Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

Jonathan Latiano’s Site-Specific Installations

Using wood, paint, mirrors and found materials, Jonathan Latiano builds crystalline structures for his site-specific installations. Breaking through walls or rising up and bursting from the floor, the geode-like shapes Latiano builds invite spontaneity, disrupting the ways we expect space to be organized in our mundane environments. Interested in biology, geology and physics, Latiano uses his work as a means to explore the physical world. The artist is based in Baltimore, MD and currently teaches at The Corcoran College of Art and Design in Washington DC. Take a look at some of his recent works after the jump.


Untitled, collaboration with Ali Miller

Using wood, paint, mirrors and found materials, Jonathan Latiano builds crystalline structures for his site-specific installations. Breaking through walls or rising up and bursting from the floor, the geode-like shapes Latiano builds invite spontaneity, disrupting the ways we expect space to be organized in our mundane environments. Interested in biology, geology and physics, Latiano uses his work as a means to explore the physical world. The artist is based in Baltimore, MD and currently teaches at The Corcoran College of Art and Design in Washington DC. Take a look at some of his recent works below.

Points of Connection, School 33 Art Center in Baltimore, MD

Compacting Factors:

Meta
Topics
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
Get a sneak peek at the next print issue of Hi-Fructose New Contemporary Art Magazine! Click Above.
Since 2004, french artist Ciou has created adorably sharp-toothed creatures utilizing a hybrid style which harnesses the language of art found in  European, American, Mexican and Japanese sub cultures. Amsterdam’s KochxBos Gallery is hosting an exhibition celebrating the artist’s immensely-detailed oeuvre. Click above to read our exclusive interview with the artist!
We are saddened to hear of the passing of master pop artist Keiichi Tanaami. His work was equally fueled by the horrific atomic blast he witnessed in World War II and the bright and ugliness of pop culture Tanaami’s art is both beautiful and horrifying. We're reposting an interview he did for Hi-Fructose with writer Caro Buermann from 2016. Click above to read it.
Explaining an image could break the illusive spell on a viewer with preconceived notions, or at the very least be a distraction to a genuine experience. Nevertheless, it’s a job of a publication like ours to try to probe a bit further, to unearth subtle intentions or points of discussion. So let’s ask Shane Pearce about his ten new paintings, entitled “Eerie Musings”, which goes on view at Copro Gallery in Santa Monica this Saturday. Click above to read the hifructose.com exclusive interview.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List