Gallery Network
5 Gallery Network Artists We’re Watching This Summer
Mark your calendar to see these artists on view from New York to Mallorca.
While much of the art world is focused on Art Basel in Switzerland this week, there is no shortage of great exhibitions on view around the rest of the world. From Mallorca to Hong Kong, we’ve rounded up five must-see exhibitions featured on the Artnet Gallery Network that cover a range of style, medium, and location, from abstract sculpture to figurative painting.
Dylan Doe, Armatures (Skater) (2025)

Dylan Doe, Armatures (Skater) (2025). Courtesy of Dylan Doe Artist Studio.
Dylan Doe’s dreamy paintings explore the often fluid relationship between humans, nature, and technology. The surreal works begin in unconscious drawings sessions that are then gradually layered with paint, though the finished works never fully obscure the first gestures. Doe is interested in the way that we rely on material goods, to the point that they are part of our beings; simultaneously expanding our relationship to the world, and limiting it. These figures are depicted somewhere between artist subjects and scientific specimens, both deeply personal and unknowable.
“The Raft” is on view at Leo Gallery in Hong Kong through June 26.
Eileen Agar, Sleeping sickness (ca. 1960)

Eileen Agar, Sleeping sickness (ca. 1960). Courtesy of Alison Jacques.
Eileen Agar was one of the most distinctive figures associated with British Surrealism. Despite this, she did not feel caged in by style,. explaining “Abstract art and Surrealism were the two movements that interested me most, and I see nothing incompatible in that, indeed we all walk on two legs, and for me, one is abstract, the other surreal–it is point and counterpoint.” Indeed, her colorful works straddle the two movements.
“Eileen Agar” is on view at Alison Jacques in London through July 25.
Mark Webber, Untitled (1954)

Mark Webber, Untitled (1954). Courtesy of Anita Rogers Gallery.
Anita Rogers Gallery presents an exhibition of new works by Mark Webber in “Keep Moving Forward While Waiting.” Webber, a lifelong builder, avid sailor, kayaker, and martial artist, explores wood in both its natural and manufactured forms in conversation. He sees “the tree as both the genesis and the silent observer of human habitation. Branches, once part of a living canopy, now engage in a dialogue with the architecture we’ve created—embracing its lines, piercing its planes, or rendering themselves as fine, intricate lines that interact with its imposed geometry.”
“Keep Moving Forward While Waiting” is on view at Anita Rogers Gallery in New York through June 20.
Angel Baldovino, Mi Reino de los sueños (2023)

Angel Baldovino, Mi Reino de los sueños (2023). Courtesy of Cansalas Gallery.
In Angel Baldovino’s paintings, the focus is light. The new works, painted between 2023 and 2026, are bathed in color that pulses across abstract forms that push, pull, squeeze, and turn. There is dramatic depth and a real sense of directionality, in each individual work, with glimmers of light from an unknown source electrifying the composition. Baldovino sees light as the revealer of truth, both of physical reality and of an unseen spiritual one.
“La Luz Viene de Arriba (The Light Comes from Above)” is on view at Cansalas Gallery in Mallorca through August 31.
Jiab Prachakul, New Era (2025)

Jiab Prachakul, New Era (2025). Courtesy of Timothy Taylor.
In her current solo exhibition, Jiab Prachakul considers memory, distance, and presence through depictions of those closest to her. “Welcome Back,” presented by Timothy Taylor Gallery, shows familiar faces in familiar places: family, friends, herself at home, along the banks of a river, wandering through the city. Many of the works in this exhibition feature scenes of Berlin, where Prachakul lived for eight years before settling in Vannes, Brittany. In May 2025, the artist returned to the city and spent time with friends in familiar places, gathering images that informed this series. The paintings have a calming quality, a feeling that the artist is inviting you in to her innermost sanctum.
“Welcome Back” is on view at Timothy Taylor Gallery in London through July 11.
Explore works by these artists and more with the Artnet Gallery Network.