{*}
Add news
March 2010 April 2010 May 2010 June 2010 July 2010
August 2010
September 2010 October 2010 November 2010 December 2010 January 2011 February 2011 March 2011 April 2011 May 2011 June 2011 July 2011 August 2011 September 2011 October 2011 November 2011 December 2011 January 2012 February 2012 March 2012 April 2012 May 2012 June 2012 July 2012 August 2012 September 2012 October 2012 November 2012 December 2012 January 2013 February 2013 March 2013 April 2013 May 2013 June 2013 July 2013 August 2013 September 2013 October 2013 November 2013 December 2013 January 2014 February 2014 March 2014 April 2014 May 2014 June 2014 July 2014 August 2014 September 2014 October 2014 November 2014 December 2014 January 2015 February 2015 March 2015 April 2015 May 2015 June 2015 July 2015 August 2015 September 2015 October 2015 November 2015 December 2015 January 2016 February 2016 March 2016 April 2016 May 2016 June 2016 July 2016 August 2016 September 2016 October 2016 November 2016 December 2016 January 2017 February 2017 March 2017 April 2017 May 2017 June 2017 July 2017 August 2017 September 2017 October 2017 November 2017 December 2017 January 2018 February 2018 March 2018 April 2018 May 2018 June 2018 July 2018 August 2018 September 2018 October 2018 November 2018 December 2018 January 2019 February 2019 March 2019 April 2019 May 2019 June 2019 July 2019 August 2019 September 2019 October 2019 November 2019 December 2019 January 2020 February 2020 March 2020 April 2020 May 2020 June 2020 July 2020 August 2020 September 2020 October 2020 November 2020 December 2020 January 2021 February 2021 March 2021 April 2021 May 2021 June 2021 July 2021 August 2021 September 2021 October 2021 November 2021 December 2021 January 2022 February 2022 March 2022 April 2022 May 2022 June 2022 July 2022 August 2022 September 2022 October 2022 November 2022 December 2022 January 2023 February 2023 March 2023 April 2023 May 2023 June 2023 July 2023 August 2023 September 2023 October 2023 November 2023 December 2023 January 2024 February 2024 March 2024 April 2024 May 2024 June 2024 July 2024 August 2024 September 2024 October 2024 November 2024 December 2024 January 2025 February 2025 March 2025 April 2025 May 2025 June 2025 July 2025 August 2025 September 2025 October 2025 November 2025 December 2025 January 2026 February 2026
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27
28
News Every Day |

Erica Mahinay’s Explorations of the Threshold Between the Seen and the Sensed

Erica Mahinay with layered pink, orange and burgundy gestures intersected by translucent vertical lines." width="970" height="728" data-caption='Erica Mahinay&#8217;s practice occupies the intersection of gestural abstraction and phenomenological inquiry. <span class="media-credit">Photo by Jeff McLane</span>'>

Existing between the physical and the abstract, Erica Mahinay’s works engage painting’s physicality as surface and tactile matter, entering into dialogue with its existence as body, memory and imagination. A similar sensibility informs her biomorphic sculptures of disjointed bodies rendered as unfinished forms. Building on the momentum generated by her inclusion in the most recent iteration of “Made in L.A.” at the Hammer Museum, Mahinay is presenting with Make Room at Frieze Los Angeles with pieces that are the culmination of a decade-long process of rigorous studio experimentation. Working across multiple materials, her practice probes embodiment, perception and material consciousness.

Moving fluidly at the intersection of gestural abstraction and phenomenological inquiry, and deliberately inhabiting the threshold between abstraction and figuration, her work is, in both process and presence, a sustained meditation on embodiment and material consciousness. It touches something at the core of our encounter with the world, resonating across cognitive, emotional and imaginative dimensions. When Observer caught up with Mahinay ahead of Frieze, she explained that during her early explorations, as she searched for a conceptual foundation for her work, she was deeply drawn to memento mori and still-life painting. These references shaped her earliest output, which included still lifes but quickly expanded beyond conventional pictorial boundaries into hybrid objects recalling Rauschenberg’s combines, in which painted elements pushed outward into space and assumed sculptural form.

That became the foundation of her sustained interest in the tension between painting as a physical object and painting as an illusory window—an essential dialectic at the core of abstraction that animates her entire practice. “That’s a conversation I think abstraction takes on—the physicality of painting, and either the embracing or negation of painting as this space to enter,” she reflected. Over time, these questions became less literal and more materially embedded, as she no longer felt compelled to represent them directly. Her subsequent experimentation with fabric marked a decisive shift, allowing her to collapse the expanded sculptural field of the combine works back into a surface that was technically two-dimensional yet still retained a palpable tactile depth. Working primarily with sewn silk for nearly a decade, she explored varying degrees of transparency while deliberately exposing stretcher bars and structural supports, using these elements to probe painting’s underlying architecture and to question, more fundamentally, what constitutes painting itself.

A sustained engagement with surface gradually led Mahinay to conceive of the image as something almost wearable—something that could be tried on, like an identity or provisional state of being. “There was this kind of acknowledgement with painting and surface as an agreement between myself and the viewer,” she said. In the 10 years she spent working with fabrics, she also found herself rediscovering color through the process of dyeing, which she experienced as fundamentally different from applying pigment. “I think I fell in love with color again,” she said, reflecting on how this renewed relationship with chromatic depth and material presence ultimately led her back to oil painting, with a heightened awareness of color’s alchemical potential to transform tactile matter into imaginative and poetic universes.

Her latest paintings emerged out of techniques rooted in classical underpainting, beginning with earth-sourced pigments—burnt sienna, burnt umber and Dutch brown—that establish a chromatic foundation she activates through responsive gestures. It’s a highly traditional process, much closer to 16th-century landscape or figurative painting than to modern abstraction. “I use burnt umbers and burnt siennas in a single wash, then wipe away the lights and darks to create contrast and establish a sense of figure-ground. It creates a baseline color for the painting,” she explained. This initial stage unfolds quickly and intuitively, as she must work within a limited window of time to shape these tonal relationships before the surface settles. There are no preparatory sketches, predetermined plans or color studies; each painting emerges organically, guided by a responsive dialogue with previous works or gestures she may choose to extend or resist as the process unfolds.

From that initial underpainting, she applies a thin wash of titanium or lead white. When white is layered over brown, it produces an optical color-mixing effect historically associated with painters such as Caravaggio, whose subtle tonal transitions evoke the sensation of light passing through space. The interaction generates unexpected chromatic shifts—soft blues, pinks and purples—that the eye registers as atmospheric depth rather than literal pigment. “For me, it produces a familiarity that the eye associates with looking through atmosphere, with light passing through space and reflecting back. Your brain completes the color. It often results in soft pinks, blues or purples,” Mahinay said. For her, this is the alchemy of painting. “You can create something entirely new from two very different colors. Burnt sienna is this bright orange, and then you layer white over it, and suddenly it produces these soft, hazy blues. It feels like magic.”

In this first intuitive and gestural phase, Mahinay channels a spontaneous form of transmission onto the canvas, which she said might include the influence of her mother, a psychiatric nurse practitioner who incorporated somatic practices such as dance into her therapeutic work. “I do believe that movement and gesture carry your experience through it,” she said. “That’s part of how I trust the process—that I know I’m funneling or channeling something.”

After this initial stage, however, the process slows considerably, as she allows each layer to dry fully in order to preserve its chromatic balance. Each painting develops through a prolonged and highly individualized relationship, often accumulating density over time and undergoing substantial chromatic and structural shifts. Certain works transform dramatically in palette and identity as she responds to the painting’s internal logic and emerging presence. “I think I’m drawing from traditions that are about observing and looking and combining them with traditions of gesture and more intuitive mark-making, and a more all-over kind of impact on the surface,” she reflected.

The final painting emerges from this sustained dialogue with the surface—one that resists closure and remains open to interpretation. Mahinay is quick to point out that her paintings are not intended to communicate specific personal narratives. “I don’t expect anyone to pull away anything about me necessarily from the canvas,” she said, while nonetheless acknowledging that lived experience filters into the work. “Everything that I experience and absorb ends up in the work somehow.” In that sense, her canvases are both a record of experience and an inquiry into how perception emerges through the body, how surfaces hold memory and how internal emotional states take external form.

Her paintings have often been open-ended, but in this new body of work, she introduces a self-imposed form of containment: a translucent grid with shimmering lines of light vertically traversing the canvas, operating both as a formal device and philosophical proposition. More lush and vigorous painterly currents spill beyond this grid, as if exceeding the symbolic systems humans have devised to contain the inherently entropic nature of the cosmos and of our own psyche, suspended between imagination and the subconscious.

This confrontation with the increasingly dematerialized nature of experience, and the attempt to re-embody perception through material form, extends into the ceramic sculptural presences in the presentation. Developed at Cerámica Suro in Guadalajara, Mahinay’s anthropomorphic forms are suspended in a fluid, amorphous state—unfinished lower-body fragments positioned in states of repose. “I wanted that body language to reflect a state of observing or receiving or meditating or taking pause,” she said. In their unresolved condition, these bodies seem to inhabit what the poetics of the Informel defined as the domain of the shapeless—not as an absence of form, but as form in continuous emergence, resisting closure and fixed classification.

Mahinay’s turn to ceramics grew out of a desire to extend the scale and spatial presence she had previously explored into a new material register, supported by the technical resources and collaborative environment available to her. At Frieze, the sculptures are accompanied by disjointed arms holding glass mirrors, preserving a trace of a human presence while underscoring their fragmentation. At the same time, the raw quality of their tactile surfaces retains the immediacy of the artist’s touch, engaging clay as one of humanity’s ancestral materials. Suspended between artifact and apparition, these sculptures surface like contemporary archaeological remnants charged with temporal ambiguity. In their heightened sensual materiality, they stand as quiet acts of resistance against the progressive virtualization of experience at this late stage of civilization. What they ultimately foreground is the irreducible condition of embodied experience—a phenomenological choreography that remains at the core of Mahinay’s practice, where making and sensing unfold as one continuous, reciprocal act.

More in Artists

Ria.city






Read also

Alexa’s new AI personalities are cringe

Denis Bouanga agrees to multiyear contract extension with Los Angeles FC after Fluminense interest

Video: Cristiano Ronaldo still unstoppable at 41 as his 965th career goal fires Al-Nassr to the top of Saudi Pro League

News, articles, comments, with a minute-by-minute update, now on Today24.pro

Today24.pro — latest news 24/7. You can add your news instantly now — here




Sports today


Новости тенниса


Спорт в России и мире


All sports news today





Sports in Russia today


Новости России


Russian.city



Губернаторы России









Путин в России и мире







Персональные новости
Russian.city





Friends of Today24

Музыкальные новости

Персональные новости