 30, 2026
Shoshana Wayne Gallery, Los Angeles

Shoshana Wayne Gallery is pleased to present What Holds, a solo exhibition by Miami-based artist Frances Trombly. Marking Trombly’s return to the gallery following her 2016 solo exhibition, this body of work continues her investigation into weaving, labor, and the structures that make visibility possible.

Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Leah Ollman described Trombly’s sculptures, weavings, and installations as “confident trespassers,” works that “meander into all sorts of territory, straddling genre lines and tunneling through hierarchical divides.” Nearly a decade later, that trespass has become more deliberate. In What Holds, the works resist a fixed category. They move across painting and sculpture, appearing as supports, tools, remnants, and propositions. The works seem to have arrived from the studio still carrying the pressure of their own making. At the center of the exhibition is the warp, the longitudinal threads that carry tension and give structure to woven cloth. Trombly brings this underlying system forward, where it operates as both subject and support. Warps hang exposed. Textiles slip from wooden frames. Handwoven surfaces are suspended, layered, or left partially formed. The conditions of making are not concealed or smoothed over. They remain. Process is not a step toward something else. It is the work.

Her structures recall looms, stretcher bars, warping boards, and scaffolds. They hold and distribute tension. They point toward painting while refusing the stability of the canvas. They remain tied to the logic of cloth even as they occupy space. In What Holds, Trombly returns painting to its material condition: a woven support shaped by tension, labor, and time.

@frances_trombly @shoshanawayne @leahollman @latimes

#francestrombly #shoshanawayne #losangeles #sculpture #weaving #textile


107
12
3 days ago

Frances Trombly: What Holds

Opens May 30, 2026
Shoshana Wayne Gallery, Los Angeles

Shoshana Wayne Gallery is pleased to present What Holds, a solo exhibition by Miami-based artist Frances Trombly. Marking Trombly’s return to the gallery following her 2016 solo exhibition, this body of work continues her investigation into weaving, labor, and the structures that make visibility possible.

Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Leah Ollman described Trombly’s sculptures, weavings, and installations as “confident trespassers,” works that “meander into all sorts of territory, straddling genre lines and tunneling through hierarchical divides.” Nearly a decade later, that trespass has become more deliberate. In What Holds, the works resist a fixed category. They move across painting and sculpture, appearing as supports, tools, remnants, and propositions. The works seem to have arrived from the studio still carrying the pressure of their own making. At the center of the exhibition is the warp, the longitudinal threads that carry tension and give structure to woven cloth. Trombly brings this underlying system forward, where it operates as both subject and support. Warps hang exposed. Textiles slip from wooden frames. Handwoven surfaces are suspended, layered, or left partially formed. The conditions of making are not concealed or smoothed over. They remain. Process is not a step toward something else. It is the work.

Her structures recall looms, stretcher bars, warping boards, and scaffolds. They hold and distribute tension. They point toward painting while refusing the stability of the canvas. They remain tied to the logic of cloth even as they occupy space. In What Holds, Trombly returns painting to its material condition: a woven support shaped by tension, labor, and time.

@frances_trombly @shoshanawayne @leahollman @latimes

#francestrombly #shoshanawayne #losangeles #sculpture #weaving #textile


107
12
3 days ago

Frances Trombly: What Holds

Opens May 30, 2026
Shoshana Wayne Gallery, Los Angeles

Shoshana Wayne Gallery is pleased to present What Holds, a solo exhibition by Miami-based artist Frances Trombly. Marking Trombly’s return to the gallery following her 2016 solo exhibition, this body of work continues her investigation into weaving, labor, and the structures that make visibility possible.

Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Leah Ollman described Trombly’s sculptures, weavings, and installations as “confident trespassers,” works that “meander into all sorts of territory, straddling genre lines and tunneling through hierarchical divides.” Nearly a decade later, that trespass has become more deliberate. In What Holds, the works resist a fixed category. They move across painting and sculpture, appearing as supports, tools, remnants, and propositions. The works seem to have arrived from the studio still carrying the pressure of their own making. At the center of the exhibition is the warp, the longitudinal threads that carry tension and give structure to woven cloth. Trombly brings this underlying system forward, where it operates as both subject and support. Warps hang exposed. Textiles slip from wooden frames. Handwoven surfaces are suspended, layered, or left partially formed. The conditions of making are not concealed or smoothed over. They remain. Process is not a step toward something else. It is the work.

Her structures recall looms, stretcher bars, warping boards, and scaffolds. They hold and distribute tension. They point toward painting while refusing the stability of the canvas. They remain tied to the logic of cloth even as they occupy space. In What Holds, Trombly returns painting to its material condition: a woven support shaped by tension, labor, and time.

@frances_trombly @shoshanawayne @leahollman @latimes

#francestrombly #shoshanawayne #losangeles #sculpture #weaving #textile


107
12
3 days ago

Frances Trombly: What Holds

Opens May 30, 2026
Shoshana Wayne Gallery, Los Angeles

Shoshana Wayne Gallery is pleased to present What Holds, a solo exhibition by Miami-based artist Frances Trombly. Marking Trombly’s return to the gallery following her 2016 solo exhibition, this body of work continues her investigation into weaving, labor, and the structures that make visibility possible.

Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Leah Ollman described Trombly’s sculptures, weavings, and installations as “confident trespassers,” works that “meander into all sorts of territory, straddling genre lines and tunneling through hierarchical divides.” Nearly a decade later, that trespass has become more deliberate. In What Holds, the works resist a fixed category. They move across painting and sculpture, appearing as supports, tools, remnants, and propositions. The works seem to have arrived from the studio still carrying the pressure of their own making. At the center of the exhibition is the warp, the longitudinal threads that carry tension and give structure to woven cloth. Trombly brings this underlying system forward, where it operates as both subject and support. Warps hang exposed. Textiles slip from wooden frames. Handwoven surfaces are suspended, layered, or left partially formed. The conditions of making are not concealed or smoothed over. They remain. Process is not a step toward something else. It is the work.

Her structures recall looms, stretcher bars, warping boards, and scaffolds. They hold and distribute tension. They point toward painting while refusing the stability of the canvas. They remain tied to the logic of cloth even as they occupy space. In What Holds, Trombly returns painting to its material condition: a woven support shaped by tension, labor, and time.

@frances_trombly @shoshanawayne @leahollman @latimes

#francestrombly #shoshanawayne #losangeles #sculpture #weaving #textile


107
12
3 days ago


Frances Trombly: What Holds

Opens May 30, 2026
Shoshana Wayne Gallery, Los Angeles

Shoshana Wayne Gallery is pleased to present What Holds, a solo exhibition by Miami-based artist Frances Trombly. Marking Trombly’s return to the gallery following her 2016 solo exhibition, this body of work continues her investigation into weaving, labor, and the structures that make visibility possible.

Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Leah Ollman described Trombly’s sculptures, weavings, and installations as “confident trespassers,” works that “meander into all sorts of territory, straddling genre lines and tunneling through hierarchical divides.” Nearly a decade later, that trespass has become more deliberate. In What Holds, the works resist a fixed category. They move across painting and sculpture, appearing as supports, tools, remnants, and propositions. The works seem to have arrived from the studio still carrying the pressure of their own making. At the center of the exhibition is the warp, the longitudinal threads that carry tension and give structure to woven cloth. Trombly brings this underlying system forward, where it operates as both subject and support. Warps hang exposed. Textiles slip from wooden frames. Handwoven surfaces are suspended, layered, or left partially formed. The conditions of making are not concealed or smoothed over. They remain. Process is not a step toward something else. It is the work.

Her structures recall looms, stretcher bars, warping boards, and scaffolds. They hold and distribute tension. They point toward painting while refusing the stability of the canvas. They remain tied to the logic of cloth even as they occupy space. In What Holds, Trombly returns painting to its material condition: a woven support shaped by tension, labor, and time.

@frances_trombly @shoshanawayne @leahollman @latimes

#francestrombly #shoshanawayne #losangeles #sculpture #weaving #textile


107
12
3 days ago

Frances Trombly: What Holds

Opens May 30, 2026
Shoshana Wayne Gallery, Los Angeles

Shoshana Wayne Gallery is pleased to present What Holds, a solo exhibition by Miami-based artist Frances Trombly. Marking Trombly’s return to the gallery following her 2016 solo exhibition, this body of work continues her investigation into weaving, labor, and the structures that make visibility possible.

Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Leah Ollman described Trombly’s sculptures, weavings, and installations as “confident trespassers,” works that “meander into all sorts of territory, straddling genre lines and tunneling through hierarchical divides.” Nearly a decade later, that trespass has become more deliberate. In What Holds, the works resist a fixed category. They move across painting and sculpture, appearing as supports, tools, remnants, and propositions. The works seem to have arrived from the studio still carrying the pressure of their own making. At the center of the exhibition is the warp, the longitudinal threads that carry tension and give structure to woven cloth. Trombly brings this underlying system forward, where it operates as both subject and support. Warps hang exposed. Textiles slip from wooden frames. Handwoven surfaces are suspended, layered, or left partially formed. The conditions of making are not concealed or smoothed over. They remain. Process is not a step toward something else. It is the work.

Her structures recall looms, stretcher bars, warping boards, and scaffolds. They hold and distribute tension. They point toward painting while refusing the stability of the canvas. They remain tied to the logic of cloth even as they occupy space. In What Holds, Trombly returns painting to its material condition: a woven support shaped by tension, labor, and time.

@frances_trombly @shoshanawayne @leahollman @latimes

#francestrombly #shoshanawayne #losangeles #sculpture #weaving #textile


107
12
3 days ago

Exile: Antonia Wright & Ruben Millares

On view through July 25, 2026
Piero Atchugarry Gallery

“By salvaging and transforming this boat, we hope to honor the lives it carried and evoke the broader experience of displacement, struggle, and survival. According to the UN Refugee Agency, there are currently 117.3 million forcibly displaced people worldwide. The boat is a symbol not only of the Cuban diaspora but of all refugees.”
—Antonia Wright & Ruben Millares

At Piero Atchugarry Gallery, Wright and Millares present Exile, a two-part exhibition unfolding within the gallery’s Survey Space. Developed over several years, the exhibition reflects on the immigrant experience through themes of displacement, resistance, and survival. Installed across two interconnected spaces, Exile constructs a layered narrative that moves from monument to trace.

In the first space, viewers encounter the work that gives the exhibition its title: Exile, a large-scale installation centered on a refugee boat salvaged from the coast of Miami after washing ashore in Key Biscayne, Florida. Used by Cubans fleeing the island, the vessel becomes both artifact and witness. Through sound and light, Wright and Millares transform the boat into a defiant monument, honoring not only the Cuban diaspora but refugees worldwide.

The second space deepens the exhibition’s inquiry through gesture, and the ambiguity of numerical systems. The adjacent gallery presents a selection of Wright’s cyanotypes and Millares’ paintings alongside Desembarco, a collaborative standalone sculpture that embodies both exile and arrival. Found inside the refugee vessel was a makeshift paddle, a humble tool used to navigate uncertain waters. Wright and Millares embed this paddle into native South Florida oolite limestone, creating a grounded yet suspended object: a quiet monument to crossing, landfall, and survival.

@antonia_wrighttt@rubenmillares16 @pieroatchugarrygallery

#antoniawright #rubenmillares #pieroatchugarrygallery


30
1
4 days ago

Exile: Antonia Wright & Ruben Millares

On view through July 25, 2026
Piero Atchugarry Gallery

“By salvaging and transforming this boat, we hope to honor the lives it carried and evoke the broader experience of displacement, struggle, and survival. According to the UN Refugee Agency, there are currently 117.3 million forcibly displaced people worldwide. The boat is a symbol not only of the Cuban diaspora but of all refugees.”
—Antonia Wright & Ruben Millares

At Piero Atchugarry Gallery, Wright and Millares present Exile, a two-part exhibition unfolding within the gallery’s Survey Space. Developed over several years, the exhibition reflects on the immigrant experience through themes of displacement, resistance, and survival. Installed across two interconnected spaces, Exile constructs a layered narrative that moves from monument to trace.

In the first space, viewers encounter the work that gives the exhibition its title: Exile, a large-scale installation centered on a refugee boat salvaged from the coast of Miami after washing ashore in Key Biscayne, Florida. Used by Cubans fleeing the island, the vessel becomes both artifact and witness. Through sound and light, Wright and Millares transform the boat into a defiant monument, honoring not only the Cuban diaspora but refugees worldwide.

The second space deepens the exhibition’s inquiry through gesture, and the ambiguity of numerical systems. The adjacent gallery presents a selection of Wright’s cyanotypes and Millares’ paintings alongside Desembarco, a collaborative standalone sculpture that embodies both exile and arrival. Found inside the refugee vessel was a makeshift paddle, a humble tool used to navigate uncertain waters. Wright and Millares embed this paddle into native South Florida oolite limestone, creating a grounded yet suspended object: a quiet monument to crossing, landfall, and survival.

@antonia_wrighttt@rubenmillares16 @pieroatchugarrygallery

#antoniawright #rubenmillares #pieroatchugarrygallery


30
1
4 days ago

Exile: Antonia Wright & Ruben Millares

On view through July 25, 2026
Piero Atchugarry Gallery

“By salvaging and transforming this boat, we hope to honor the lives it carried and evoke the broader experience of displacement, struggle, and survival. According to the UN Refugee Agency, there are currently 117.3 million forcibly displaced people worldwide. The boat is a symbol not only of the Cuban diaspora but of all refugees.”
—Antonia Wright & Ruben Millares

At Piero Atchugarry Gallery, Wright and Millares present Exile, a two-part exhibition unfolding within the gallery’s Survey Space. Developed over several years, the exhibition reflects on the immigrant experience through themes of displacement, resistance, and survival. Installed across two interconnected spaces, Exile constructs a layered narrative that moves from monument to trace.

In the first space, viewers encounter the work that gives the exhibition its title: Exile, a large-scale installation centered on a refugee boat salvaged from the coast of Miami after washing ashore in Key Biscayne, Florida. Used by Cubans fleeing the island, the vessel becomes both artifact and witness. Through sound and light, Wright and Millares transform the boat into a defiant monument, honoring not only the Cuban diaspora but refugees worldwide.

The second space deepens the exhibition’s inquiry through gesture, and the ambiguity of numerical systems. The adjacent gallery presents a selection of Wright’s cyanotypes and Millares’ paintings alongside Desembarco, a collaborative standalone sculpture that embodies both exile and arrival. Found inside the refugee vessel was a makeshift paddle, a humble tool used to navigate uncertain waters. Wright and Millares embed this paddle into native South Florida oolite limestone, creating a grounded yet suspended object: a quiet monument to crossing, landfall, and survival.

@antonia_wrighttt@rubenmillares16 @pieroatchugarrygallery

#antoniawright #rubenmillares #pieroatchugarrygallery


30
1
4 days ago

Exile: Antonia Wright & Ruben Millares

On view through July 25, 2026
Piero Atchugarry Gallery

“By salvaging and transforming this boat, we hope to honor the lives it carried and evoke the broader experience of displacement, struggle, and survival. According to the UN Refugee Agency, there are currently 117.3 million forcibly displaced people worldwide. The boat is a symbol not only of the Cuban diaspora but of all refugees.”
—Antonia Wright & Ruben Millares

At Piero Atchugarry Gallery, Wright and Millares present Exile, a two-part exhibition unfolding within the gallery’s Survey Space. Developed over several years, the exhibition reflects on the immigrant experience through themes of displacement, resistance, and survival. Installed across two interconnected spaces, Exile constructs a layered narrative that moves from monument to trace.

In the first space, viewers encounter the work that gives the exhibition its title: Exile, a large-scale installation centered on a refugee boat salvaged from the coast of Miami after washing ashore in Key Biscayne, Florida. Used by Cubans fleeing the island, the vessel becomes both artifact and witness. Through sound and light, Wright and Millares transform the boat into a defiant monument, honoring not only the Cuban diaspora but refugees worldwide.

The second space deepens the exhibition’s inquiry through gesture, and the ambiguity of numerical systems. The adjacent gallery presents a selection of Wright’s cyanotypes and Millares’ paintings alongside Desembarco, a collaborative standalone sculpture that embodies both exile and arrival. Found inside the refugee vessel was a makeshift paddle, a humble tool used to navigate uncertain waters. Wright and Millares embed this paddle into native South Florida oolite limestone, creating a grounded yet suspended object: a quiet monument to crossing, landfall, and survival.

@antonia_wrighttt@rubenmillares16 @pieroatchugarrygallery

#antoniawright #rubenmillares #pieroatchugarrygallery


30
1
4 days ago

Exile: Antonia Wright & Ruben Millares

On view through July 25, 2026
Piero Atchugarry Gallery

“By salvaging and transforming this boat, we hope to honor the lives it carried and evoke the broader experience of displacement, struggle, and survival. According to the UN Refugee Agency, there are currently 117.3 million forcibly displaced people worldwide. The boat is a symbol not only of the Cuban diaspora but of all refugees.”
—Antonia Wright & Ruben Millares

At Piero Atchugarry Gallery, Wright and Millares present Exile, a two-part exhibition unfolding within the gallery’s Survey Space. Developed over several years, the exhibition reflects on the immigrant experience through themes of displacement, resistance, and survival. Installed across two interconnected spaces, Exile constructs a layered narrative that moves from monument to trace.

In the first space, viewers encounter the work that gives the exhibition its title: Exile, a large-scale installation centered on a refugee boat salvaged from the coast of Miami after washing ashore in Key Biscayne, Florida. Used by Cubans fleeing the island, the vessel becomes both artifact and witness. Through sound and light, Wright and Millares transform the boat into a defiant monument, honoring not only the Cuban diaspora but refugees worldwide.

The second space deepens the exhibition’s inquiry through gesture, and the ambiguity of numerical systems. The adjacent gallery presents a selection of Wright’s cyanotypes and Millares’ paintings alongside Desembarco, a collaborative standalone sculpture that embodies both exile and arrival. Found inside the refugee vessel was a makeshift paddle, a humble tool used to navigate uncertain waters. Wright and Millares embed this paddle into native South Florida oolite limestone, creating a grounded yet suspended object: a quiet monument to crossing, landfall, and survival.

@antonia_wrighttt@rubenmillares16 @pieroatchugarrygallery

#antoniawright #rubenmillares #pieroatchugarrygallery


30
1
4 days ago


@saluaares at @futurefairs

#saluaares #dimensionsvariable #futurefair #dv #ny


16
1
6 days ago

Co-founding director of DV, @leydenrodriguezcasanova in conversation @futurefairs NYC!

Moderated by @elisartgal


29
2
6 days ago

Welcomed tours through yesterday. Super grateful to @margretheaanestad for representing DV as they came by.

Thanks @saluaares for capturing the moments.

#dimensionsvariable #futurefair #dv #ny


90
3
6 days ago

Welcomed tours through yesterday. Super grateful to @margretheaanestad for representing DV as they came by.

Thanks @saluaares for capturing the moments.

#dimensionsvariable #futurefair #dv #ny


90
3
6 days ago

Come visit us today in booth F1 or for the conversation at 12:30 pm. See you at @futurefairs


29
1
6 days ago

@marcosvalella at @futurefairs

#dimensionsvariable #futurefair #dv #ny


26
2
6 days ago


@a_biondo at @futurefairs

#dimensionsvariable #futurefair #dv #ny


23
4
1 weeks ago

@futurefairs opening night was a packed house. Come through all week till Saturday.

#dimensionsvariable #futurefair #dv #ny


94
6
1 weeks ago

@futurefairs opening night was a packed house. Come through all week till Saturday.

#dimensionsvariable #futurefair #dv #ny


94
6
1 weeks ago

@futurefairs opening night was a packed house. Come through all week till Saturday.

#dimensionsvariable #futurefair #dv #ny


94
6
1 weeks ago

@javier1barrera1 at @futurefairs

#javierbarrera #futurefair #dimensionsvariable #dv #ny


31
1 weeks ago

@claudiavieira_studio at @futurefairs

#claudiavieira #futurefair #dimensionsvariable #dv #ny


29
6
1 weeks ago


View Instagram Stories in Secret

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.

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Private Instagram Viewer

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This free tool allows you to view Instagram Stories anonymously, ensuring your activity remains hidden from the story uploader.

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Anonstories lets users view Instagram stories without alerting the creator.

 
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Prioritizes secure, anonymous browsing without requiring login credentials.

 
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Users can view public stories by simply entering a username—no account needed.

 
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Downloads photos (JPEG) and videos (MP4) with ease.

 
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Content from private accounts can only be accessed by followers.

 
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Files are for personal or educational use only and must comply with copyright rules.

 
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Enter a public username to view or download stories. The service generates direct links for saving content locally.