
Steven Cabral: Stars between Spaces
Steven Cabral
Kingston Gallery
450 Harrison Ave, No. 43, Boston, MA 02118
Wed–Sun, 12–5 PM and by appointment
Admission
Free Admission
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About
The body of work in Steven Cabral’s _Stars between Spaces_ series begins with a simple action: pouring color onto raw canvas. Working primarily in acrylic, with crayon, marker, and other media, he pours, stains, sands, erases, adds, layers, scrapes, and negotiates the surface until it hovers on the verge of becoming something. Edges and cracks appear, opening into new visual cues of painterly space. These fractures and residues feel to him like hidden worlds—stars between spaces waiting to be discovered. Cabral's abstract practice is one of spatial and dreamlike contemplation manifested on a surface. He is always looking for a sense of “place” or “space” within the painting, even if that place is ambiguous. Organic forms meet geometric structures; stains and irregular marks collide with shapes. The geometry, while not always obvious, offers a kind of scaffolding—an underlying order that holds the more fluid gestures in tension. Each painting becomes a negotiation between freedom and structure, accident and intention. Layering is central to Cabral’s process, and it conveys a sense of memory and residue. Each pour, each mark, leaves a trace behind, like each of our interactions with the world around us—a residue of light from previous decisions. Even when a layer is mostly obscured, an echo remains that shapes what comes after. The paintings hold these histories in their surfaces. In this way, they mirror how we experience the world: nothing is ever entirely erased; a small residue remains, waiting to be recalled to active memory. Cabral does not consider his interpretations final or fixed. His questions for the viewer are simple: _What do you see? What do you sense? What emerges for you as you stay with the work?_ The paintings invite inspection, introspection, and slowing down, leaving room for each viewer’s own experiences and subjective recall. He hopes that, as you wander through these layered spaces, you might feel both the weight of complexity and the possibility of quiet within them.