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Ridley Howard Looks to the “Sky”

Ridley Howard Looks to the
Marinaro is pleased to present Sky, a group of new small paintings by Ridley Howard with a particular focus on the significance of space. Howard’s paintings exist in a quietly charged place between minimalism and intimacy, realism and abstraction. His work often depicts everyday moments — a glance, a kiss, a figure in repose — yet there is a palpable stillness and timelessness that gives his paintings a poetic and contemplative edge. Howard’s ability to make the mundane feel mythic is central to his artistic power.
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Arnold J. Kemp “Un-make | Un-model” at M. Le Blanc, Chicago

M. LeBlanc is proud to open the gallery’s second solo exhibition with artist Arnold J. Kemp. Titled “Un-make | Un-model”, the exhibition will open on Saturday, April 19th from 6 to 9 pm, and remain on view through May 31st. Comprising the exhibition are watercolors from Kemp’s latest Scores series and a select number of recent abstract
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How to Start Collecting Art in 2025

Collecting art can be a rewarding pursuit, both personally enriching and financially promising. The art world will continue to expand digitally and physically, providing beginners ample opportunities to dive in. Whether you’re driven by passion, investment potential, or both, here’s your guide on how to start collecting art effectively in 2025. Define Your Artistic Preferences…

The post How to Start Collecting Art in 2025 appeared first on Hue & Eye.

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Sebastião Salgado, known for his epic photos of global labour, dies at 81.

Sebastião Salgado, the Brazilian documentary photographer whose sweeping black-and-white images documented labourers, migrants, and remote rural communities in some of the world’s harshest climates, has died at the age of 81. His death was confirmed on May 23rd by Instituto Terra, the environmental foundation he co-founded with his wife, Lélia Wanick Salgado.

Salgado was known for engaging deeply with the communities he worked with, a relationship that sometimes lasted for decades. This engagement resulted in totally unique and breathtakingly epic images . His photo series included “Workers” (1993), “Exodus” (2000), “Genesis” (2013) and “Amazônia” (2021). He portrayed gold miners at Serra Pelada—the massive open-pit mine in northern Brazil—as well as families crossing the Sudanese Sahara and Indigenous communities in the remote Amazon. His style blended the traditions of social documentary and humanist photography, evoking Dorothea Lange and Robert Doisneau, with a pictorialist sensibility rooted in the work of Ansel Adams.

Ecuador, 1982 , 1982
Sebastião Salgado

Polka Galerie

Born in 1944 in Aimorés, Brazil, Salgado first trained as an economist before discovering photography in the early 1970s during a trip to Africa. He later worked with agencies including Sygma, Gamma, and Magnum before founding Amazonas Images with his wife in 1994.

His early photography assignments saw him posted to cover the plight of communities in sub-Saharan Africa. This formative engagement with environmental refugees surviving extreme droughts was highly influential for Salgado, and would define the work for which he became globally renowned. As a young photographer without extensive formal training, Salgado quickly developed a reputation for his distinct visual style and his ability to apply theories of formal composition in harsh, often chaotic, and dangerous environments.

Though some critics accused him of romanticising hardship, Salgado argued that his photographs affirmed the dignity of life under extreme conditions. Contemporary photographers such as Edward Burtynsky and Gideon Mendel cite him as a major influence.

Xingu, Mato Grosso, Brazil , 2005
Sebastião Salgado

Galerie Bene Taschen

In 1998, Salgado and his wife, who is an author and environmental activist, launched Instituto Terra, a project to restore Brazil’s Atlantic Forest. The initiative has since reforested thousands of acres and shaped Salgado’s later turn toward environmental themes.

Salgado received a slew of industry honors throughout his career, including the Hasselblad Award and the Prince of Asturias Prize for the Arts. His life and work were profiled in the Oscar-nominated documentary The Salt of the Earth (2014), directed by Wim Wenders and the artist’s son, Juliano Ribeiro Salgado. The film showed the intense physical hardship that Salgado endured in order to capture his images. In the film’s voiceover, Wenders described Salgado as “a man writing and rewriting the world with lights and shadows.”

He is survived by Lélia, their two sons, and several grandchildren.

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Finnish gallery Makasiini Contemporary will open a new gallery space in Helsinki.

Finnish gallery Makasiini Contemporary has announced that it will open a new location in Helsinki this fall. After eight years in the regional capital of Turku, the gallery will now add another space in the Finnish capital. On September 19th, the gallery will inaugurate the new space with three simultaneous exhibitions, including concurrent solo exhibitions by Spanish painter Jorge Galindo and Canadian painter Cindy Phenix, as well as a group exhibition featuring a selection from the gallery’s roster.

The new gallery is located in Pasila, at Helsinki’s historic Train Factory, an industrial site that was revived as a cultural center last year. The approximately 8,000-square-foot venue will feature three exhibition spaces, as well as a private showroom.

Makasiini Contemporary was founded in Turku, Finland in 2016 by Frej Forsblom. The gallery’s flagship is located in a massive yellow building, known as the former governor’s stables, which was built by architect Charles Bassi in 1832.

The Finnish gallery currently mounts around 10 exhibitions a year, featuring an internationally diverse roster of artists. Some artists include Argentine artist Fabian Marcaccio, Spanish artist Jordi Alcaraz, American artist Jacob Hashimoto, and Zambian artist Jack Kabangu, among others.

“After eight years in Turku, this move to Helsinki felt like a natural next step,” Forsblom said in a statement to Artsy. “We’ve been looking for the right space for years—and this one immediately felt right. The architecture, the volume, and the natural light make it ideal for ambitious exhibitions.”

A formidable presence in Finland, Makasiini Contemporary also represents the country’s art scene at art fairs around the world. In the last year, the gallery has participated in Untitled Art Miami Beach, Atlanta Art Fair, and Art SG. Meanwhile, the gallery is known for its robust online programming, which is helping shape the online art world.