Saturday, 14 February 2026






Louise Giovanelli
Work from her oeuvre.
“Giovanelli’s delicate, luminous works inject vitality into historical subjects from the canon of Western art. Through interconnected series, she weaves together visual clues surrounding a specific moment or event. Her subject matter is primarily chosen for its formal qualities and includes, staged photographs, film stills, classical sculpture, and architectural elements. Within each series, Giovanelli repeats her motifs and certain paintings appear nearly identical, excepting slight alterations of the composition, or tonality. Deftly manipulating light and form, her multivalent imagery reminds us that the classical foundations of painting remain sources of delight and innovation. Keenly attuned to the historical significance of painting as a medium and system of representation, her paintings challenge the eye by dissolving representation into carefully crafted textures and patterns. For Giovanelli, painting allows for a visual slowing-down, and beholding her works is akin to a meditative process.” – Grimm Gallery
Tags: feminism, mediated, pinting, realist
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Friday, 13 February 2026





Jenna Sutela
Work from her oeuvre.
“Jenna Sutela (*1983 in Turku, FI) uses biological and computational systems to create audio-visual works, sculptures, images and performance art. Working with artificial neuronal networks or bacteria and with the help of her own systems and algorithms, the artist uncovers patterns and meanings that are hidden in disorder. With her collaborative approach she points to decentralised organisation, she questions social hierarchy, broaches the issue of communication between species and the connection of awareness and the material world. Her procedural works are based on latest scientific research and reflect its socio-political impact. Sutela’s work promotes the idea of a symbiotic network and the renunciation of an anthropocentric world. Her oeuvre illustrates that humankind does not exist in a void, but in symbiotic ecosystems with bacteria, mould, computers and many other elements, some of which remain incomprehensible.” – Max Goelitz
Tags: biological, finnish, living, neural network, systems, technology, wild
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Thursday, 12 February 2026



Robert Morris
Work from his oeuvre.
“Robert Morris (1931–2018) was one of the most influential figures in postwar American art. His extraordinarily versatile practice encompassed dance performance, minimalist sculpture, earthworks, drawing, painting, film, photography, collage, readymades and theoretical essays. Primarily based in New York City, the artist explored in his oeuvre the perception of objects, and how viewers renegotiate their sense of space when confronted by one of his works. Throughout his long career, he grappled with the conditions of artistic display and production and the dynamics of theoretical and social discourse.” – Sprüth Magers
Tags: berlin, conceptual, minimalism, postwar, sculpture
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Wednesday, 11 February 2026
Tags: abstract, book, irish, monument, painter, photography, repetition, rocks, straight photo, typological, walls
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Tuesday, 10 February 2026





Jumana Manna
Work from Break, Take, Erase, Tally.
“This ongoing series of ceramic sculptures explores a tension between preservation and ruination. Their forms draw from the khabya, a once common structure for grain storage in rural houses across the Levant. Built into homes, the khabya–which means “the thing that hides” in Arabic–would preserve the annual grain harvest for family and communal consumption. With the advent of refrigeration and state-centralized grain silos, the khabya became obsolete and now can occasionally be found in the remnants of abandoned village structures. While some works maintain a structural similarity to the historical khabya, others adapt the crumbling or fragmented form into new geometries and anthropomorphic, creature like vessels. The surfaces of the works have been coated with tadelakt, a lime-plaster technique unique to Morocco. Resuscitated in various states of fracture and mutation, these clay vessels are set against industrial steel grates such as those used in climate-controlled seed bank storage units, museum vaults, ethnographic institutions, and urban infrastructures. Manna fuses contrasting conceptions and architectures of archiving: from the seed, which stores genetic material for survival, to the khabya vessels, and finally to the safekeeping institution, highlighting a shift from preservation as sustenance to preservation as accumulation.”
Tags: architecture, archive, history, Palestinian, politics, systems
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Monday, 9 February 2026





Kara Güt and Clare Gatto
Work from Void 0 at SkyLab.
“Void 0 combines a love for clipping through stage geometry with an infinite bath. It is the culmination of work by two artists, Clare Gatto and Kara Gut, who use the machinations of a simulated world to create images of slippery definition. The show plays with various versions of input and output to reveal biology through synthetics and mythology through game design.” – Kara Güt and Clare Gatto
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Wednesday, 4 February 2026






David Noel
Work from Tactical Aesthetic.
“Close Encounters with Tactical Aesthetic is a participatory installation that guides viewers through various tactical scenarios.” – David Noel
Tags: military, politics, tacticool, terror, war
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Monday, 2 February 2026



Rick Silva
Work from Dirt Nap.
“Dirt Nap is composed of one-minute excerpts from 46 naps Rick Silva took in nature across the western United States between September 2024 and January 2026, sequenced in the order they were recorded.” – Rick Silva
Tags: dirt, epic, grief, nap, nature, reigning champ, system, typological, video
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Sunday, 1 February 2026





Rinko Kawauchi
Work from M/E.
“Some things can only be obtained through moving my body to face my photographic subject head-on.
I have found this an effective way to approach, however incrementally, the unanswerable question of why I find myself alive right here and right now.
After living this way for more than thirty years, I felt the desire to once more confirm the ground on which I stood.
Not in terms of regional or national bounds, but the fact that I was on a planet.
When I visited Iceland in the summer of 2019—I had been there only once before, some twenty years ago—that desire was fulfilled.
I saw geysers like the planet’s breath and glaciers far beyond any human time. And what I saw seemed to illuminate my own existence.
One experience inside a dormant volcano left a particularly strong impression.
When I looked up, I saw light spilling in through the crater above, and its shape was reminiscent of female genitalia. As I gazed at this sight, I had the sense of being a fetus enveloped by the earth, and I felt a connection to this planet I have never felt before.
My plans to visit Iceland again in winter to probe these connections more deeply were thwarted by COVID-19. Partly as a result of this, I visited Hokkaido many times in the winter of last year. There I saw things that could only be seen in the bitterest cold, and recalled how small and frail my own body truly was.
Take the initials of “Mother Earth,” and the result is “M/E.”
When I wrote out those two letters, I felt a connection between things so vast their full form cannot be surveyed with the naked eye and the individuals, and was reminded of that mysterious sensation I experienced beneath the volcanic crater, of inversion and unity between the planet and myself.” – Rinko Kawauchi
Tags: art book, landscape, Mother Earth, nature, relationship
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Saturday, 31 January 2026




John-David Richardson and Emily Wiethorn.
Work from HERE YOU COME AGAIN.
“As individuals, each of us has experienced profoundly traumatic encounters with masculinity, violence, and misogyny. These experiences have left indelible marks, shaping who we are as artists and how we navigate the world. In our individual practices, we each grapple with these complex dynamics, unpacking the intersections of gender, power, and trauma. The exhibition Here You Come Again emerged from a shared desire to confront these overlapping narratives collectively. Through this collaborative practice, we reflect on how misogyny and violence have permeated our personal histories and familial lines, tracing their reverberations across generations.
The works presented in this exhibition span images, video, found objects, and vernacular photographs, creating a multifaceted narrative that invites both introspection and dialogue. This body of work seeks to balance vulnerability and strength, exposing the weight of harm while honoring moments of resilience. A deliberate tension is established between what is presented openly and what is safeguarded behind a frame. Imagery that evokes tension, violence, aggression, and fear is left unprotected and deliberately exposed to the viewer’s gaze. These works, raw and unshielded, reflect the fragility and neglect that violence imposes, suggesting that such moments do not warrant the same reverence or care.
In contrast, we have chosen to frame and protect images that symbolize care, comfort, and resilience—portraits and moments imbued with tenderness and personal significance. These protected works act as visual sanctuaries, embodying the safeguarding of memory and preserving what remains intact within ourselves, our mothers, and our shared histories. The juxtaposition between defense and exposure mirrors the emotional duality we experience in navigating these traumas: the instinct to shield what we hold dear while confronting what has harmed us.
Here You Come Again is both a refuge and a reckoning. It is a space to process the lingering impacts of violent men while simultaneously preserving the strength, love, and resilience that persist despite them.” – John-David Richardson
Tags: documentary, masculinity, photography, trauma, vulnerability
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