Exhibitions NOW

Contemporary Art Listings The Hague


Tag: Sculpture

  • Event: Obviously Unthinkable – Matter Rebellion at iii

    Event: Obviously Unthinkable – Matter Rebellion at iii

    Human-made materials now outweigh all living biomass on Earth. This milestone steers us towards reconsidering the obediency of materials against the suggestion of matter with open-ended evolution.

    Experience the hidden forces of matter through the inner-animated landscape of Thixocymatics, a Black Smoking Mirror, and a singing vagina in Nina and the Robots. In collaboration with LIMA, the program will be supplemented by a screening of Marina Abramović and Ulay’s Talking about Similarity.

    Trigger Warning: the program contains nudity and extreme body art

    Thixocymatics is a kinetic sculpture that explores the fragile threshold between order and collapse. Using tools from the world of construction—specifically concrete formwork—the artist created an instrument that carefully manipulates a block of thixotropic calcium. Rather than producing stable patterns, the material resists predictability. It slowly shifts, continuously reshaping itself into an evolving, unstable landscape. The work embodies a dialogue with material agency, where control gives way to emergence, and structure yields to fluid transformation.

    Aldo Brinkhoff works with an intuitive approach to chemistry to find, isolate and strengthen natural phenomena. Attracted to the uncontrollable nature of these processes, he navigates through their complexity and emergent morphology.

    Nina and the Robots is an opera that stages the encounter between two bodies: a human and a soft robot driven by compressed air. Filmed as a live performance in two long takes, the piece converges into a breath-heavy face-off where the singing merges with the robot’s pump (driving both the score and movement) in a moment of technological teleonanism.

    Cindy Coutant is a visual artist and researcher based in Geneva (CH). Her work explores the living’s desire to connect with beings and things, as well as the co-evolution between species and techno-species. Her installations, films, and augmented readings dismantle western high-tech narratives, introducing a missing imaginary where technology appears as non-instrumental, slimy, erotic, and indefinite.

    Black Smoking Mirror is a performance about resistance, friction and obstruction of the canvas by laser engraving surrounded by electronic sound.

    Gert-Jan Prins focuses on the sonic and musical qualities of electronic noise and investigates its relationship with the visual. His works includes live performances, sound-installations, compositions, electronic circuits, and collaborations with composers, musicians and visual artists.
    Martijn van Boven combines the techniques and possibilities of modern image processing and creation within the context of expanded cinema and early computer generated films.

    Talking about Similarity is a performance about self-imposed silence, which took place in Amsterdam, on November 30th, 1976.

    From 1976 to 1988, Ulay collaborated with Marina Abramović, forming one of the most celebrated artistic partnerships of the 20th century. Their intensely symbiotic relationship, both personal and artistic, led to groundbreaking performance works that pushed the limits of physical and psychological endurance.

    About the curators
    Dmitry Gelfand & Evelina Domnitch have been working in tandem since 1998 creating multi-sensory installations and performances prodding the slippery origins of the physical world. The duo’s artworks have emerged through unorthodox collaborations with pioneering research groups, including LIGO (Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory), RySQ (Rydberg Atom Quantum Simulator), and Aerospace Engineering (TU Delft).

    This event is presented by iii with financial support from Creative Industries Fund NL and The Municipality of The Hague.

  • Ryan Gander: X Edgar Degas – Pas de Deux at Museum Beelden aan Zee

    Ryan Gander: X Edgar Degas – Pas de Deux at Museum Beelden aan Zee

    In June, Museum Beelden aan Zee will be staging an exhibition which creates a dialogue between the work of the British visual artist Ryan Gander (1976) and that of the French painter and sculptor Edgar Degas (1834 – 1917). Since 2008, Gander has been working on a conceptual series in which he reinterprets Degas’ world-famous sculpture Petite Danseuse de Quatorze Ans (1881) and places her in a contemporary context. Gander’s sculptures liberate Degas’ fourteen year-old dancer from her pedestal and places her in various scenarios. The exhibition in Museum Beelden aan Zee will show Gander’s series of twenty-one ballerinas for the first time, and also in direct connection with Degas’ famous sculpture.

    Transition
    Petite Danseuse de Quatorze Ans marks the transition from classical to modern sculpture. The French artist not only captured the beauty of ballet life but also the tension between the discipline of dance and the vulnerability of youth with this sculpture of the young ballerina in a restrained and realistic pose. More than a century later, Ryan Gander reflects upon Degas’ work through a series of ballerina sculptures with poetic titles in unexpected or everyday situations. His reinterpretations raise questions about the idealization of the ballerina and the role of art in presenting reality versus fiction.

    Brigitte Bloksma, director of Museum Beelden aan Zee and curator of the exhibition: “The relationship between Degas’ original work and Gander’s approach offers a fascinating reflection on the perception of the ballerina and the subtle boundaries between art and everyday life. It shows how artists across time address themes such as movement, youth, and vulnerability.”

    New work
    Ryan Gander X Edgar Degas – Pas de Deux will be Ryan Gander’s first solo exhibition in the Netherlands. The exhibition is being made possible thanks to a collaboration with public and private collections worldwide which have lent their sculptures, as well as Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, which has kindly lent us Degas’ Petite Danseuse de Quatorze Ans (1880 – 1881/1922). Museum Beelden aan Zee has commissioned Ryan Gander to make a new ballerina, Waiting for timefall, or Living in a time where everything is possible, but nothing can happen, the last work in his series.

    A publication with a contribution by the artist is being published to coincide with the exhibition.

    Book your tickets at https://www.beeldenaanzee.nl/en/visit/buy-tickets

    Curator: Brigitte Bloksma