Logo

13/04/2026

"horizons: minerva cuevas & thiago hattnher" at kurimanzutto

Imagen principal

The horizon is the line where sky meets land or sea. At this threshold, what we see is always in motion, disappearing or slowly coming into view. It is both spatial and temporal: a shifting boundary between what is visible and what is not yet seen.

 

Minerva Cuevas’s intervened seascapes retain the familiar line where ocean meets sky, while contrasting a romanticized conception of nature with a natural element. Along the lower edge of the paintings, chapopote—a dense, tar-like petroleum—accumulates and drips beyond the canvas. This material disrupts the reading of an otherwise conventional scene, foregrounding its physical presence. The use of petroleum inevitably recalls the environmental realities of oil extraction. At the same time, the black horizons become sites of tension between the material’s alluring texture and the idealized beauty historically associated with landscape painting.

 

In Thiago Hattnher’s paintings, horizontal bands of color are built up in layers over time. These layers create multiple, shifting horizons rather than a single, static one, producing changes in tone, mood, and rhythm. The result is a field of horizons within horizons, recalling early modernist grid-based paintings. Within the same surface, flower arrangements, geometric forms, and hints of landscape drawn from the artist’s memory coexist without hierarchy. Variations in tone and texture unfold across the canvas without a clear point of departure or arrival. The paintings remain in flux, with Hattnher’s recollections dispersed across layers as memory accumulates and is reworked over time, rather than settling into a resolved image.

 

Across both practices, the horizon shifts from a fixed line to a site that continually transforms, closer to the movement of the tide. In Cuevas’s work, it frames notions of beauty and nature as fluid, mutating as perceptions shift over time, while in Hattnher’s it multiplies and recedes, suggesting fleeting impressions drawn from memory. Their horizons offer a way to inhabit multiple temporalities, prompting reflection on how environments are perceived, remembered, and gradually altered over time.

 

April 14 – Project Room

Mexico

Gob. Rafael Rebollar 94, San Miguel Chapultepec I Secc, Miguel Hidalgo, 11850 Mexico City, CDMX

The horizon is the line where sky meets land or sea. At this threshold, what we see is always in motion, disappearing or slowly coming into view. It is both spatial and temporal: a shifting boundary between what is visible and what is not yet seen.

 

Minerva Cuevas’s intervened seascapes retain the familiar line where ocean meets sky, while contrasting a romanticized conception of nature with a natural element. Along the lower edge of the paintings, chapopote—a dense, tar-like petroleum—accumulates and drips beyond the canvas. This material disrupts the reading of an otherwise conventional scene, foregrounding its physical presence. The use of petroleum inevitably recalls the environmental realities of oil extraction. At the same time, the black horizons become sites of tension between the material’s alluring texture and the idealized beauty historically associated with landscape painting.

 

In Thiago Hattnher’s paintings, horizontal bands of color are built up in layers over time. These layers create multiple, shifting horizons rather than a single, static one, producing changes in tone, mood, and rhythm. The result is a field of horizons within horizons, recalling early modernist grid-based paintings. Within the same surface, flower arrangements, geometric forms, and hints of landscape drawn from the artist’s memory coexist without hierarchy. Variations in tone and texture unfold across the canvas without a clear point of departure or arrival. The paintings remain in flux, with Hattnher’s recollections dispersed across layers as memory accumulates and is reworked over time, rather than settling into a resolved image.

 

Across both practices, the horizon shifts from a fixed line to a site that continually transforms, closer to the movement of the tide. In Cuevas’s work, it frames notions of beauty and nature as fluid, mutating as perceptions shift over time, while in Hattnher’s it multiplies and recedes, suggesting fleeting impressions drawn from memory. Their horizons offer a way to inhabit multiple temporalities, prompting reflection on how environments are perceived, remembered, and gradually altered over time.

 

April 14 – Project Room

Mexico

Gob. Rafael Rebollar 94, San Miguel Chapultepec I Secc, Miguel Hidalgo, 11850 Mexico City, CDMX


Sacred meets profane, David LaChapelle at VISU Gallery

14.04.2026
Estados Unidos

Galería Reus embarks on a new phase, consolidating over two decades of experience

13.04.2026
España

"Future spaces replicate earlier spaces" Gala Porras-Kim First Exhibition

10.04.2026
México

“Still More Fragile” by Luján Candria at Faena Art Project Room

23.03.2026
Estados Unidos

2026 materia abierta Open Call

20.03.2026
México

Opening: Constellations and Drifts: Art from Latin America in the FEMSA Collection

17.03.2026
México

Keynote lecture by Yolanda Wood

17.03.2026
None

Cobertizo Announces Open Call for the LATAM + Caribbean Fellowship

06.03.2026
México

Everything you need to know about Chaco-16!

03.03.2026
Chile

Visit the new exhibition by Rafael Lozano-Hemmer

03.03.2026
México

OPEN CALL: EPECUÉN XVIII RESIDENCY

20.02.2026
Argentina

2026 Artlab Editorial Fellowship Open Call

16.02.2026
None

Oscar Murillo and Leonor Antunes at kurimanzutto

04.02.2026
México

Museo Tamayo opens two new exhibitions

29.01.2026
México

Salón ACME No. 13 arrives during Art Week in Mexico City

29.01.2026
México

Feria Material Vol. 12 presents its public program!

29.01.2026
México

"The War of the Machines Has Begun” opens on February 4th

29.01.2026
México

Galería NAC will be exhibiting at Feria Material, Booth 16

27.01.2026
Chile

Opening: T"he Chant of the Chaos-Monde". Collective exhibition curated by Luis Graham Castillo and Terremoto

21.01.2026
México

Feria Material Vol. 12 arrives at Maravilla Studios

20.01.2026
México

NDEX ART BOOK FAIR 2026 is coming

14.01.2026
México

“SCRATCH” opens on January 31st at Croma

12.01.2026
México

Fundación Ama Amoedo announces artists and jury for the 2026 FAARA Residency

05.01.2026
Uruguay

Visit Rini Templeton's exhibition at muac

19.11.2025
México

SUPPORT CAMPAIGN – OBRERA CENTRO AND HERRATECA NEED YOU!

14.11.2025
México

MIRA ART FAIR 2025 is coming

11.11.2025
Francia

Daniela Negrete presents “Habitar(nos)” at Amplia Galeria

07.11.2025
México

Announcement of the Winners of the 2025 Ama Amoedo Foundation Scholarships

04.11.2025
Uruguay

ZsONAMACO returns in February 2026

31.10.2025
None
Cargar Más