
This is a video (and a screen-grabbed still) that comes with a just released piece of music called Procession, a piece of music taken from the new Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe album Liminal. The artwork and animation in the video is by London-based artist Orfeo Tagiuri, although we note the art is not credited on the official You Tube post, not a single mention, rather naughty, artists deserve (indeed artists need) credit for these things, you’d think Mr Eno would be on the case with these things. More about Orfeo Tagiuri underneath the video…
Orfeo Tagiuri (b.1991, USA) lives and works in London. Orfeo’s practice spans from painting and drawing to performance, film, woodcarving, animation, and music. He has exhibited and performed internationally, including at Sapling, London, Art Brussels, Palais de Tokyo, Paris, Paris International, and MACRO, Rome. In 2020 Orfeo was nominated for Bloomberg New Contemporaries award and published his first book Little Passing Thoughts in 2023. Orfeo has directed and animated music videos for James Blake as well as the Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe video up there.
Orfeo has a first solo exhibition in Los Angeles opening this coming Saturday 8th November at Charlotte Call Gallery (the opening is from 5-7pm on Saturday if you happen to be in the area). The show runs until 12th December


The L.A gallery is “presenting an extension of the ongoing Little Passing Thoughts series, this new body of large-scale pastel works on paper expands upon the intimate sketches that have cultivated a devoted following and led to a successful publication. The series has resonated with audiences around the world, with some individuals even choosing to tattoo particular thoughts that held personal significance. Originating from the artist’s daily reflections, these compositions of text and line capture moments of perception and introspection, from glimpses of the magical within the everyday to meditations on how connection is formed. Each work functions as a quiet pursuit of joy, charting the shifting terrain of fear and wonder.
“Each of these drawings is fished out from the river of little passing thoughts. I don’t know where they come from but sometimes I take the time to gently scoop them up and set them down. They are a great joy, relief and meditation to make. I hope you can feel that” – Orfeo Tagiuri
The series began on postcard-size papers, allowing the artist to rapidly capture thoughts as they surfaced. The artist shares the series on a dedicated instagram account @orfayo. A selection from the series was published in a book titled Little Passing Thoughts in 2023, and is currently on its third edition due to popular demand”.
Further Orfeo Tagiuri reading: An interview that you can find via Plaster.
Meanwhile Brian Eno has his own gallery exhibition coming up this month, this one is in London, more about that under this second video and more from that new the new Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe album Liminal that came out in October. No idea who did the art for the this video, once again no credit offered, oh no, hang on “Visualization by Beatie Wolfe & Brian Eno”.
That Brian Eno exhibition, Blocks, will run at London’s Paul Stopler Gallery from Friday14th November 2025 until mid January next year…
“Paul Stolper is pleased to announce Brian Eno’s Blocks, a new series of paintings made in August 2025 during a two-day continuous performance in his London studio. Over four hundred primed birch ply panels, each measuring 18x13x2.5 cm, were laid out across a number of long tables” (something one or two of us might have done before on a long table in a gallery, both the performanve and the blocks)
Eno started by making large cut-out stencils which he set down across numerous panels and sprayed through, resulting in positive painted shapes. By spraying over found shapes and dried pasta, either deliberately placed, or randomly dropped, negative painted shapes appeared on the panels below. More congested areas would reveal much busier compositions, where others with few shapes and paint covering emerged more quiet and minimal. Throughout the process Eno was picking out pieces as they seemed finished, leaving gaps to be filled with other blocks. A block stayed in circulation until it ‘got somewhere’.


Hugely enjoying the dramatic oppositions of composition and colour offered by the remaining panels, Eno adopted a very different curatorial approach to the project. From these he made a small series of works, each one made up of four panels, measuring 31x31cm, whilst leaving a 5x5cm square gap in the centre, again referencing the positive and negative shapes made in the painting process.
Each individual painting will be on sale at £500 for the duration of the exhibition and will rise after the exhibition finishes on 17th January 2026″.


Brian Eno – Blocks at Paul Stopler Gallery opens with a Private View on Thursday 13th November (6pm until 8pm) and then runs from Friday 14th November until Saturday 17th January 2026. The gallery is open Monday to Friday 10am until 6pm and Saturday 11am until 6pm
Paul Stolper Gallery is found at 31 Museum Street, London, WC1A 1LH (a short walk from Tottenham Road tube station)
previously on these pages….





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