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Luciana LevintonContemporary Geometric Abstract Painting in Layered Blue Tones2025
2025
$5,400
£4,100.84
€4,711.09
CA$7,612.73
A$8,093.90
CHF 4,376.94
MX$96,279.43
NOK 54,827.36
SEK 50,073.70
DKK 35,193.48
About the Item
Untitled (Sesc Pompeia) oil on canvas. 2025.
Luciana Levinton de-contextualizes architectural elements, sketches facades, delineates floor plans, and blurs interiors to recreate precise figurations of architecture that transports viewers into the unknown. Her urban landscapes come alive through strident combinations of short and long brushstrokes that create phantom-like images of what can be identified as buildings, although not fully defined. Infused with a dynamic perspective and vibrant colors, Levinton’s spaces entice viewers into a place of heightened imagination.
Luciana Levinton is the winner of the Living Color award at the Saatchi Gallery in London. She has showcased her work in galleries and museums worldwide such us Museum of Architecture and Centro Cultural Recoleta in Argentina, Pablo Atchugarry Foundation in Uruguay, Matteo Fantoni Studio in Italy. She currently works and lives in Buenos Aires.
- Creator:Luciana Levinton (1977, Argentinian)
- Creation Year:2025
- Dimensions:Height: 37 in (93.98 cm)Width: 29 in (73.66 cm)
- Medium:
- Period:
- Condition:
- Gallery Location:New York, NY
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU596314287062
Luciana Levinton
Luciana Levinton is an Argentine contemporary artist whose practice explores abstraction through an architectural and minimalist lens. Trained as an architect at the University of Buenos Aires (FADU-UBA), Levinton brings a rigorous understanding of structure, proportion, and spatial logic to her painting practice. This background is not incidental but foundational: her work treats line, geometry, and negative space as active, organizing forces, shaping how the viewer experiences rhythm, balance, and suspension.
Levinton’s paintings are defined by restraint and precision. Rather than relying on expressive gesture or narrative imagery, her compositions unfold through carefully calibrated linear forms, subtle tonal shifts, and measured intervals of space. Each element is intentional; nothing is ornamental. The result is a visual language that feels calm yet charged, where tension emerges from balance and silence becomes as meaningful as form. Her use of color—often restrained palettes of blues, greens, neutrals, and muted tones—reinforces the architectural quality of the work, allowing chromatic relationships to support structure rather than dominate it.
Themes of space, perception, and order recur throughout Levinton’s practice. Her paintings invite slow looking, encouraging viewers to move through the surface as one might move through an interior or built environment. This spatial sensibility allows the work to function powerfully within contemporary settings, particularly in architectural, residential, and institutional contexts, where it can anchor a space without overwhelming it. Her work resists trends and spectacle, favoring a timeless visual language grounded in clarity and proportion.
Levinton’s practice has been developed through sustained studio work and exhibitions, and her work has been shown in gallery contexts and private collections. Her background in architecture continues to inform her artistic inquiry, positioning her painting at the intersection of art and spatial design. This interdisciplinary foundation gives her work a distinct coherence and maturity, appealing to collectors, architects, and interior designers seeking contemporary abstraction with both conceptual rigor and practical presence.
The value of Levinton’s work lies in its discipline and longevity. Large-scale minimalist paintings demand confidence and control, and her ability to maintain visual tension through reduction speaks to a refined and established practice. Her paintings are not decorative objects but spatial propositions—works that define atmosphere, establish rhythm, and reward sustained engagement.
Living and working in Argentina, Luciana Levinton continues to refine a practice rooted in structure, balance, and quiet intensity. Her work offers a thoughtful contribution to contemporary abstraction, one that privileges precision over excess and permanence over immediacy.
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