Sebastiano Mauri Sebastiano Mauri lives and works between Buenos Aires and Milan. The concern for identity is present throughout his work. From the different artistic approaches and techniques he uses—painting, photography, and video—Mauri makes us think about the prejudices that affect us, in an almost automatic way, and dangerously limit us in our way of relating to one another. Chino Soria Chino Soria is an architect and a digital artist. In his work, he explores the consequent rhetoric of the inherent aspects of digital language, specifically concerning the possibility of infinite combinations and the questions dealing with the boundaries of possibility. |
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Horace Brockington
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Sebastiano Mauri
Sebastiano Mauri lives and works between Buenos Aires and Milan. The concern for identity is present throughout his work. From the different artistic approaches and techniques he uses—painting, photography, and video—Mauri makes us think about the prejudices that affect us, in an almost automatic way, and dangerously limit us in our way of relating to one another.Chino Soria
Chino Soria is an architect and a digital artist. In his work, he explores the consequent rhetoric of the inherent aspects of digital language, specifically concerning the possibility of infinite combinations and the questions dealing with the boundaries of possibility. Each form of his work, animations, theoretical alterations, paintings, and digital installations, responds equally to an idea that is both vital and committed to the notion of art as an attitude and choice of life.Leonel Luna
Leonel Luna’s works are presented as “the presentation of the representation,” like a part of historic conceptions that attempts to consider the definition of “the real.” He intends to open new semantic orders, trying to cross the mirror of what we should believe to see. Through the investigation of the “real” Luna attempts to re-invent traditions and genealogies as points of discussion.Andres Waissman
Andres Waissman’s images of multitudes of refugees, emigrants, and immigrants personify an agonizing narrative loaded with conflictive situations and tales of efforts, commitment, and displacement. His paintings are fictitious events that speak to an emerging, migratory world.Josefina Robirosa
Josefina Robirosa’s abstract landscapes are barren of human figures, animals, or architectural structures. They gently establish analogies between nature and art as the place of systemic complexities. Robirosa has stated that nature confronts us with constant scale differences between the infinitely small of the microscopic detail and the immeasurable. Robirosa’s works repeat these contradictions, recreate them in bewildering ambiguitous settings.Nessy Cohen
Nessy Cohen’s paintings echo aspects of his research operating between abstraction and representation. In Cohen’s imagery, a single body tells us a series of anecdotes of metaphysical nature. His work does not close upon an explanation or a certainty but in a series of questions, namely what the Body identifies with, what it invents or rejects, or what it sublimates.Miguel Mitlag
Miguel Mitlag is a film director known for photographic essays that reflect the creation of precarious spaces, in which the artifice is underscored, tones are driven to extremes, and the insignificant gains prominence. His photographic compositions reveal his predilection for the intervention into real world sites. They present themselves as an ambiguous interplay of shapes and colors, in which texture and context engage in dialogue from a seemingly neutral starting point.Leandro Erlich
Leandro Erlich is known for installations that seem to defy the basic laws of physics and confuse the viewer’s sense of balance and space by the very nature of their monumentality. Swimming Pool shown at the 49th Venice Biennale has recently been recreated at P.S. 1. In the New York installation, Erlich has constructed a full-size pool, complete with a deck and ladder, set in a duplex space at the old P.S. 1 schoolhouse. When approaching from the first floor, visitors are confronted with s scene of people fully clothed, seen standing, walking, and conversating beneath the surface of the water. It is only when visitors enter the Duplex gallery from the basement that they recognize the pool is empty. It is essentially a visual illusion. A large, continuous piece of acrylic spans the pool and suspends water above it, creating the illusion of a standard swimming pool.Juan Martin Juares
Juan Martin Juares explores intersections between design, craft, and art within daily life. He blurs the frontiers among poetic objects. Instinctive, intelligent, non-speculative, his drawing lines create a fusion of facts and fiction, opposing the perceived and the actual.Carla Bertone
Carla Bertone’s abstractions focus on geometric shapes in which a visual language is produced that meditates issues of structures, space, and representation. Her forms fundamentally confront the spectator’s own perception. The geometry of work becomes metaphors of a simultaneous experience but equally results in new questions.Rafael Gonzalez Moreno
Rafael Gonzalez Moreno works in plastic, using toys and other objects. Often the works are selected for their colors in everyday use. He then manipulates the plastic and transforms it into diverse forms.Maria Noel
Maria Noel’s works operate on a multitude of levels. Her artworks are recontextualized, re-materializing as fine papers, music scores, readable or unreadable graphs, metal sheets, and a never-ending variety of things. Similar to many of her fellow Argentinean artists, the artist’s working process emerges from a spontaneous consciousness exchange between the real and the inner worlds, proposing bridges between the outside and the poetic experience.