Friday, May 16, 2025

TONIGHT! New Exhibitions Opening at Mindy Solomon Gallery Friday, May 16th!

 

TONIGHT!
New Exhibitions Opening Friday, May 16!

Osamu Kobayashi: Jungle Politics

May 16 – July 13, 2025

Opening May 16, 6-8:30pm

Osamu Kobayashi, Jungle Politics I, 2025, Oil on canvas, 48" x 50" (121.92 x 127 cm)

"You have power over your mind - not outside events. Realize this, and you will find strength." - Marcus Aurelius, Meditations

Mindy Solomon Gallery is pleased to present Jungle Politics, Kobayashi's fourth exhibition with the gallery since his representation began in 2013. A fastidious painter with a unique style that includes meticulous brush work, Kobayashi continues to investigate a common leit motif for this exhibition.

"Eyes are a recurring theme in my work. The paintings in this show are all looking clockwise around the room and at each other. A standoff ensues where each painting is waiting on the movement of the one beside it to decide their own direction. However, this moment of tension is one of reservation: an awareness of the other while contemplating the self. It's neither instigative nor passive, but rather it's outward looking as well as inward."

Introspection and self-reflection permeate the paintings in this series. Shown as two separate groupings, one 48" x 50" in scale, the other 16" x 18", each painting appears to radiate out from the center "eye". Soft vibrational colors applied in a circular fashion that emphasize the center of each painting, like a spiritual mandala. Vibrant oranges, hazy greens, floating blues; each image is a transcendental experience into an unknown realm while the all-knowing eye watches. With this newest exhibition, Kobayashi continues to prove why he is one of the most significant abstract painters of his generation. With gentle persistence he continues to pursue truth through brush mark.

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Eduardo Cardozo: Primero fue el gesto (First was the gesture)

May 16 – July 13, 2025

Opening May 16, 6-8:30pm

Eduardo Cardozo, Formas, 2009, Oil and acrylic on canvas, 43.7" x 37.4"

Mindy Solomon is pleased to present a collaborative exhibition with AppArt Paris to showcase Uruguayan artist and 2025 Venice Biennale representative Eduardo Cardozo. For his first solo show in Miami, Cardozo will feature seminal works from 2009-2024.

Crafting works that speak to art history, materiality and time, Cardozo brings a warmth and subtlety to his surfaces. Whether it is a large-scale canvas that breathes through an unprimed surface of warm tones and soft saturated colors, or a textile work remade from scraps of canvas, each piece is a fragment of time. In works such as Péndulo, 2009 Cardozo creates a sense of delicately floating objects leaving a distinct slick or residue as they move through space. Gentle wisps of line tether form and leave the viewer entranced with the nebulous nature of the image. Íntimo, 2021 is a small work but extremely impactful. Utilizing his signature style of oil on layered canvas, he creates a work that is reminiscent of his studio walls and the plaster surfaces of historic old master paintings. In his magnificent presentation at the Venice Biennale, Cardozo created a space of contemplation in a sea of deeply political and challenging pavilions. Drawing reference to Old Master Tintoretto, he created a project called Latent, an immersive installation that seeks to create a relational act between two painters at a distance: the Uruguayan Cardozo and the Venetian Tintoretto. This dialogue consists of three moments: the nude, the wall of Cardozo's studio, transferred to Venice using the stacco technique; the vestment, an interpretation that the Uruguayan artist makes of one of the sketches of Tintoretto's Paradise; and the veil, a cloth sewn from the scraps of gauze used to move the walls of the studio. This generates a counterpoint between Uruguay and Italy, south and north, between Cardozo's work and his reinterpretation of Tintoretto's painting.

Cardozo is focused on the notion of "meticulous reflection" regarding material resources and the challenges of creating a painting that reflects a representation of "mental space". His imagery is informed by the modernist works of Paul Klee, Francis Picabia, Wassily Kandinsky, and Hans Arp.

The series of works selected correspond to this research. Throughout the exhibition, the pictorial space is marked by the tempo of manual techniques to which the slow and shaky gesture of the brushstroke and the frequent voids and interruptions of the visual discourse can be seen and experienced. In this space Cardozo shares the process of creation with all of us. 

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Ricardo Alcaide: Brightest Light

May 16 – July 13, 2025

Opening May 16, 6-8:30pm

Sunset-Sun, 2025, mdf and industrial lacquer, 26.25" x 26.25" x 3"

Mindy Solomon is pleased to present Venezuelan born; Antwerp based artist Ricardo Alcaide in his first solo exhibition in the gallery.

There is a quiet tension in Ricardo Alcaide's work—an insistence that what we often overlook has weight, memory, and meaning. In Brightest Light, he presents a new body of work that distills years of lived experience into a material language that is both ordered and unruly.

Alcaide's compositions begin with the logic of construction: bars of aluminum or MDF, aligned with near-clinical precision, marked by repetition and control. But he never lets them settle. Paint spills beyond the lines, edges are scuffed or left raw, and bricks are inserted where they can't perform their function. In works such as Silence and Visible, the works appear sharp and clean from the front, even minimalist. But take a step to the side, and their skin peels back. Imperfection reveals itself as a method. Mess becomes the message.

For the first time, Alcaide turns to aluminum—a reflective, industrial material he had long resisted. In these new wall-mounted reliefs, the aluminum's smoothness contrasts sharply with the rawness of embedded bricks and the rough brushwork along the edges. These aren't just aesthetic choices but acts of resistance: against polish, against pretense. If the surface remains smooth, it does so, bearing inner scars.

In one of his recent works, Alcaide found himself unexpectedly echoing Venezuelan modernist Alejandro Otero. Like Otero's Color hythm series, his vertical compositions pulse with rhythm and modularity. But what Otero sought in purity and optical harmony, Alcaide interrupts with bricks and intentional sloppiness. His is not a celebration of order but a slow unraveling of it. What stays is tactile and restless, a structure marked by the evidence of its own making.

The brick, recurring throughout the exhibition, first entered Alcaide's vocabulary while living in São Paulo. There, he encountered bricks everywhere throughout his walks in the mega-metropolis—stacked on sidewalks, tucked into windows, and left abandoned on street corners. To him, they became a symbol of the city's informal architecture, its unfinished edges, and its capacity to hold weight without fanfare. Alongside MDF—a material he came to know intimately while working as a handyman in London—the brick embodies Alcaide's ongoing commitment to what is often dismissed or covered up. Both are materials that usually live behind the wall. Here, he gives them visibility—foregrounding their presence rather than concealing it. In this, Alcaide's impulse recalls Hélio Oiticica's embrace of the marginal as a social position and a creative force. The use of brick, MDF, and other industrial materials is not simply to represent the everyday but to create from it.[1]

Despite the material heft of aluminum and brick, lightness permeates the exhibition—conceptually and chromatically. The show's title and orientation take inspiration from the sun, light, and Alcaide's emotional response to Miami's brightness. A sequence Alcaide calls his "rainbow of chaos" derived from a graffiti he once saw in downtown Miami that read, "We live in the rainbow of chaos." These personalized rainbows evoke joy and spiritual charge layered over the grid's rigidity. At once intuitive and formal, this palette reflects Alcaide's desire to channel sensation through geometry—translating emotional landscapes into structural terms.

Taken together, the works in Brightest Light offer a sensorially rich meditation on what lies beneath appearances. If modernism once promised clarity through order, Alcaide answers with aesthetic friction—embracing the residue, the error, the humble. His practice evokes what curator Mari Carmen Ramírez called the 'fractured utopias' of Latin American modernity, where formal purity often collided with the social realities it sought to transcend. [2] Yet Alcaide's work is not a didactic language—but one of intuition, memory, and personal reinvention. Having lived between Venezuela, Brazil, the UK, and now Belgium, his work remains rooted in displacement, reassembled through a careful choreography of material, memory, and mark making. In Miami, it comes full circle—an encounter with light again.

Written by Jennifer Inacio, Curator, Pérez Art Museum Miami

[1] Hélio Oiticica, "Appearance of the Super-Sensorial," in Hélio Oiticica, ed. Guy Brett (Lon- don: Tate Publishing, 2007), pp. 114–118. [2] Mari Carmen Ramírez, "Blueprint Circuits: Conceptual Art and Politics in Latin America," in Global Conceptualism: Points of Origin, 1950s–1980s, ed. Luis Camnitzer, Jane Farver, and Rachel Weiss (Queens Museum of Art, 1999), pp. 54–61.

 

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