Georges Le Chevallier

First saw Georges’ work in Front Burner with Ashlynn and Brett and Lien. He recently also curated Abstracto/Latino: Latin American with an Abstract Fusion.

Also- the way he often lets his stretcher bars show or uses them as compositional elements reminds me of Dona.

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#georgeslechevallier

Seulgi Lee

Artforum says Lee’s newest (Slow Water at Incheon) conjures incredible sumptuousness (visual and symbolic) via astonishing restraint—producing a free-ranging post-Minimalism born of collaborations with traditional Korean artisans and spiked with mischievous enigmas.

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#seulgilee

Anne Tallentire

Declan Long at Artforum points out how Anne’s most recent artworks at The MAC involve careful measuring, precise mapping, methodical assembly as she reflects on the physical, social, and sensory conditions of built environments, scrutinizing small details of domestic interiors or gesturing toward larger histories of public space.

#annetallentire

J.M.W. Turner

This Artforum article spoke to me, having recently been in Texas. Wish I had made it to Dallas to see the show but I did get to see below speaking of inspiring sunsets.

Clearly, Turner was not an abstractionist (romantic is the term the canon demands we use). Particularly in his later life, Turner painted many pictures exploring the effects of the elements: wind, rain, snow, sea, and storms.

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Speaking of romantics and clouds

#JMWTurner

Nikola Olić

Sasha Bogojev at Juxtapoz talks with Nicola about how the subjective experience of our imminent surroundings is providing infinite ways of interacting with it, but also, exploring, and capturing or depicting it.

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If you like this (art that is photographic contemplations of the formal qualities of buildings) you should check out Gianluca and Matthieu.

#nikolaolic