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About this Artist

Gabrielle Garland is an artist whose work delves into the concept of space as a fundamental dimension of human existence, exploring it not merely as a container of objects but as a field of infinite possibilities. In her view, space serves as a theatre of human relationships, where individuals leave traces that contribute to defining identity. Every gesture, mark, or trace becomes an act of self-definition, transforming void into a shared heritage and expressing a desire for existence and continuity.

Garland’s artistic journey began early; as the child of artists who met at Herron School of Art and Design, she has been painting and creating since childhood, continuing through her teen years and into the present. She describes the structural theme of her work as a kind of virtual collage, allowing multiple systems of order to coexist in a single piece without using computers for preliminary images. Her process involves sculpting forms out of paint, employing a palette of intense colors to take control of color as she does with framing and structure. She explores urban and suburban landscapes from public domains, such as city streets and sidewalks, using spaces as her primary source material and photographs as secondary documentation to capture diverse viewpoints and details.

In her creative practice, memory plays a crucial role; photographs remind her of personal experiences within spaces, functioning like blueprints to help her imagine and grasp environments as a whole. She often reflects on Richard Serra’s insights on how people interact with spaces over time. Garland challenges traditional rules of perspective to express her subjective perception of space, emphasizing that human experience involves movement and changing focus rather than fixed viewpoints. Her works embrace ambiguity, showing that ideas of order and disorder are subjective, and she aims for audiences to imagine narratives freely without judgment.

A key series, Artists’ Spaces, highlights how art activates domestic environments, featuring living spaces of figures like Michelle Grabner, Mickalene Thomas, Peter Halley, Izhar Patkin, and Laura Letinsky. Throughout her work, Garland explores the ways we inhabit domestic space, with portraits that, though devoid of human forms, are marked by evidence of human presence and properties.

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© 2025 BY YOOSHIQ VISUALS

© 2025 BY YOOSHIQ VISUALS

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