Art & design

JUXTAPOZ – Hashimoto Contemporary Presents Group Group @ Future Fair, NYC

Hashimoto Contemporary I am pleased to announce our participation in Future Gallery. This will be the second year in a row that the exhibition will show at the New York City exhibition, where we will show five artists from our program: Artists Scott Albricht and Carlos Rodriguez, along with Sabrina Bucker, Paul Gagner, and Stephen Morrison.

Brokelin headquarters Scott AlbrichtWooden inscriptions are largely enlightened by printing, and its goal is to reconsider the relationship between the message and the viewer. In his works, the forms of messages are extracted and rebuilt to create a space for the viewer to interact more intentionally with a message through alternative methods of shape, color, feeling, exploration and meditation in the hope of creating a deeper personal communication.

Carlos Rodriguez She is born at the time in Mexico City. Rodriguez explores the worlds of sexual desire, sex, identity, graphics, paintings and ceramics that praise males. Inspired by classic drawing, naive art, and adult entertainment elements, his work picks the essence of men immersed in natural expressions of play and imagination.

Sabrina Bucker He lives and works in Brooklyn. Her work refers to the subjects of local and valuable identity (or their absence) in what is historically considered the work of women. The artistic paintings detailed with the artist are carefully designed with Dutch officials of an official golden age, as well as artists who belong to the new objectivity movement. Interested in division between traditional and superheroes, Buckler creates scenes from the descending abundance with an external appeal that raises a closer look.

Paul Jagner He is a painter and a sculptor based in Brooklyn who depicts humor and luxury in ordinary things and situations. Gagner often uses a self -yellowed image as a way to find a deeper understanding of our weaknesses. His works are ridiculous moments as a self -regulation that also alludes to the boundaries of the surface of the plate and sculpture.

Artist based in Brooklyn Stephen MorrisonThe floral plates draw the S trombe l’oeil viewer to reveal a distinctive feature – a small dog image hidden inside every prosperity. It is a symbolic of life and death, these actions carry a reminder of the appreciation of the life transit nature.

The future exhibition will continue until May 10 in the Chelsea Industrial Building, New York City



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