Details
Description
Miguel Cardenas’s "City, Juggler and Mascot" is a vibrant painting featuring a surreal figure with multicolored limbs juggling orbs, set against an abstract urban landscape. The composition blends vivid hues and geometric forms, with a wolf-like creature adding to the fantastical atmosphere. Cardenas merges realism and abstraction, employing a blend of pre-Columbian influences and European modernism. This piece reflects his exploration of impossible perspectives and the interplay between reality and imagination, inviting viewers to ponder the intersection of nature and human experience in a speculative future. ...
Similar Artworks
Cárdenas’s interdisciplinary practice spans painting, drawing, sculpture, video animation, and murals, crafting immersive environments where the tangible and the imaginary intertwine. His work draws deeply from pre-Columbian art and European modernism—two distant yet perceptually transformative traditions—fusing realism and abstraction into compositions rich in ancestral symbolism that point toward a mysterious, uncertain future. In his painted and sculptural works, Cárdenas frequently employs impossible perspectives and fantastical landscapes inhabited by creatures that straddle the organic and the surreal. Through these elements, he creates sensory-rich experiences that invite reflection on the human relationship to the natural world. Across all media, Cárdenas questions established artistic languages—from surrealism to street art—reinterpreting them to propose a fresh visual vocabulary rooted in experimentation and open-ended meaning. His visual lexicon speaks to both present realities and speculative futures, inviting viewers into a poetic space where perception, memory, and myth coexist ...
Founded in 2011, Kendall Koppe is a Glasgow-based gallery committed to championing under-represented voices in contemporary art, with a particular focus on queer and female artists. The gallery fosters a space where personal narratives intersect with broader cultural, historical, and social contexts, while also advocating for Scotland’s role in the international visual arts landscape.