In Isabelle Abbot’s newest body of work, these questions unfold through a sustained act of observation and interrogation.
Working in oil and gouache, she visits—and revisits—a single setting in central Virginia, allowing repetition to build familiarity, and familiarity to deepen into meaning.
The idea recalls terroir—the way a place distinctly shapes what grows from it. But here, the exchange is between artist and land.
Abbot’s paintings are not fixed depictions, but evolving responses—each one shaped by time, attention, and subtle shifts of perception.
The result is a body of work that suggests the significance of place is not something that is found; it is something that is deliberately constructed, through the act of looking deeply.
Writing contributed by Emily Valentine / Miroir Art Advisory