Fabio Menino: Art of the Everyday
Fabio Menino, an artist from São Paulo, has built his career on making us rethink the humble objects cluttering our lives. While most of us toss a broom in a corner or a watermelon on a countertop without a second thought, Fabio looks at these objects and sees something worth painting—a lot of something, actually.
His work is simple but not simplistic. Each painting typically features a single, everyday object. But instead of leaving it in its usual role—functional, boring, ignored—Fabio lifts it to an artistic plane where it can command your attention and maybe even make you laugh.
in his work, Fabio isolates the object, giving it space to breathe. He strips these objects of their context and invites us to see them anew. By doing so, he taps into something universal: our weird, complicated relationship with the stuff we surround ourselves with.
The genius of Fabio’s work lies in how he takes the mundane and makes it feel monumental. These objects, so ordinary they’re practically invisible in daily life, suddenly demand your attention. You find yourself staring at a painted chair or a set of tires and realizing they’re oddly beautiful—like they’ve been hiding their charm in plain sight all this time.
And then there’s the humor. Fabio is poking fun at how seriously we take—or don’t take—them. He’s highlighting the absurdity of a world where industrial design and advertising make us want things we don’t need and ignore the things we already have. It’s a subtle joke, but it lands every time.
Ultimately, Fabio’s art is about connection. He’s not asking you to revere these objects; he’s asking you to notice them. To stop and appreciate the small, often-overlooked pieces of life. It’s a reminder that art isn’t always about grandeur or spectacle—sometimes, it’s about finding meaning in the ordinary. Or, in Fabio’s case, making you think twice about your broom.