Corporeal Landscapes: Gao Yuan’s Calligraphic Cartographies

by Aias Christofis

Gao Yuan, "The Gangster" Series
Gao Yuan, “The Gangster” Series

In the ceaselessly transmutative art oeuvre of Gao Yuan, an ouroboric and almost corporeally charged dialectic unfolds between flesh and terrain; an uncanny, destabilizing metamorphosis through which the vulnerable epidermal surface of the human body dilates, calcifies, and mutates into a desolate, estranged landscape, while these alien terrains themselves seem to petrify into sculptural scarifications of an embodied identity in perpetual alteration. Trained in Taiwan and the United States, Yuan’s practice articulates a hybridized aesthetic in which photography, video, and sculpture converge into a single mutational continuum: her ostensibly flat, two-dimensional photographic surfaces do not remain inert but instead convulse, swell, and erupt outward, acquiring a kind of 3-dimensionality as they force themselves into our presence; an existence that occupies space with the insistence of something bodily, mineral, and newly hatched.

In her early monochrome studies of tattooed bodies, Gao Yuan evokes the estrangement technique of ostranenie, reminiscent of the Russian Formalist theorists and visual artists such as Shklovsky and Eisenstein, through which the once-familiar body is rendered unrecognizable, transmuted into an alien, quasi-geological topography whose markings read less as tattoos than as tectonic fissures upon a living stone-surface, compelling the viewer to confront both self and otherness in an otherworldly and unfamiliar spectrality. In this way, Yuan embodies a philosophical sensibility steeped in Taoist paradox: the tattooed body as both void and plenitude, an aperture of emptiness and simultaneous fullness. This uncanny calligraphy of fossilized flesh invokes a meditative interplay of form and emptiness —a śūnyatā not of serene dissolution, but of visceral potentiality— in which inscription becomes petrification, and petrification becomes the ground of a defamiliarized mode of embodiment.

Gao Yuan, "Entropy" Series
Gao Yuan, “Entropy” Series

In her later landscape works, Gao Yuan’s practice evolves into tactile photo-sculpture: a hybrid of two-dimensional photography and three-dimensional form. These photographic prints of textures are layered, cut, folded, and rearranged into sculptural objects. Her engagement with landscape draws, at a subterranean level, upon the Manual of the Mustard Seed Garden, that encyclopaedic codification of pictorial ontology through which Qing-dynasty painters articulated the morphogenesis of mountains, mists, and vegetal forms. Here, the manual’s taxonomies undergo a kind of somatic transduction; the ink-surface territories coagulate into calligraphic eruptions, and sculptural protrusions pulse with the same energetic principle that once guided the rendering of rocks or cloud swells. What emerges is a mutated, almost bio-calligraphic vocabulary in which classical aesthetics are not merely reinterpreted but re-enfleshed; their once-serene diagrams propelled into a tactile, estranged, and telluric domain where these bodily landscapes no longer mirror one another but fuse into a single, continuously reconfiguring organism. The viewer might observe an unknown vista, but actually witnesses a geomorphological body.
Similarly, Gao Yuan’s videographic practice operates as a spectral choreography in which estranged skin, unstable territory, and mutating identity are folded into a single, oscillating field of forces, where the body is not simply filmed, but activated as a site of inscription, trauma, and psycho-geographic flux. The human body rebels as a living palimpsest: a trembling stratum of overwritten histories, capturing the micro-convulsions of Oneness. For example, Gao Yuan’s video artwork titled Ci’Ke unfolds as a somatic mythography in which a tattooed body on a desolate shoreline becomes the central conduit through which personal identity, historical violence, and territorial memory are made to resonate. Ci’Ke —meaning both a tattooed figure (or “marked one”) and assassin— ritualistically recasts the moving human body into a living geological formation, a body rendered porous to wind, water, and sediment. Filmed against the relentless breathing of the sea, the inked skin functions simultaneously as epidermal script and eroded terrain.

Gao Yuan, "The Woman With" Series
Gao Yuan, “The Woman With” Series

Within the broader constellation of Taiwanese contemporary art, Yuan’s practice uniquely occupies a liminal position: she operates outside the island’s dominant aesthetic bifurcation between, on the one hand, synchronous electronic–digital idioms aligned with Taiwan’s technoscientific industries, and, on the other, the linear, manga-inflected visual vernacular embraced by younger artists. Instead, her art remains insistently tethered to the tactile, the somatic, and the material, articulating an aesthetic vocabulary that neither retreats into nostalgic traditionalism nor capitulates to techno-futurist acceleration. This rootedness, however, is never static. It is profoundly shaped by Taiwan’s intricate ethnic palimpsest —the interwoven genealogies of Austronesian Indigenous communities, Hakka settlers, and later migratory currents— that generate an unstable cultural geology through which identity is continually renegotiated.

In this sense, Gao Yuan’s practice performs a Deleuzian deterritorialization of flesh and ground: the body liquefies into terrain, terrain recoils into skin, and identity melts down and then is torn loose from any stable cartography. What remains is a state of perpetual becoming; a quivering interval where histories surge without hardening into origin, and where the self is no longer anchored in lineage or land, but suspended within the restless, porous volatility of its own transforming surface.

33 New York Artists at Gallery Onetwentyeight

by Chunbum Park

Himeka Murai - “After Slope (LES)” (2025), Mixed media with discarded slope from gallery onetwentyeight, 24 x 14 x 3.5 inches
Himeka Murai, “After Slope (LES)” (2025), mixed media with discarded slope from gallery onetwentyeight, 24 x 14 x 3.5 inches

Thirty-three painters and sculptors from New York gather for an eclectic group exhibition at Gallery Onetwentyeight to have a genuine conversation about what constitutes truth and sincerity in the form of art in our post-truth era.

What is real? What is art? What is real and truthful about an artistic vision or visual style, if it can be mimicked by data-harvesting and analyzing artificial intelligence? Who is an artist, if machines can outdo humans in their own invention of critical thinking and authentic imagery?

Does truth exist as a great virtue and a guiding principle for humanity, if it can be easily mimicked and distorted for sinister aims via fake news and AI-generated content?

It is the human capacity for emotion and feeling that sets apart the likes of the artists featured in this exhibit, from the common antithesis in the future, which would be an advanced, general AI. No matter how smart the general intelligence would be, and regardless of how efficiently it would measure, calculate, and connect, it would not be able to feel and experience as the observer and actor with a consciousness and a soul. The machine would be able to map out the relationships between the signifier and the signified, but it would not be able to feel and experience what is being signified.

Himeka Murai makes a highly experimental and hybrid sculpture titled, “After Slope (LES)” (2025), that incorporates a site-specific found object—the discarded slope from Gallery Onetwentyeight itself. Created during an artist residency in the Lower East Side, the piece quietly acknowledges the material legacies of artists like Eva Hesse, whose post-minimalist and feminist approaches to process and fragility inform Murai’s own sensibility. Rather than simply adopting that language, Murai transforms it into one of poetic sincerity and attentive record-keeping—an approach rooted in memory, urban texture, and the emotional residue of overlooked materials. It is an organic diary that is autobiographical, a record of her experiences and thoughts while wandering in the streets in the LES neighborhood. She collects soil samples and embeds it into the work using hot glue. Transparent photo prints of Gallery Onetwentyeight and the rundown scenes of the surrounding neighborhood tape to the various locations and landmarks of the piece. And the rectangular form attaches to the wall by means of hinges and can open like a door.

The work simultaneously invites the viewer into the artist’s point of view and recollects the fact that the artist has existed in this space, that the artist made her mark here. The work gently proclaims her presence and allows the traces of her voice felt through her vision by the viewers through the intermediary that is the artwork. The work is the outcome of a gatherer collecting bits and pieces of objects that signify both existence and memory. It is a form of re-collection, in which the past (of memory), the present (of the existence in the now), and the future (in the form of dialogue with people who will come after us) coincide in the same object.

Dasha Bazanova - “Carpet” (2025), ceramic, 9 x 17 x 16 inches
Dasha Bazanova, “Carpet” (2025), ceramic, 9 x 17 x 16 inches

Dasha Bazanova, a Russian American sculptor, exhibits her breakthrough piece titled, “Carpet” (2025), depicting a puppy situated on a carpet alongside two pokeballs and a dead chicken android. The work is a continuation of her previous works that depicted sculptural portraits of animal characters with a wonky twist, like her depiction of a goat with disorienting, bulging eyes. But the content of this particular work operates on an entirely different level of metaphor, psychology, and imagery. In this work, Bazanova no longer simply describes within the format of a portrait; she now makes strong commentaries and asks questions that bridge the knowns and the unknowns. In this work, the artist’s gestures feel profound, and her vision, iconic.

The dog is not an ordinary dog, but it is a character with a readable personality or psychology, transformed by the cartoonistic style or iconographic language that carries the vector of furryness, juvenile innocence, and cuteness (something like kawaii culture in Japan but the American version of it). The chicken is a hilariously and comically conceived dead object that is simultaneously alive, like an oxymoron.

Why are there pokeballs thrown on the carpet? Did the dog and the chicken come from the pokeballs? Are the creatures actually something like pokemon, which can be captured or tamed from the wild and summoned to perform tasks at will?

What is the nature of pets, which become objects of love, care, and affection, and what is the nature of food, like chicken, who go through slaughter houses and we think nothing of this tacitly orchestrated holocaust of animals? What are we to judge the level of consciousness of other animals, who has a soul and who doesn’t, and which animals get to live (and which must die)? What will an all-powerful machine like the Terminator do with this kind of precedent set by us humans? What is the artist even saying if she is not a vegan herself?

Sarah Belleview, “Self Portrait as Witch,” acrylic, beads, oil on canvas, 22 x 28 inches
Sarah Belleview, “Self Portrait as Witch,” acrylic, beads, oil on canvas, 22 x 28 inches

Sarah Belleview’s “Self Portrait as a Witch” (year unknown) is fictional, highly fantasized portrait painting of the artist herself also rendered in a semi-cartoonistic style, similar to the ones found in a board game or an illustrated children’s storybook. The portrait is very vulnerable and sensitive yet also genuine and authentic not only because the artist is depicted as a nude and riding a big broomstick, but also the cartoonistic style contains a great deal of human fragility and conflicting emotions. It is very hard to discern if the figure’s smile is in pure delight or sad defeat because a strong form of sadness is imbued in the smile, and the figure is so full of imperfections, embracing her flawed human self, that she requires protection of all those who see her sight in the night sky, rather than condemnation as a witch. This is the question of whether to protect someone for their flaws or differences, or to condemn, ridicule, and alienate them. The artist, who proudly identifies as a magical witch, similarly asks, fight or flight? The artist is brave to accept her vulnerability and her difference, and she is also brave to fight and flight for different reasons. Oppositely, the cowards would fight, and those spineless bullies would also take flight, for the same reason that they are immature and weak, unable to accept individual differences and uniqueness.

In a post-truth era, truth still matters. In a world soon to be dominated and designed by machines, the human is still the center for many of us, not because of power but due to our colors and flawed nature, which furnish us with the choice to be strong and the power to understand our own free will. Art is a humanistic endeavor, after all. When we feel and think, we live. When we strive for truth and justice, we prevail, and humanity makes progress.

The Artists: Mother Pigeon, Carol Diamond, Sarah Fuhrman, Felix Morelo, Lane Twitchell, Tyrome Tripoli, Michelle Rosenberg, Rachel Yanku, Carmen Cicero, Rosabel Ferber, Frank Olt, Rosie Lopeman, Dasha Bazanova, Noelle Velez, Keisha Prioleau-Martin, James Prez, Kerry Law, Marcus Glitteris, Ryan Dawalt, Dean Cerone, Himeka Murai, Charlotte Bravin Lee, Luke Atkinson, Candice Spry, Miriam Carothers, Joy Curtis, Mike Olin, Jeanne Tremel, Isabelle Schneider, Nancy Elsamanoudi, Roberta Fineberg, FA-Q, Zak Vreeland

Veins of the Invisible: Mika Aono

by Caldas da Rainha

Grupius Atelier, Street View, photo: the author
Grupius Atelier, Street View, photo: the author

Situated above a Tattoo Atelier in Caldas da Rainha, Portugal, is the gallery Grupius Atelier. The current exhibition Veins of the Invisible: Mika Aono, is an enchanting exhibition of prints, collages, assemblages and fabric work that all come together to transform relatively tight quarters into a uniquely spiritual experience.

 “Veins of the Invisible: Mika Aono,” installation view, photo: the author
Veins of the Invisible: Mika Aono, installation view, photo: the author

Dominating the space is a multimedia collage On the Way (A Caminho) (2025) that hangs from the ceiling, dividing the space on a subtle diagonal axis. By placing it on such an angle Aono opens up the space, increasing the visual flow for visitors to pass through the space. On the way (A Caminho) features numerous printing approaches from highly refined woodblock prints to impressions garnered from municipal manhole covers and other utilitarian street plates that are unique to Portugal. Other areas are more abstract and experimental where Aono burns through the paper with incense, while in one particular area paper is cutaway creating a partially shuttered window effect. Set up in something of a grid, the entire piece echoes back and forth within its own space creating a dialog with both the confines of the roomscape and the viewer’s thoughts.

Mika Aono, On the Way (A Caminho) (detail) (2025), relief, screenprint, mixed media, 6 x 10 feet, all remaining images courtesy of the artist
Mika Aono, On the Way (A Caminho) (detail) (2025), relief, screenprint, mixed media, 6 x 10 feet, all remaining images courtesy of the artist

Aside from Aono’s obvious skill as a printmaker, there are other intriguing approaches here. For instance, in Dear (Minha Querida) (2025), Aono stitches on a found flea market doily made by a local artisan the melodic South African name Lalela she heard a friend mention. The baby blue of the handiwork, the copper nails that hold the doily in place, and the wine and white color of the thread used by the artist for the name all come together to signify human connection through love and admiration. In a statement, Aono writes: “(Lalela is) a word from the Zulu language, and it really touched me. Lalela means to listen—but not “just listen.” It is an invitation to listen intently, with open presence, to allow yourself to be permeated by what is around and within you. In Zulu culture, “lalela” calls for a deep, respectful attention: to listen not only with your ears but with your whole self—with heart, mind, body, and spirit.”

Mika Aono, On the Way (A Caminho) (detail) (2025), relief, screenprint, mixed media, 6 x 10 feet, all remaining images courtesy of the artist
Mika Aono, On the Way (A Caminho) (detail) (2025), relief, screenprint, mixed media, 6 x 10 feet, all remaining images courtesy of the artist

Another example is Trans-it (2025), which appears at the right in the second image above. Here the artist hangs from a preexisting pipe near the ceiling of the gallery a string of tiny lights draped over thick paper discs pierced again with glowing hot incense sticks to make lines and clusters of holes. At play here are the different intensities of light and shadow, and the way this work is both grounded and ascending as it elicits an uplifting mood.

Mika Aono, On the Way (A Caminho) (detail) (2025), relief, screenprint, mixed media, 6 x 10 feet, all remaining images courtesy of the artist
Mika Aono, On the Way (A Caminho) (detail) (2025), relief, screenprint, mixed media, 6 x 10 feet, all remaining images courtesy of the artist

Aesthetically, the art of Aono has many aspects. Take for instance three prints; Mirror Mirror (Espelho, Espelho) (2025), Full of Tears (Cheia de Lágrimas) (2025) and Where To (2025). Through these three examples Aono moves from a very profound connection to mother earth; then to a sixties where a colorfully mesmerizing series of teardrops that loosely encircle six voids in a soft grid suggest motion; to a powerfully rendered, albeit disorderly jumble of moths clustered and casting shadows in a complex mass that reflects controlled chaos through interaction.

Veins of the Invisible: Mika Aono at Grupius Atelier in Caldas da Rainha, Portugal, runs through December 4th 2025.

Joan Bofill: Surrealist Double Portrait

by Chunbum Park

Joan Bofill, David Lynch, 2019, Posca markers, fine liner, and pencil on paper, 42 × 59.4 cm (16.5 × 23.4 in). Image Courtesy of Joan Bofill
Joan Bofill, David Lynch, 2019, Posca markers, fine liner, and pencil on paper, 42 × 59.4 cm (16.5 × 23.4 in). Image Courtesy of Joan Bofill

Joan Bofill, a Spanish visual artist and filmmaker, engages with a mode of portraiture which he calls “Double Portrait,” to capture a meaningful trace and record of his encounters with distinguished figures. At the Angel Orensanz Foundation’s gothic synagogue, Bofill’s exhibition, “Double Portrait: Paintings In Conversation” (October 16-17), takes place in collaboration with (Director) Sozita Goudouna’s The Opening Gallery. The Angel Orensanz Foundation for the Arts, established 1992 in New York City, is an artistic and cultural space/institution open to artists, writers, thinkers and leaders, including Philip Glass and Spike Lee; Arthur Miller, Alexander McQueen, Salman Rushdie, Maya Angelou and Alexander Borovsky; Elie Wiesel and Chuck Close. The current show brings together both large-scale paintings and the smaller “Double Portraits.” The “Double Portrait” project specifically involves both the filming of the encounter or interview and the artist’s drawing/painting of the figure with India ink and graphite. The series emerged from his documentary work, particularly his film about Hollywood producer Stuart Cornfeld (premiering at AFI Festival October 23). While conducting interviews for that film, Bofill began drawing his subjects simultaneously—a practice that evolved into something more deliberate.

Joan Bofill installation view at Angel Orensanz Foundation for the Arts
Joan Bofill installation view at Angel Orensanz Foundation for the Arts

“Double Portrait” is a synthetic process with dialogue based on mutual trust and the dynamic interplay of personalities – the artist’s and the interviewee’s. The artist envisions the “Double Portrait” as a principled endeavor – one that refuses to exploit or use people for their fame and which happens naturally and organically through a web or network of human connections. Throughout the continuation of this practice, Stuart Cornfield might introduce another filmmaker like David Lynch to the artist purely out of delight for the conversation that the artist engaged in with the person. 

The manner in which Bofill tunes into the conversation with the figures with an observant, creative, and informed mind gains the trust of the interviewees, which allows them to open up to the artist to create together a playful and friendly synthesis of ideas, not necessarily as thesis and antithesis, but as intuition embracing intuitions, and experience empathizing with experience.

All the information garnered by the artist feeds into the artist’s psyche in interpreting and digesting the subject’s persona and history, which contributes to the final image through the subconscious. 

Being heavily influenced by Surrealism, of which Spanish painters Salvador Dali and Joan Miro were key figures, the artist’s visual renderings of the subjects traverse the territories of the transient, ephemeral, spectral, and angelic. A uniquely different kind of visual qualia or style can be detected in this kind of work from the artist’s usual repertoire of figurative and abstract painting. It should be humbly assessed that Bofill’s most successful and consistent body of work to date is the “Double Portrait” not because of its ambitious and large scale but because of its narrowed down scope, clarity of purpose and originality of vision, and its historical and cultural significance in dealing with iconic figures.

Joan Bofill, Angel Orensanz, 2025, work on paper and video – min, color, sound, work on paper, 20.7 × 30.2 cm (8.15 × 11.89). Image Courtesy of Joan Bofill
Joan Bofill, Angel Orensanz, 2025, work on paper and video – min, color, sound, work on paper, 20.7 × 30.2 cm (8.15 × 11.89). Image Courtesy of Joan Bofill

The paper on which the “Double Portrait” is executed takes on a special meaning or significance because the artist often rips out a page from an old art history book or monograph without the image or the slide of the artwork, which the artist purposefully removes, leaving a blank white space for the drawing and painting. This act is akin to the making of a palimpsest, in which the artist recognizes the historical significance of the continuity of tradition, lineage, and canon over long centuries and millennia. The artist appears to suggest, in engaging with figures from the Spanish-speaking domains, the American mainstream, and African and Caribbean origins, that the “Western” history and culture has evolved into a global union of people and ideas and not strictly limited to the history and the cultures of people with a European ancestry. What remains is no longer purely Western people and society but a globalized cultural network of institutions, ideas, trade, and encounters.

A clear distinction can be observed between Bofill and the other “artists” in the streets chasing after famous people: Bofill approaches the “Double Portrait” project with sincerity and lucidity, with the goal of earning the trust of the other by maintaining his own artistic integrity and sensitivity. There is no wax or fluff in Bofill’s work; it is neither over nor underworked; it is made just about right, which is very difficult to achieve for many artists who may overshoot or undershoot from the most ideal outcome. The accidents are no longer accidents but serve as the patterns of an organic and creative process based on discovery and an earnest investigation (for the truth of what they may discuss). While Bofill may not be Picasso just yet, he is a young master in his own rights. 

Through repetition of the “Double Portrait,” Bofill slowly accumulates the structure and the voice of his unique style, which is ghostly or angelic at times, traversing into the spiritual and the metaphysical territories, perhaps because the artist is acutely aware of the passage of time and our own mortality.

Why “Double Portrait”? What is the effect of assigning a QR code to each drawing or painting, which leads to a video interview of the person depicted in the artwork? 

The answers may be obvious, but the truth requires a great deal of thought and effort to be properly excavated. The video interview may capture in real time the various facial expressions, the speech patterns, the voice, and gestures and the manners of the person. The video may be the shadow of the object, which is the drawn portrait, or it may be the object itself, with the shadow being the drawn portrait. Sometimes, the video may contain more information than the drawing or painting itself.

But art is the process or the act of curation of information. In photography, it is the cropping of the subject, filtering out the unnecessary details or noise. Similarly, the video component of the “Double Portrait” serves to provide context for the framed information and to create an ecosystem of ideas and meaning, of which only a small amount makes it into the visual rendering like the tip of the iceberg.

But, really, art should transcend this kind of curation and accumulation of information, going beyond to capture something invisible and essential, which can never be found in the recorded video of the interview.

And this is where the true test for the artist lies. Even when the artist could not communicate properly with the subject, due to the limitations or differences of language, the artist connected with the subject. And this shows in the paintings. The artist allows the subject to subconsciously alter the internal state of the artist’s own being, which makes Double Portrait in essence an interactive and collaborative project. 

oan Bofill, Sagrada Familia - Familia Sagrada, 2023-2024. Image Courtesy of Joan Bofill
Joan Bofill, Sagrada Familia – Familia Sagrada, 2023-2024. Image Courtesy of Joan Bofill

“Double Portrait” is not just the words or the act of sitting down and conversing with one another, but it is the intermingling of personalities, the interaction of personal energies, and the interconnection and trust between the two – the observer and the subject. The subject opens up to the observer (who is the artist) because the observer opens up to the subject with great sincerity; the observer/artist also allows the subject to enter into the observer/artist’s psyche, just as the observer/artist is doing the same to read into the subject’s own feelings, lived experiences, and ideological stance. And what results is that the artist’s hand serves as the subject’s hand, on a psychological or subconscious level, which is consistent with the Surrealist and even Dadaist (which evolved from the Surrealist) practice and philosophy. In effect, the observer is observed, and the observed, observing.

Bofill’s portrait of David Lynch is filled with sparks of light (which metaphorically becomes the spark of ideas) that penetrate into the shadows of his face. His strong and determined depiction of Angel Orensanz keeps his identity and ideological persona as a revolutionary and advocate for the advancement of art and culture. 

In conclusion, the artist achieves something greater than the sum of its parts for the “Double Portrait” project, by the very nature of its limited focus and artistic philosophy and sensitivity that reflects highly of the artist’s own fine-tuned and intellectual nature. Bofill approaches the subject not as an object of portraiture but as a subjecthood for empathy and human connection, and this is what makes the people respond to and engage so brilliantly and meaningfully with the project.

Art Toronto 2025

by Roy Bernardi and Jennifer Leskiw

Mexican curator Karen Huber in front of art work by Chilean artist Rolankay (1989-) titled Illumination, 2025, oil on canvas 67-3/4 x 59-7/8 inches courtesy of Isabel Croxatto Galeria from Santiago, Chile
Mexican curator Karen Huber in front of art work by Chilean artist Rolankay (1989-) titled Illumination, 2025, oil on canvas 67-3/4 x 59-7/8 inches courtesy of Isabel Croxatto Galeria from Santiago, Chile

Art Toronto is Canada’s leading art fair, held annually at the Metro Convention Centre located on Front Street in the vibrant downtown area of Toronto. It is the largest art fair in the country, showcasing works from both emerging young artists and established masters. Under the leadership of Mia Nielsen, the Director of Art Toronto, the fair has consistently thrived, with a new central theme introduced each year. This year, the focus is on Latin American art (Arte Sur), curated by Karen Huber, a Mexican curator and gallerist based in Mexico City. Huber is recognized for her innovative approach to presenting contemporary Latin American art from Central and South America. She has assembled 11 esteemed galleries for Art Toronto, which are featured in a dedicated section of the fair’s exhibition space. The participating galleries include Alejandra Topete Gallery from Mexico City, Mexico; Aninat Galería from Vitacura, Chile; BLOC Art from Lima, Peru; Crisis Gallery from Lima, Peru; deCERCA from San José, Costa Rica; Judas Galería from Valparaíso, Chile; Isabel Croxatto Galería from Santiago, Chile; PROXYCO Gallery from New York, USA (featuring Latin artists); Subsuelo from Rosario, Argentina; Swivel Gallery from New York, USA (featuring Latin artists); and The White Lodge from Buenos Aires, Argentina. 

The Latin American focus is a must see. According to Huber, every art fair in the world needs a section for Latin American art. This huge continent brims with creativity encompassing all mediums resulting in fresh works touching upon all aspects of humanity stemming from young voices, indigenous peoples, well seasoned artists and those artists no longer alive. In talks with fellow colleagues, curators and friends, Huber feels Latin America is no longer seen as a minority. In her opinion, it has become very active in every country and in every city in the world and it is an important part of the economy. Huber feels it is essential to give visibility to Latin American artists in spaces like art fairs, galleries, museums and institutions. Many feel there has been a void in the art market for contemporary Latin American art. More galleries are now expanding to exhibit Latin American art opening the world to more conversations about art, to more story telling from different backgrounds and linking various cultures together. There is a growing curiosity among individuals regarding Latin American art. Individuals are increasingly seeking to travel to fairs in Latin America to witness and discover the wealth of offerings that this continent presents.

Canadian artist Harold Town (1924-1990), Tyranny of the Corner Puzzle Set,1962, oil and lucite on canvas, 82 x 75 inches, courtesy of Christopher Cutts Gallery
Canadian artist Harold Town (1924-1990), Tyranny of the Corner Puzzle Set,1962, oil and lucite on canvas, 82 x 75 inches, courtesy of Christopher Cutts Gallery

Although most galleries within the Art Fair showcase emerging contemporary artists, there are exceptions like Christopher Cutts Gallery booth A71, who highlights emerging talents such as Alexander Rasmussen alongside the renowned Canadian master Harold Town. Director Christopher Cutts made a noteworthy observation: “They positioned me in a corner this year, so I thought there was no more fitting artwork to display in that corner than Harold Town’s piece titled Tyranny of the Corner Puzzle Set from 1962”.

American artist  Robert Rauschenberg (1925-2008) Cardbird lll, from Cardbird Series (Gemini 305), 1971, offset lithograph and collage with tape on corrugated cardboard, 35 XS 35-1/2 inches courtesy Cowley Abbott Art Auctioneers
American artist  Robert Rauschenberg (1925-2008) Cardbird lll, from Cardbird Series (Gemini 305), 1971, offset lithograph and collage with tape on corrugated cardboard, 35 x 35-1/2 inches courtesy Cowley Abbott Art Auctioneers
Canadian artist Group of Seven Member Franklin Carmichael (1890-1945) Coal Chute, 1942, oil on board, 38 x 48 inches courtesy Cowley Abbott Art Auctioneers
Canadian artist Group of Seven Member Franklin Carmichael (1890-1945) Coal Chute, 1942, oil on board, 38 x 48 inches courtesy Cowley Abbott Art Auctioneers

This year signifies a milestone for innovators Rob Cowley and Lydia Abbott, who are continually expanding the limits of art sales. Together, they operate Cowley Abbott, Canada’s Art Auctioneers, which specializes in showcasing and selling secondary market artworks both regionally and internationally. Their Private Sales section, featured within the auction house and exhibited at the Art Toronto art fair booth A51, highlights Canadian masters such as David Blackwood, A.J. Casson, and Franklin Carmichael, alongside international icons like Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg, and Larry Poons.

Rebecca Hossak Art Gallery at Art Toronto booth C54 featuring works by artist Nikoleta Sekulovic (1974-) (left) Alice, 2025, acrylic and oil stick on linen, 78-7/10 x 68-9/10 inches. Nikoleta Sekulovic (1974-) (right) Vanessa Bell, 2025, acrylic and oil stick on linen, 84-3/5 x 72-4/5 inches
Rebecca Hossak Art Gallery at Art Toronto booth C54 featuring works by artist Nikoleta Sekulovic (1974-) (left) Alice, 2025, acrylic and oil stick on linen, 78-7/10 x 68-9/10 inches. Nikoleta Sekulovic (1974-) (right) Vanessa Bell, 2025, acrylic and oil stick on linen, 84-3/5 x 72-4/5 inches

The Rebecca Hossak Art Gallery, booth C54, located in London, UK, showcases two remarkable artworks by the artist Nikoleta Sekulovic, who was born in 1974 in Rome, Italy, and has German/Serbian heritage. Sekulovic is among the most sought-after artists represented by the gallery. Last year, she presented two pieces at Art Toronto, successfully selling both, and subsequently featured her work at Miami Basel, where several pieces sold out. Sekulovic is a contemporary figurative painter renowned for her vividly conceived portraits that pay tribute to iconic women throughout history. She employs a unique style that she has cultivated, characterized by a contemporary craftsmanship reminiscent of Pre-Raphaelite design.

The art fair offers a wonderful experience for those seeking inspiration and knowledge from the numerous art dealers and artworks displayed.