Mini 3 returns with a focus on scale, precision, and attention.
Each work in the exhibition remains (or tries to) under 12 inches. This constraint is intentional. It shifts the way a work is made and experienced. In a smaller format, every decision is visible. There is less room to rely on scale. The work holds through clarity, sensitivity, and control.
Small format work carries a distinct role within contemporary practice. It brings the viewer closer. It slows the act of looking. The relationship becomes more direct, more intimate. What may pass unnoticed at a larger scale begins to matter here. A line, a surface, a shift in material. These details form the language of the work.
For artists, this scale offers a different kind of space. It allows for experimentation without excess. Ideas can be tested, pushed, and refined in a concentrated way. The work can move into areas that may not emerge within larger formats. Materials behave differently. Processes become sharper. Decisions become more precise.
Mini 3 encourages artists to move beyond familiar approaches. To explore new directions within their practice. To treat the small format as a complete and resolved space, rather than a study or a reduced version of something larger.
This exhibition brings together works that engage with scale thoughtfully. Works that understand the discipline of reduction and the possibilities it opens.
Mini 3 is about working with intent.
And about discovering what becomes possible when scale is reduced and attention is focused.
