At the age of ninety, Oliver Lee Jackson continues to explore one of painting’s most enduring questions: the unstable boundary between figuration and abstraction. The exhibition brings together paintings from recent decades alongside a previously unseen multi-panel screen, offering insight into a practice that for more than sixty years has been defined by layered and highly dynamic compositions. Within Jackson’s works appear his well-known figures, the so-called “paint people,” emerging from fields of color and movement. Created with oil paint, chalk, and spray-painted stencils, these presences sometimes gather in small groups, at other times appear alone in essential gestures - crouching, reclining, or interacting with one another - within complex pictorial spaces that invite slow and open interpretation. At the center of the exhibition is a tripartite screen painted on both sides and conceived as a movable element that can be arranged in multiple configurations. The work continually shifts the relationship between figure, landscape, and abstraction, transforming the painted surface into a spatial device that challenges the boundaries between painting and sculpture.
Luca Campestri explores the idea of home through memory, nomadism, and everyday gestures
Through installation, photography, and sculpture, Campestri turns objects and images into a poetic reflection on home as a mobile space shaped by memory.
Vemo Hang and Yi Wen: When Nature Becomes a Visual Language
Painting and sculpture converge in an exhibition that explores nature as a living system, blending organic forms, industrial materials, and new visual narratives.