Future Exhibition
June 5 - July 30, 2026
Gallery Exhibition
Dennis Beach, Rick Hidalgo, Hannah Robinett
The Space Between: Dennis Beach, Rick Hidalgo, and Hannah Robinett
We tend to assume that meaning is produced through difference, that things become legible only through opposition:
life and death, joy and despair, good and evil, violence and peace. But fixing meaning in contrasts conceals the
relations that actually give them form.
The Space Between brings together the work of Dennis Beach, Rick Hidalgo, and Hannah Robinett around a shared
preoccupation with what abstraction holds in reserve. Across their practices, form is reduced but never fully
stabilized, held in states of adjustment by interval, repetition and threshold.
Reduction in Beach’s work is a concentrating force. His compositions in intensely colored plywood, acrylic, and
paint translate observed natural rhythms into tightly structured arrangements. Beach edits and abstracts shape, color,
and form into systems where stability and movement remain in continual tension. No single viewing position settles
the work. Meaning accumulates in the movement between them.
Rick Hidalgo’s surfaces resist immediate comprehension. Through encaustic, metal, wood, and resin, they register
light differently across proximity, placement, and duration of looking. Restrained at first glance, his compositions
open gradually into particulate, highly detailed surfaces. The work demands a kind of attention a glance doesn’t
require. What the work means is inseparable from how long you stand in front of it.
Hannah Robinett’s work is organized around the grid as both structure and measure. It anchors each composition in
imposed order and desired perfection, against which the erratic chaos of human feeling is tested. Hand-cut forms,
painted surfaces, text fragments, and gold leaf pull against this order without abandoning it. Control and
vulnerability remain equally active within the same field, instability registering as structure rather than collapse.
These are not works that resolve. Beach, Hidalgo, and Robinett each treat abstraction as a space where meaning is
produced through relation rather than contrast, through the conditions under which forms hold or fail to settle. The
space between is not emptiness. It is where you are.
- Curated by Charlotte Kelly
Hannah Robinett, Trinity, 2020, Gouache on Paper, 33.5 x 25 inches (90.17 x 63.5 cm)
Hannah Robinett, Darkness & Light, 2020, Paper, two at 21 x 21 inches (53.34 x 53.34 cm)
Rick Hidalgo, Landscape IV, 2019, Encaustic and Asphalt on Wood Panel, 48 x 36 inches (121.92 x 91.44 cm)
Rick Hidalgo, Landscape VI, 2019, Acrylic and Wood Shavings on Panel, 14 x 14 inches (35.56 x 35.56 cm)
Dennis Beach, Spin #BW16, 2020, Acrylic on Plywood, 31 x 31 inches (78.74 x 78.74 cm)
Dennis Beach, 20 Ellipses, 2020, Acrylic on Plywood, 57 x 33 inches (144.78 x 83.82 cm)
Contact us
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