Luia Corsini
New York, 1994Luia Corsini (New York, 1994) has found a turning point in her work in Mexico City. Her practice, rooted in grids and color, engages with minimalism and color field painting, incorporating architecture, light, and the visual landscape of the places she inhabits.
Luia Corsini was raised between Rome and New York, a duality that shaped her fascination with two contrasting styles of architecture. Drawn to the cultural vibrancy of both cities, she chose to study Fine Arts at NYU, where she became captivated by the Colour Field painting movement and the work of artists like Agnes Martin, Frank Stella, Mark Rothko, and Donald Judd. Her practice is deeply rooted in Minimalism and Abstract Expressionism, with strong conceptual grounding in Rosalind Krauss’ essay Grids, which positions the grid as a structural foundation of modern art.After graduating, she spent time in Barcelona, later moved to Malibu, and is now based in Mexico City. The architecture of all these places has clearly influenced her work. Through rich color palettes and geometric compositions, Corsini reflects her fascination with Barragán’s buildings, New York’s skyscrapers, and the soft, dreamy tones of the Californian coast. Her paintings offer a contemporary and fresh perspective on minimalism and abstraction—two movements that have fundamentally shaped her visual language.
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