Quinha Faria, Khôra, 2026. Pigment, fabric dye, marble dust, acrylic, and rayon on carved mahogany, 121.9 x 152.4 cm; 48 x 60 in.
NEW YORK, NY.—
Kiang Malingue is presenting in its New York space Receptors, an exhibition by Quinha Faria, the artists first solo exhibition in New York. Quinha Faria activates a constellation of receptive fields, traversing natural and synthetic materials, and their transformation through woodwork and weaving, into paintings, sculptures, and installations. In a series of carved paintings, Faria begins with the subtractive hand tool woodworking methods of carving and gouging, with and against woodgrain into the substrates of birch, mahogony, and luan, where images emerge, recalling phenomena, such as landscape formation, climate occurrences, synaptic connection, or temporal leaps and psychic conditions. These markmaking are incipient records, offering shifting perceptual grounds that allow for interaction with a range of paint materials, including oil, acrylic, latex, sumi ink, pigment, tempera, fabric dye, tar, and medical-use skin marker. Toggling between actions of embedding, layering, and