Silverlens New York opens 'Carmen Argote: Soft Perimeter'
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, July 10, 2026


Silverlens New York opens 'Carmen Argote: Soft Perimeter'
Installation view.



NEW YORK, NY.- For Carmen Argote’s debut solo gallery show in 2010, she exhibited a 720-square-foot carpet that once covered the floors of her childhood home in Los Angeles, hanging it from the ceiling in the manner of a monumental tapestry. She painted most of the carpet white, leaving a wide strip of the original chestnut brown around the edges; over time, stains from years past bled through the paint, like memories slowly returning to the surface of consciousness.

Many of the formal, material, and conceptual concerns of 720 Sq. Feet: Household Mutations return, refined and elaborated, in the work gathered together for “Soft Perimeter,” Argote’s first solo gallery show in New York. The sculptural object that gives the exhibition its title, Soft perimeter of home (2026), similarly maps a domestic interior: the hybrid home and studio the adult Argote shares with her mother (a frequent collaborator) and a handful of chickens (also collaborators), a space where art making is just one activity among many that sustain the artist’s daily life. Every nook and cranny is filled with personal effects commingled with works-in-progress; it’s this premium on available space that led Soft perimeter of home to wind up coiled on Argote’s bed, taking on the loose infinity shape that it now occupies on the gallery floor. What once traced the edges of the artist’s home has collapsed in self-embrace, its twists and softness calling up the body more acutely than the rigid geometry of architecture.

The foam guts of Soft perimeter of home are externalized and made grotesque in a series of objects, all from 2026, made in part from a foraged foam mattress that Argote originally thought had once belonged to a romantic partner. Building on her earlier “comforting objects,” small figural sculptures of bundled and knotted organic and found materials, the more recent foam works also employ braiding and binding to create dense forms, but in this case they evoke matter metabolized and expelled—matter of the body rather than a surrogate for the body.


Description of image


Unlike the earlier comforting objects, these works are unified by Argote’s use of cochineal, a deep red dye harvested from insects, whose usage dates back to the Mayans and Aztecs. When mixed with lemon juice, the dye shifts to vibrant orange, scarlet, gray, and violet, a viscerally intense palette with associations of sun, blood, passion, and death. A number of titles in the series—Matchstick, Please fireweed, Yes Firebasket—reference fire, a force of nature both destructive and sanctifying. Where the comforting objects strongly relate to Argote’s larger project of re-mothering her inner child, the more recent sculptures suggest chemical transformation, nodding to the 2025 wildfires that forever changed the physical and psychological landscape of Los Angeles, and willing, through forms compacted and enclosed, their containment. Twin works on paper, where is the match that sparked the entire terrain (2026), extend the impulse toward control, with even brushstrokes of crimson cochineal creating an allover field of color that envelops the viewer, containing us in the bodily and psychic experience of encounter.

Cochineal, itself derived from a non-human body, constitutes the corporeal throughline of “Soft Perimeter.” Argote imagines the dye as “almost like a body,” behaving similarly to “all kinds of secretions, like hormones and different chemicals, which shift and change our mood.” Me at Market (2020), a monumentally scaled work on linen, embodies both the excess of secretion and the magic of material metamorphosis. The work is narrow and impossibly long, much like the intestinal Soft perimeter of home, but with vastly different appearances on recto and verso, not unlike a body. The “front” is dotted with a grid of linen pockets—similar to those sewn on the artist’s signature jumpsuits, several of which appear in Dream Sequence—that Argote filled with cochineal and lemon juice, allowing the liquid to bleed downward, leaving behind neat lines of pigment that link one pocket to the next and so on. The “back” of the work is its more chaotic underbelly, where dye and acid swirl in dark mottled pools, beautiful and gruesome all at once. Argote’s orderly pockets—cut and sewn by her mother—suggest holding, harboring, and keeping; but sometimes what is meant to be carried cannot be contained, instead seeping outward, inward, and through, changing everything in its path.

— Andrea Gyorody


Today's News

July 10, 2026

Vero Beach Museum of Art explores nature through the exhibition 'James Prosek: At Work'

Discover fashion & jewelry treasures at Turner Auctions + Appraisals on July 19

Detroit Institute of Arts to present landmark exhibition exploring Georgia O'Keeffe's architectural paintings

Celebrated sculptor Bruno Lucchesi dies at 99

Columbia Museum of Art appoints new executive director

Exhibition at Asya Geisberg Gallery explores the subversion of body horror tropes

Benjamin Franklin's Revolutionary War loan agreement with France sells for $484,151 at auction

Major exhibition explores the evolution of Korean contemporary art

Belvedere 21 to host Miao Ying's first solo museum exhibition in Europe

Hauser & Wirth announces two major exhibitions with George Condo in Paris and Palo Alto in 2027

Chemould Prescott Road pairs recent paintings with poetry and archival lectures by Prabhakar Kolte

Budds Auctions to sell the largest collection of Dickie Bird's personal memorabilia

Solar-powered frozen sculpture joins Danish museum's permanent collection

Busan Museum of Contemporary Art presents Body, Under Experiment

Open call for the selection of the curator of the Luxembourg Pavilion at the Venice Art Biennale 2028

Silverlens New York opens 'Carmen Argote: Soft Perimeter'

National Portrait Gallery announces details of major photography Tim Walker exhibition

Formafantasma announced as Serpentine Lead R&D Fellows, Ecology

Artist Ai Weiwei to create a major new public artwork for MCA Australia

CLAMP opens 'From the Ground Up' exhibition featuring Anthony Peyton Young

Mirror Moon unveiled at Royal Observatory Greenwich

Wellcome Collection stages first museum retrospective of artist Audrey Amiss

Tai Kwun Contemporary to debut Isaac Chong Wai's first solo live art exhibition in Hong Kong

David Kordansky Gallery hosts South Korean artist Moka Lee's US solo debut




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



The OnlineCasinosSpelen editors have years of experience with everything related to online gambling providers and reliable online casinos Nederland. If you have any questions about casino bonuses and, please contact the team directly.


sports betting sites not on GamStop

Truck Accident Attorneys



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez


Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful