With 60 galleries, Pinta, the Modern & Contemporary Latin American Art Show at Earls Court 
Cesar Paternosto: Trio 14, 2013 at Durban  Segnini , Florida 
Two fine long-running abstract painters were highlighted by solo shows: 98 year old Argentine Luis Tomasello, who has often shown in England 

Patricia Camet: Emoticons 23, 2011 at  LAMB arts London  / Galeria Paralelo, Sao Paulo 
For twelve years the Peruvian artist Patti Camet has been collecting packaging – from phones, chocolates, pills, eggs, scissors etc – and casting them in ceramic. Here a square metre of them, mounted on pine board, bring anthropomorphic qualities to a combination somewhere between still life and abstraction. It's one of a series which anthologises various different emotions – by way of email emoticons – in this way. Attractive, for sure – but are we, then, no more than the sum of what we’ve consumed?
Héctor Arce-Espasas: CLP-A8 (Black & Landscape), 2013 at De la Cruz Projects, San Jose 
This freestyle riff on a Puerto Rican jungle by a young New York  based artist born in San Juan 
Ivana Brenner: Untitled, Diptych, 2010 at jaggedart, London 
What looked like infestations of mussel shells or sections of ruched curtains solidified into scallopings of petal turned out to be… paint hardened over metal armatures (which, incidentally, had a comparable elegance from the back). Argentine Ivana Brenner made a good first impression in Britain 
Ximena Garrido-Lecca: Composition II, 2012 at Max Wigram, London 
The Peruvian artist’s solo booth had sculpture, drawings, and a huge collage of agricultural sacks which moved into painterly territory. Composition II cunningly combined branded sacks with a Pop art feel with unbranded sacks with cheerful patterns which happened to echo a good few of the Fair’s abstract paintings. The patchwork result also delivered on Garrido-Lecca’s wider strategy of importing personally infected everyday Peruvian life into a western art context: such sacks are indeed made into blankets and curtains in her home city of Lima 
Célio Braga: Untitled (07 meters), 2013 at Galeria Pilar, São Paulo 
Célio Braga’s compositions were the stand-out among many dissections of the grid: they  caught the flux of personal history by using strips of his friends’ clothes and characteristically Brazilian ‘wishing  ribbons’ (tie round wrist with three knots: make one wish per knot, and they’ll come true when the bracelet wears away and falls off). The resulting barely-there paintings-of-sorts are named for their length – the longest one framed the booth’s entrance – and have the ability to change formation: as above, the artist wore one around his neck. Hung slightly away from the wall, shadows magnified their vulnerable irregularities.
Toby Christian: Per Pluma Qap, 2013 at Galeria Baró, São Paulo 
If you think Toby one of the less Latinate names, you’d be right: Christian’s a London  artist who qualified for the fair by making work in Brazil 
There was quite a bit of kinetic art at Pinta, bringing to mind the Venezuelan lineage of Jesús Rafael Soto and Carlos Cruz-Diez. Their countryman, Manuel Mérida (born 1939) may well have been the leading crowd-pleaser with his combination of spectacle and respect: a Union Jack themed set of four rotating circular paintings. There were monochromes in red, blue and white plus a threefold combination. They spun at the same speed, but due to the varying mixes of wood particles, sand or chalk acting as carrier behind their glass fronts, the pigment inside formed and unformed shapes at differing speeds.  

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