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Sunday, December 28, 2025 |
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| Rita Fischer explores ambiguity and the sublime in Open skies at Xippas Punta del Este |
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Rita Fischer, Untitled, 2025. Tempera on wood panel 110 x 140 cm. Courtesy of the artist and Xippas.
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PUNTA DEL ESTE.- Xippas Punta del Este presents Open Skies, an exhibition that brings together the most recent works by Rita Fischer. This new solo show at the gallery includes works produced on multiple supportswood panels, paper, and, in her most recent pieces, a return to the traditional canvas on stretcher.
These paintings continue to explore spaces of ambiguity and uncertainty. Although certain visual elements or the presence of some forms may suggest a renewed possibility of representing nature, the landscape, or the density of the native forest, once again nothing truly seems to confirm that figurative intent. All that exuberant unfolding of forms and colors never quite crystallizes into elements that might suggest a narrative we could somehow unravel or analyze. These works seem to fold in on themselves, absorbing every word that attempts to describe them, while at the same time projecting a kind of beauty that language is incapable of articulating.
Though the artist continues to explore the materiality of painting, her use of the ancient technique of tempera allows her to create a subtly mineral surface that also becomes a metaphor for the tireless pursuit of balance. Everything these works display escapes the written word.
The paintings produced by Rita Fischer in recent years appear as a natural promise: that in the future we will invent a new language containing the most precise and equitable synonyms.
In that sense, perhaps everything written up to this point seems a vain exercise in rhetoric; nevertheless, so as not to surrender to the defeat and impotence
of writing, let us recall Michel Foucaults formula: the relationship between language and painting is an infinite one.
To make up for languages inadequacy in relation to these paintings, we once again turn to the equally inexhaustible tradition of ekphrasis, where everything is pure narrative fiction.
Thus, this text could end by returning to its beginning: the deep and hermetic beauty of these works unfolds as an infinite offeringa universe where beauty, morally perfect, is equitable because it is the perfect image of nature, that is, of biological geography, where life and death are eternally intertwined and where culture, with its destructive language, cannot enter.
An undefined space, without sky or earth, inhabited by the infinite pulse of existence that endlessly renews itselfoffering us, in this way, the ultimate experience of the Sublime. Nature as a despotic yet humble divinity, eternally awaiting us in silence.
Manuel Neves
When I was a child, I would climb onto the roof of my house to stare fixedly at the sky: I waited for something extraordinary to happen... a spaceship... I wanted to see extraterrestrials... I longed for it so much. Its in this spirit that I conceive my paintings. -- Rita Fischer
My mouth wants to pronounce, silence. -- Virus
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Today's News
December 28, 2025
Städel Museum spotlights Max Beckmann's drawings in major retrospective
MoMA announces a focused exhibition presenting works by Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera
Musée d'Orsay unveils major new acquisitions spanning art, photography, and history
Artemis Fine Arts presents an end-of-year auction spanning ancient, ethno, and fine arts
Madrid museum spotlights the central role of women in Indigenous Mexico
From nudist camps to celebrity bedrooms: Major Diane Arbus survey on view in London
Christie's projects $6.2 billion in global sales for 2025 as market momentum accelerates
Luiz Zerbini in conversation with Frank Walter opens Fortes D'Aloia & Gabriel's new space
Centre Pompidou unveils its vast works-on-paper collection in landmark Drawing Unlimited exhibition at the Grand Palais
Rita Fischer explores ambiguity and the sublime in Open skies at Xippas Punta del Este
Von der Heydt Museum reveals 2026 programme exploring modernity, industry, and ornament
Raisa Raekallio and Misha del Val present a decade-long collaboration at Galerie Forsblom
Michael Werner Gallery presents Empty Night, new paintings by Barbara Wesołowska
Mumbai Gallery Weekend 2026: A city-wide constellation of contemporary art
Rituals and realities: FREELENS Young Professionals take over World in a Room
The Museum of Modern Art announces Samora Pinderhughes: Call and Response
Making pain visible: Sven Johne confronts militarized bodies at KLEMM'S
bitforms gallery presents Freedom, tracing Analivia Cordeiro's five decades of movement and code
Ezra Johnson maps American suburbia through layered painting and sculpture
Fridman Gallery's Sanctuary confronts the psychological and political realities of displacement
Photography slows down at Chaumont-sur-Loire, where nature becomes a sensory dialogue
Pernod Ricard Foundation stages France's first institutional exhibition of Beatrice Bonino
Fondation H presents Roméo Mivekannin's Correspondances, weaving memory, colonial archives, and repair
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