Peter Halley

Peter Halley stands as a monolithic sentinel within the pantheon of contemporary creation, widely heralded as the legitimate scion of the American abstract tradition. His ascent from the gritty, crucible-like art milieu of mid-eighties New York precipitated an international epoch of renown, positioning him as the grand architect of geometric abstraction for over a quarter-century. His oeuvre is a visceral, chromatic assault. By deploying an unorthodox apothecary of industrial agents—synthetic mortar, the searing brilliance of Day-Glo, the granular texture of Roll-a-Tex, and the synthetic hum of acrylic fluorescence—Halley crafts a visual lexicon that vibrates with immediate, jarring potency. To the observer, his geometry acts as an intricate funhouse mirror for our modern condition. These compositions are locked in a serpentine dance between entities he christens “prisons” and “cells,” architectural metaphors for the tectonic encroaching of grid-like structures upon our communal existence. Much like a phantom architect mapping the skeletal blueprint of a metropolis, he draws from the rigid, labyrinthine city grid of Manhattan and his own profound seclusion therein; he imagines the abstract form as a shackled bastion, desperately tethered to the external world through the ephemeral conduits of electronic discourse. Beyond the canvas, Halley wields his intellect with a surgeon’s precision. He is not merely a painter, but a provocateur … Read more

Meret Oppenheim

Meret Oppenheim was a cartographer of the subconscious, weaving the disparate threads of Dadaism and Surrealism into an tapestry singularly her own. She did not merely participate in the avant-garde; she permeated it. Arriving in Paris at the dawn of adulthood, she became a luminary among icons like Man Ray and Breton, gravitating toward the incendiary brilliance of the Parisian circle. Then came the teacup—that fur-lined catalyst of 1936—which shattered expectations as abruptly as a lightning strike, branding her name into the collective consciousness. Yet, the ascent was met with a protracted silence. For two decades, Oppenheim retreated into a labyrinth of internalized strife, drifting away from her peers to seek sanctuary within the Alpine borders of neutral Switzerland. This period was a crucible for her spirit, a desert phase before her vigorous renaissance in the mid-1950s. When she reemerged, it was with the ferocity of a gale. Her oeuvre expanded, transcending mere sculpture to encompass a sprawling taxonomy of drawings, visceral jewelry, and mixed-media alchemy. She stood as an iconoclast, habitually dismantling the binary architecture of gender. Her art functioned as a threshold, a liminal space where the obsidian edges of reality bled into the gossamer light of dreams. … Read more

Ben Vautier

Born amongst the sun-drenched vestiges of Naples in 1935, Benjamin Vautier—universally recognized by the shorthand ‘Ben’—emerged from an ancestral tapestry woven of Irish and Swiss threads. War’s shadow cast his kin into a peripatetic existence, a restless pilgrimage traversing Switzerland, Turkey, and finally the alluvial soil of Egypt, before the family anchored their dreams in the azure embrace of Nice in 1949. Within the hallowed halls of the Collège Stanislas, Vautier matured, eventually leveraging maternal largesse to inaugurate ‘Magasin.’ Initially a modest repository for literature and stationery, the storefront underwent a metamorphic shift; it shed its skin to emerge as a bastion for the sonic avant-garde and a crucible for visionaries like César and Arman. Here, the creative spirit flourished, a lotus unfurling in the fecund loam of dissent. Entranced by the metaphysical weight of Yves Klein and the iconoclastic tremors of Marcel … Read more

Ossip ( 1952-2026)

Some twelve years ago, my son Lucas and I had the privilege of visiting Ossip in his studio for a fourth time—an experience that has remained vivid in our memories ever since. From the moment we arrived, it felt as though we had stepped into another world. The studio was much more than a workspace; … Read more

Öyvind Fahlström

Öyvind Fahlström—a nomadic luminary born in the humid sprawl of São Paulo and destined for the Baltic chill of Stockholm—has long languished in the footnotes of art history. Critics tethered him to the neon-drenched coat-tails of European Pop Art, yet such labeling feels like describing a tempest as a mere breeze. Beneath his aesthetic appropriation of mass-media static and the grimy undercurrents of counter-culture, Fahlström’s oeuvre throbs with a labyrinthine moral urgency; it is less a collection of objects than a rigorous, intellectual siege against complacency. This meticulously curated exhibition bridges the chasm between archival silences and public reception, pulling over seventy disparate artifacts from the shadows of private vaults. Much of this assembly draws its bracing, unfiltered vitality from the artist’s own personal caches, recently entrusted to the custodianship of the MACBA. To engage with Fahlström is to abandon … Read more

Carl Andre, 2 new additions

Born in the granite-crusted soil of Quincy, Massachusetts, in 1935, Carl Andre emerged as a sculptural iconoclast, shedding the pretensions of high art like a snake sloughing its winter skin. His trajectory was forged not in the sterile vacuum of the academy, but amidst the industrial grit of gear works and the rhythmic, iron-lunged roar of the Pennsylvania Railroad, where he served as a brakesman. These years amidst the switchbacks proved seminal; the utilitarian cadence of locomotives bled into his aesthetic, transmuted into the rigid geometry of his later output. Andre’s transition from the gestural—his nascent poems and ethereal perspex incisions—to the tectonic was absolute. Influenced profoundly by the stripped-down essence of Brancusi and the chromatic austerity of his confidant, Frank Stella, Andre redirected his focus. Carving became anachronism; construction, his new … Read more

Irma Boom

The first blog “new Style ” is dedicated to arguably the most influential book designer from the last 3 decades from the Netherlands. Irma Boom started designing books right after she had left the AKI; yet, her definitive refinement occurred during a half-decade tenure navigating the bureaucratic currents of the Dutch government’s printing house. In 1991, she birthed Irma Boom Office—a boutique studio that functions much like an alchemist’s workshop, distilling complex cultural narratives into physical form for a global clientele spanning from the … Read more