April 2nd, 2018
You know you are in Savannah when…
When her majesty the Queen Georgia of Savannah herself invites you on board for cocktails and old time tales; when the ”sweetheart of seafaring men of the world”, Miss Florence Matus ”the waving girl” is still waving her handkerchief welcoming you to her home, just as she did for every passing ship, every single day for forty-four years; and when the night that falls sweetly over the city’s cobblestone squares brings Savannah’s secret world of spirits to life, old souls walk past you and fade into the mist, like a midsummer night’s breeze.
Walking along the East River Street, Johnson Square & Reynolds Square
Savannah, GA
April 1st, 2018
A lunch date
You know it’s getting hot when…
They make a perfect couple
Paths crossing
Being: Tarsila & Henri & Joanna & Sofia
Getting acquainted with the work of Tarsila do Amaral, whose art is as stunning as the artist herself; capturing the minimal geometry of New York’s temple of modern art; feeling the urge to stop by ”The Piano Lesson”, one of Matisse’s most interesting compositions (a few more times and I might even begin to like it); leaping from modern art to ”New Photography” and its 2018 edition examining how photography can capture ”what it means to be human”.
Tarsila do Amaral, Estudo (Academia no. 2), 1923, oil on canvas
Tarsila do Amaral, A Gare, 1925, oil on canvas
Tarsila do Amaral, O touro, 1928, oil on canvas
Tarsila do Amaral, O sono, c. 1928, oil on canvas
Tarsila do Amaral, Urutu, 1928, oil on canvas
Tarsila do Amaral, Operários, 1933, oil on canvas



Henri Matisse, The Piano Lesson, 1916, oil on canvas

Joanna Piotrowska, XXIII Frowst, 2013-2014, silver gelatin hand print
Sofia Borges. Theatre, or Cave, 2014. UV-printed wallpaper, printed 2018
Sofia Borges, Yellow Chalk, 2017, pigmented inkjet print
MoMA, March 25th, 2018
MoMA PS1 ++ (The Art of covering up)
MoMA PS1 + 1 (The Art is in the details)
The Art is in the stairwells, meeting face-to-face with Abigail Lazkoz’s agonizing Cameramen; walking In the Woods, deep into Ernesto Caivano’s dark, magical forest; bathed in nature’s ephemeral reflections, outside in the courtyard.
Stairwell art:
Abigail Lazkoz: Cameraman
Abigail Lazkoz created the series Cameramen in 2002 and displayed it for the first time in MoMA PS1’s exhibition Greater New York 2005. The work consists of three large-scale drawings that reinterpret Jose Guadaulpe Posada’s 1914 engraving Se Aproxima el Fin del Mundo Las Profecias Se Cumplen Temblores, Erupciones, Guerras, Pestes, Hambres E Incendios. La Celebre Madre Matiana (The end of the World is Near, Prophecies Come True, Earthquakes, Eruptions, Wars Diseases, Famine, and Fires).
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Ernesto Caivano: In the Woods
For MoMA PS1’s stairwell A, Ernesto Caivano created a wall mural based on an ongoing story he developed over three years called After the Woods. While After the Woods consists of drawings and paper sculptures, In the Woods is composed of black latex paint and gouache to create a dense visual web of images composing Caivano’s larger-than-life sized environment. The exaggerated scale of the piece creates a total experience for the viewer, allowing an escape into this imaginary world. Naked and gnarled tree branches wind around the walls and sprout up and out onto the ceiling, entangling the viewer in their dark and magical embrace.
March 24th, 2018
MoMA PS1 || Part I (The Building as a work of Art)
MoMA PS1, one of the oldest and largest nonprofit contemporary art institutions in the United States, was founded in 1971 by Alanna Heiss as the Institute for Art and Urban Resources Inc., an organization devoted to organizing exhibitions in underutilized and abandoned spaces across New York City.
In 1976, Heiss opened the P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center in a deserted Romanesque Revival public school building, exponentially increased the organization’s exhibition and studio capacity. This building, dating from 1892, served as the first school in Long Island City until 1963, when the First Ward school it housed was closed due to low attendance and the building was turned into a warehouse.
Site-specific art includes James Turrell’s Meeting, one of his famous Skyspaces.
Staircase art by:
William Kentridge || Stair Procession
Ernesto Caivano || In the Woods
March 24th, 2018


































































