Group Show
Call Someone
Exhibition view
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Angélique Aubrit & Ludovic Beillard, Bob, 2023, Dimensions variable, Polyester, cotton, jeans, lime wood, abachi wood
Angélique Aubrit & Ludovic Beillard, Bob, 2023, Dimensions variable, Polyester, cotton, jeans, lime wood, abachi wood
Exhibition view
Tallulah Hood, Untitled, 2026, 65 × 25 × 35 cm, wood, t-shirt
Emily Dietrich, Table 1, 2023, 110 × 120 × 10 cm, Oil and pencil on MDF, stainless steel, screws
Willem de Haan, Surrounded II, 2025, 200 × 200 × 95 cm, Brush, handles
Willem de Haan, Surrounded I, 2025, 200 × 200 × 95 cm, Brush, handles
Exhibition view
Tobias John, Fails, 2026, Dimensions variable, material not specified
Exhibition view
Marcel Walldorf, Sankt Bernetto, 2020, 95 × 30 × 40 cm, Italian porcelain, taxidermied dog
Marcel Walldorf, Sankt Bernetto, 2020, 95 × 30 × 40 cm, Italian porcelain, taxidermied dog
Mathias Weinfurter, DSM102503, 2025, 143 × 106 × 7 cm, Steel
Exhibition view
Kasper de Vos, De loop dr dingen, 2023, 100 × 80 × 30 cm, Rusted metal
Tommy Smits, External memory, 2025, 15 × 20 cm, SD-cards, frames, photo print
Exhibition view
Stijn ter Braak, Pit, 2025, 200 × 110 × 110 cm, Wood, paper, isolation foam, glue, acrylic paint, plastic foil, cardboard, spray paint, tape
Stijn ter Braak, Pit, 2025, 200 × 110 × 110 cm, Wood, paper, isolation foam, glue, acrylic paint, plastic foil, cardboard, spray paint, tape
There are moments when an object stops doing what it seems to promise.
This gap between expectation and reality is where this exhibition begins. It
brings together works that appear functional yet remain out of reach. They
are connected by a condition of brokenness — a minor shift that moves
them from one register to another. Witnesses of such disruptions often
experience as a sense of awkwardness, a subtle unease that arises when
something goes wrong. We feel the dissonance of seeing the order
violated. This sensation generates a dual response: a desire to look away
and pretend nothing happened, and at the same time a need to call
someone who can restore order, to return the object to what it seemed to
promise by its image.
Egor Miroshnichenko