
“Animales Familiares,” woven acrylic on canvas and linen, 78 x 108 inches. All images © Miguel Arzabe, courtesy of Johansson Projects, shared with permission
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The artist begins each piece by reproducing a pair of modernist paintings, which he cuts into thin lengths and weaves together. Most often unrecognizable in their new forms—Rothko’s clear influence in the color-blocked “Tiburón Ballena” makes the piece an outlier—the replicas root the works in Western art history. Arzabe distorts these references, though, by layering the paintings into new landscapes, intertwining the varying geographies and cultures to allow both to coexist.
On view from September 16 to October 29 at

“Flamencos,” woven acrylic on canvas and linen, 56 x 78 inches

Detail of “Flamencos,” woven acrylic on canvas and linen, 56 x 78 inches

“Puma Roja,” woven acrylic on canvas and linen, 50 x 72 inches

“Tiburón Ballena,” woven acrylic on canvas and linen, 50 x 46 inches

Detail of “Animales Familiares,” woven acrylic on canvas and linen, 78 x 108 inches

“La Bestia del Progreso,” woven acrylic on canvas, 48 x 60 inches

“Nada De Nada,” woven acrylic on canvas, 48 x 60 inches

Arzabe at work
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