Weekly 5: April 11th 2025

Weekly 5 is a round-up the past week’s creative news, discoveries, and happenings in my world!


Best thing that happened in my world this week:

Sometimes the best things are simple things. Sundays are normally our “off-limits” day. It’s our one day of the week where  we stay home, sleep in, and have no appointments, plans or obligations. We try not to leave the house if we don’t have to. It’s our lazy day. One exception is that I have a standing hair appointment every few weeks.  While this past Sunday had moments of relaxation, it was also one of the more productive ones. After tackling one of two small mountains of languishing paperwork, setting up my file cabinet and giving the studio a general cleaning, we enjoyed a relaxing evening with good food and a movie.

From The Art Newspaper

The six-foot-wide painting comes from the collection of the Belgian arts patrons Roger Matthys (1920-2016) and Hilda Colle (1919-2004). The collectors were “among the most influential personalities in the Belgian contemporary art world”, according to Peter van der Graaf, an international specialist of post-war and contemporary art at Christie’s. “With a personal collection reflecting important art movements of the contemporary era for the past 50 years, they have left their mark by lending many of their works to artist’s retrospectives and exhibitions as well as a long-term loan to the SMAK, including works by other icons of the 21st century.”

Andy Warhol, Big Electric Chair, 1967-68
Courtesy Christie’s Images Ltd

Artist discovery:  Chloe West

Her works often reference 17th-century Flemish and Dutch painting through her use of iconographies associated with memento mori and vanitas paintings. Her careful depictions of the nude figure and dramatic lighting recall Baroque traditions and her Western landscapes converse with the sublime.

chloe-west.com

“Gored Cowboy”
©Chloe West

Hundreds of Fantastic Creatures Inhabit a Sprawling Universe by Vorja Sánchez

From Colassal

Inspired by the diversity of the forest and the vivid drawings of German biologist Ernst Haeckel, Sánchez imagines a vast ecosystem. He’s particularly drawn to patterns and employs similar motifs to create cohesion across multiple pieces. Soft, fluffy fur, slender leaves with curled tips, and gleaming eyes attached to unexpected body parts appear in several of his works.

“Ancient Tales”
©Vorja Sánchez

Playlist of the week: