SUPERFLEX: Between Tides, Public Art Fund Brings Sculpture to the Sands

SUPERFLEX
Opening 27 June - 13 September, 2026

Beach 67, Rockaway Beach, Queens

Public Art Fund is pleased to announce Between Tides, a dynamic outdoor exhibition bringing together local and international contemporary artists—Moko Fukuyama, Ilana Harris-Babou, Las Hermanas Iglesias, Carlos H. Matos, Amalia Pica, and SUPERFLEX—to present newly commissioned sculptural ping-pong tables on Rockaway Beach. From June 27 through September 13, 2026, beachgoers are invited to grab a paddle and engage with these works installed directly on the sand.

Responding to the richness of Rockaway Beach, one of New York City's most beloved recreational areas, the artists in the exhibition reimagine the ping-pong table in inventive ways: as a sea legend, an interspecies habitat, a composite musical instrument, maritime flags, a beach scene cast in ceramic, and an ancient Mesoamerican ballgame. Visitors are encouraged to experience these works in both traditional and unexpected ways, expanding the boundaries of play, participation, and fun - and reinforcing the power of public art to inspire discovery and catalyze social connections. _Between Tides_ reflects the cultural landscape of Queens, one of the nation's most demographically diverse regions, and Rockaway Peninsula, which is home to numerous delicate ecosystems and a rich array of wildlife species.

Throughout the summer, Public Art Fund will offer opportunities to enjoy Between Tides, including free ping-pong equipment available to borrow on the weekends, organized ping-pong events, and special programming. In partnership with local community organization RISE (Rockaway Initiative for Sustainability and Equity), groups of students will also connect with the exhibition through workshops and guided visits.

More Info

SUPERFLEX: Rainbows, Sponges, Flies, and Spoons at the MAK Center for Art & Architecture, Schindler House

SUPERFLEX
Opening 12 June - 13 September, 2026

SUPERFEX, The Spoons, 2026

The MAK Center for Art and Architecture is pleased to present Rainbows, Sponges, Flies, and Spoons, an exhibition by the Danish artist collective SUPERFLEX. The exhibition brings together a focused presentation of works spanning more than three decades of the collective’s practice at the MAK Center at the Schindler House.

Designed by Austrian-American architect R.M. Schindler in 1922 as a multi-family dwelling, an experiment in communal living, the Schindler House was designed to accommodate collective daily life as well as personalized areas for individual activity. Playing off this history, Rainbows, Sponges, Flies, and Spoons presents distinct bodies of work, each occupying its own space, completely separate yet strangely connected. The Spoons (1994), an early photographic lightbox depicting a circular arrangement of spoons; Hunga Tonga Rainbow (2016), presenting two photographs in which a rainbow is mirrored, creating a sense of artificial symmetry, a false whole; Proposal for the World’s Second-Tallest Building, a sculptural installation composed of ceramic sponge as a proposal for a new form of architecture; and Two Flies Staring at Each Other (on a Glass of Water) (2025), a meticulously fabricated sculptural vignette arranged in a perfect formation that would be nearly impossible to find in nature. Through subtle manipulations of familiar objects and images, the works produce moments of humor and estrangement while exploring questions of infrastructure, ecological interdependence, and collective perception.

Organized by Beth Stryker, MAK Center Director + Curator with Susan Sherrick, and support from Caroline Ellen Liou, MAK Center Residency Manager + Associate Curator.

More Info

Diana Thater 'The future of art’: A first look at the video installation that’ll light up LACMA’s Wilshire bridge, in the LA Times

Diana Thater
debuting in September 2026 | Los Angeles County Museum of Art

Artist Diana Thater stands in front of her new video installation at LACMA’s new David Geffen Galleries.

(Carlin Stiehl / For The LA Times)

By Solvej Schou

When pedestrians and drivers head under the bridge formed over Wilshire Boulevard by Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s David Geffen Galleries, they will soon be treated to a new permanent large-scale video installation by artist Diana Thater.

As the sun set on a recent weeknight, Thater stood along the busy thoroughfare and pointed up at an early test run of her new piece “Oo Fifi, Five Days In Claude Monet’s Garden, Part 3,” expected to debut in September as both the largest work of Thater’s career and the first time an artist has had a permanent outdoor video installation in a public space.

The piece will run about seven hours from sundown to sunrise, 365 days a year, just across the street from Jeff Koons’ monumental topiary sculpture “Split-Rocker.”

While the sunlight faded, two large projectors splashed 6K video footage that Thater took in 2025 of Claude Monet’s lush garden in Giverny, France, onto a 59-feet-wide by 21-feet-high building wall — and part of the bridge’s ceiling — on the north side of the recently opened Peter Zumthor–designed galleries.

More Info

SUPERFLEX collaborates with Sharjah Art Foundation to reimagine Al Majarrah Park

SUPERFLEX
Opening 21 May, 2026 | Al Majarrah Park in Sharjah

SUPERFEX, Al Maharrah Park, Sharjah, 2026. Image courtesy of Sharjah Art Foundation. Photo: Motaz Mawid

Sharjah Art Foundation announces the reopening of Al Majarrah Park, located alongside the creek in the heritage district of Sharjah. Opening on 21 May 2026, the park is redesigned to bring residents and visitors closer together through recreation, conversation and shared cultural memories.

The new plan for the park was conceived by renowned artist collective SUPERFLEX in close collaboration with Schul Landscape Architects, Copenhagen, and KWY.studio, Lisbon. Outlines of old courtyards and houses are reflected in the design of the different zones, and uneven walkways rise and fall like dunes, a reminder of the landscape surrounding the city.

Al Mujarrah Park examines the invisible memories of Mujarrah. In an attempt to represent the collective memory of Mujarrah, stories were gather from local residents about everyday objects that have personal significance for them, either as tokens of their time in Sharjah or reminders of their homelands. Then these objects were magnified into large-scale monochrome sculptures of a lucky card, a toy tractor, a kebab, a cardamom, a basketball, a safe, a date, a phone, a sand grain, and a book.

The meaning of these objects might seem mysterious to visitors, but to the individuals who suggested them, they were connected to memories. Now that they are placed in a public space, their meanings will continually transform over time, gathering new stories as people use the park.

The Foundation has a longstanding relationship with SUPERFLEX, beginning with their Sharjah Biennial 11 commission The Bank (2013), an urban playground that actively engaged the local community.

More Info

Jorge Pardo in 'As if in a Dream: History, Fantasy, Future'

Jorge Pardo
March 8, 2026 – January 3, 2027 | Santa Barbara Museum of Art

Jorge Pardo, Untitled (Sea Urchin), 2012. Collection of SBMA. Museum purchase funded by The Museum Contemporaries and the 20th Century Art Quasi Endowment Fund.

The artworks in 'As if in a Dream: History, Fantasy, Future' started from a kernel of reality, glimmer of lived experience, or sliver of memory. Like dreams, they combine real and familiar elements but in illogical or uncanny ways. With works from the Museum’s collection supplemented by loans, this exhibition shows artists giving fleeting memories durable form, envisioning a future, and transforming the everyday into the visionary. Spread across the McCormick, Wasserman Family, and Davidson Galleries, and predominantly featuring collection items with a few special loans, the presentation is divided into two sections: landscapes and bodies (mostly human).

This exhibition features works by Rodolfo Abularach, Alice Baber, Roger Brown, Dominic Chambers, Edward Chávez, Rafael Coronel, Daniel Crews-Chubb, Jules de Balincourt, Marsden Hartley, Alexei Jawlensky, Max Hooper Schneider, Wifredo Lam, Dave McDermott, Mimi Lauter, Wright Ludington, Giovanni Paolo Panini, Jorge Pardo, Patricia Peco, Howardena Pindell, Lari Pitman, Kenneth Price, Odilon Redon, Alison Saar, Fernando de Szyszlo, Tom Wudl, Brenna Youngblood, among others.

More Info

Petra Cortright in 'Dire Straits' curated by Benjamin Godsill

Petra Cortright
April 25, 2026 – April 11, 2027 | Carl Kostyál, Stockholm

MAINBITCH.MOV SPRING SCRAP, 2012
webcam video
5 minutes 32 seconds
2 of 3 + 1AP

“We seem to be standing at a precipice: a jumping off point. But don’t we always? And, to a certain extent, we always are. Every passing moment creates a cascading tree of roads not taken. Collectively (and individually) we find ourselves on the road we did take, and we are not sure it was the correct exit, and we can’t find anywhere to get-off and turn-around. As a culture we are in dire straits – a very bad situation and there is no off-ramp.

This exhibition documents this moment in time: how artists are thinking, making and reimagining what could be. Drawn from the Gullringsbo collection, assembled over almost two decades with select recent additions as well as several loans from simpatico collections, the artworks assembled can be read as a new navigational system for un-charted waters. The artists included in ‘Dire Straits’ propose- in their varied projects-a heterogeneous set of strategies for reckoning with the now. They explore how we got here, where we are and whisper ideas of where we may be going.” – Benjamin Godsill

More Info

SUPERFLEX: Come Hell or High Water

SUPERFLEX
May 7, 2026 – January 3, 2027 | ARKEN Museum of Modern Art, Copenhagen

One day, ARKEN will be underwater. In the solo exhibition Come Hell or High Water, this future serves as the point of departure for the Danish artist group SUPERFLEX, as they transform the museum into an ark for all species. The museum is staged as a sunken ship deep below the surface of the sea. Blue light fills the galleries, and at the entrance, sandbags and barricades bear witness to attempts to keep the water out.

Transport crates are piled in the museum's Art axis. They contain works from SUPERFLEX's more than 30-year career, ranging from the group's earliest works from 1993 to brand new productions. The crates are both an archive of their art and cargo of a ship – ready to be transported onward, opened, or left behind.

Over the past several years SUPERFLEX has developed artworks that function not only as art, but also as housing for fish. This practice culminates in the exhibition's new long-term project, The Ark Factory.

At the center of the exhibition, a functioning factory will be set up in which parts of a large ark are produced using a new technique for creating habitats for marine life. This ark will not float but instead serve as an artificial reef that fosters biodiversity as sea levels rise. Over time, parts of the ark will be placed on the seabed in locations around the world. SUPERFLEX's ark will become a platform for coexistence across species – a vessel that carries life into the future, with or without humans on board.

Come Hell or High Water insists on action in uncertain times and unfolds as a space for preparation, collaboration, and imagination.

More Info

On Craft and Unexpected Materiality: An Artist Talk with Pae White in conversation with Kimberly Bradley

Pae White
May 1, 2026, 3:30-4:30pm | Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin

With a practice that transverses sculpture, tapestry, graphic design, and large-scale installation, Pae White probes both material and motif. She explores the limits of a medium’s possibility and often upends its associations, repurposing everyday substances into sensory and revelatory new arrangements: Yarn becomes painting. Automotive lacquer is applied to organic forms. Jacquard weavings take on sculptural qualities. Paper is mistaken for bronze. For the artist, every artwork feels like a test, and nothing ever feels fully resolved. In this conversation, White joins Kimberly Bradley to discuss notions of beauty, craft, and processes of creation, particularly in relation to the artist’s newest body of work—on view in her solo exhibition “pushmi-pullyu” during Gallery Weekend Berlin at neugerriemschneider’s Christinenstrasse location.

The work of Pae White (b. 1963, Pasadena, California) combines scale and delicacy to repurpose everyday substances into sensory and revelatory new arrangements. White participated in the Whitney Biennial, New York (2010) and the 53rd Venice Biennale (2009). Selected solo exhibitions include those at Plataforma de Arte Contemporáneo, Guadalajara (2025); San José Museum of Art, San José (2019); Saarlandmuseum, Moderne Galerie, Saarbrücken (2017); MAK – Museum für angewandte Kunst / Gegenwartskunst, Vienna (2013); Langen Foundation, Neuss (2013); South London Gallery, London (2013); The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, Toronto (2011); Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago (2011); Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis (2010); Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C. (2007); Manchester Art Gallery, Manchester (2006); and Hammer Museum, Los Angeles (2004). White lives and works in Los Angeles. 

Kimberly Bradley is an art critic, culture journalist, editor, and educator based in Berlin. She has written for publications ranging from frieze to The New York Times; edited catalogues and artist books for institutions including KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Haus der Kunst, and Gropius Bau; and for a decade taught courses in contemporary art practices at NYU Berlin. She is a commissioning editor at Art Basel Stories and in 2024 was the curator of Art Basel Conversations in Basel and Miami Beach.

More Info

Jan Albers in 'Zugzwang'

Jan Albers
May 9 – September 27, 2026 | kunsthaus nrw kornelimünster, Aachen

Jan Albers
Sunshine Sprayer Shelp, 2001
101 × 154 × 24 cm

Following the first chapter, „Klassenverhältnisse. Lehrende, Lernende, Künstler:innen“ in 2025, Kunsthaus NRW continues the exhibition this year with new works and thematic emphases. The exhibition explores the cosmos of the art academy through both traditional artistic genres and hybrid forms of contemporary artistic production. Alongside questions of technical training, it focuses on aspects such as conceptual thinking. It traces the historical development of art and the teaching of art since 1946 and examines relationships between teachers and students. At the same time, it addresses the global networks of art academies in North Rhine-Westphalia, points to alternative artistic paths beyond academic training, and considers the transition from study into the professional art world. Approximately 130 works from the Kunsthaus NRW collection will be presented, alongside selected loans from the Akademie-Galerie of Kunstakademie Düsseldorf.

More Info

Pae White's Ring Collection for Vhernier Debut in Venice

Pae White | May 7, 6:30pm—8:00pm at Palazzo Soranzo Van Axel

Pae White for Vhernier. Photo: Erdna Creative.

In Venice, multidisciplinary artist Pae White and Milanese jeweler Vhernier will be unveiling to Europe a limited edition ring collection that makes the case for jewelry as serious sculpture. The collection, designed by White and crafted by Vhernier, is inspired by the architecture of a crab’s exoskeleton, rendered in white gold, abalone, jade, sapphires, and rock crystal. Rarity is the name of the game here: only two iterations of each design will be produced. 

Petra Cortright in 'Zugzwang'

Petra Cortright
April 16 – May 16, 2026 | Brigade Gallery, Copenhagen

An exhibition that begins with a simple yet deeply architectural question: how is a place constructed before it exists? The works operate as a model without fixed scale — an open system in which tests and suspended forms coexist. A place conceived even as it is observed.

Featuring works by Erika Hock, Nicholas Szymanski, Petra Cortright, Marc Badia, Sofía González, Miki Leal and Stephen Felton and curated by Óscar Florit, the exhibition is part of the ongoing collaboration between Proyecto REME and La Caja.

More Info

Rirkrit Tiravanija to Assemble “A Gathering of Remarkable People” for Qatar Pavilion at Venice Biennale

Rirkrit Tiravanija | ArtForum

From left: Sophia Al-Maria, Tom Eccles, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Tarek Atoui, and Ruba Katrib. Photo: © Brigitte Lacombe.

The National Pavilion of Qatar has announced that Thai artist Rirkrit Tiravanija will bring together a group of musicians, poets, chefs, and artists from the Arab world for its exhibition at the Sixty-First Venice Biennale, to open on May 9. The show, “Untitled (a gathering of remarkable people),” is being cocurated by Tom Eccles, executive director of Center for Curatorial Studies and the Hessel Museum of Art at Bard College, and Ruba Katrib, chief curator and director of curatorial affairs, at New York’s MoMA PS1. It will occupy a tent in the Giardini on the future site of Qatar’s new permanent pavilion, which is being designed by Lebanese-born architect Lina Ghotmeh.

[…]

“On the global stage of the Venice Biennale, this exhibition demonstrates Qatar’s unwavering belief in the power of culture to bring people together and to create space for reflection, connection, and affirmation of our shared humanity,” said Qatar Museums chair Sheikha Al Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, the pavilion’s commissioner, in a statement. “Qatar is proud to provide a platform for the creative talent of our nation and the Arab world. Together, these artists and their work highlight the importance of resilience in a complicated time, empowering communities, inspiring generations, and strengthening our combined heritage.”

Read more here.

Uta Barth: “Perception and the Act of Looking”

Uta Barth | EXIT Imagen y Cultura #99, Published March 2026

by Guillermo Espinosa

Few fine art photographers have accommodated phenomenology into their work in a more direct and enlightening way than Uta Barth (Berlin, 1958). The German-American photographer’s evident desire to redefine the act of looking in perceptual terms triggers questions that relate directly to the culture of the image and the meaning that looking imparts on the act of representation. It is a position that can possibly be traced back to her reading of two works that are central to the development of knowledge and aesthetic theory in the 20th century: Phenomenology of Perception (1945, translated into English in 1961) by the French Marxist Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and Art and Visual Perception: A Psychology of the Creative Eye (1958, revised and extended in 1974) by the German Gestalt psychologist Rudholf Arheim. The first of these works holds that is is the body—and not the conscience—that truly allows us to interpret reality and illuminate our subjective interpretation of the world through a biological mechanism shared by all human beings. The second breaks down the processes of perception and their relationship with the creation of all images aesthetics: from the differentiation between figure and background to mathematical composition strategies and the flaws and manipulations of perception required to represent a three-dimensional reality on a two-dimensional surface. In short, both works appeal to the eye and its perceptuial processes as the true source of an interpretation of reality or its replication as an image, which is then processed subjectively by the human brain and psyche. Barth’s work can largely be seen as a conscious affirmation of these hypotheses, which explain her importance to late 2-th-centiry contemporary photography.

Read more here.

Paul Winstanley: “IMAGES ARE HIGHLY FABRICATED INVENTIONS”

Paul Winstanley | Rosanna Albertini’s The Kite

by Rosanna Albertini

Here I am, as the painter wrote, “the artists gets out of the way and leaves the viewer where once he stood.” I know Walkway is an image he reworked many times, each time a different painting in sync with a new state of his awareness of what he is doing. I use the present, as a sort of absolute time, separate from the fullness of things in which we loose the sense of our most intimate perception, and time steals our days. As I stand in front of the painting something from inside me is sucked in toward the silence of the white square at the end of the tunnel, so intense it is scary. The painting is, not the real physical place. Other humans have been there and marked their presence in graphic signs. The skin of the tunnel bears tattoos. Only in the painting they are indelible. But an un-human, vaguely pink-brown fog fights with the clarity of the white end. Forget reading. Only my soul can slide through the artist’s mental fog, and mine, maybe ours, in this damned 2026, where reason has lost her way.  “life seeps in unintentionally, subliminally” (PW)

‘Surface, translucency, light and space are all as one; they are indivisible. … a pure idea of the physicality and illusion of the painting.”  (PW)

On the wall, in the gallery, “ the subject of the painting has ceased to be the walkway or the trees but was instead the painting’s own mediation of these things.” (PW)

What I write here makes sense when we are in front of the painting, the 87 x 60 inches of a window whose semitransparent curtain filters the outside scenery and remakes it intensified on the floor. My brain, at first, was seeing nuances of gray as the dominant colors. My eyes were mimicking the curtain, tricky as they are. I stayed still for a while, waiting: and colors come to me.

As if the painting was waking from sleep. It was such a wonderful sensation that I liked to believe it was true for a second, a magical mutation. The one who was asleep was my brain, slowly making the colors out of the waves of light hitting the receptors at the door of my eyes. I am old, no surprise. You wrote it at page 94, dear artist, “Self-irony, or knowingness, is always present as part of nostalgia, even when we are tempted to think it is not.”

The viewer needs it as much as you. I continue to see the light blue and the pink in the sky that gives to the painting a vaguely luminous area taking off from the top of the trees, as if the end of foliage was a landscape line. The profile of earthly creatures. I want to be a bird in that sky.  

Read more here.

SUPERFLEX: There Are Other Fish In The Sea

SUPERFLEX
April 14, 2026 – August 2, 2026 | Palazzo Strozzi, Florence

There Are Other Fish In the Sea, 2026, installation view. Photo by Ela Bialkowska, OKNO Studio. Courtesy of Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi, Florence. 

Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi was built as an enclosed home but has now been reimagined as a public square and a site for art. Consisting of eight columns standing amid the palazzo’s existing columns, There Are Other Fish In The Sea puts interspecies architecture into dialogue with the harmonious proportions and colonnaded courtyard of the palazzo. The work expands the notion of the public to include other species, while offering human visitors an opportunity to pause and reflect on the possibilities for interspecies living and coexistence.
 
As sea levels continue to rise, human buildings will soon be underwater. Because ocean biodiversity thrives around structures with an abundance of surface area, the building blocks of There Are Other Fish In The Sea are designed to feature many flat and irregularly-sized planes. Stackable and modular, the blocks can be used to construct art for humans and infrastructure for sea creatures.
 
The resulting pink columns are of uneven height: some reach toward the sky, and others are lower to the ground. The columns emerge from a dark pool of water which reflects both the sculptures and the sky above—as well as any visitors who look into it. The water is a reminder of the closeness of the river Arno and its relationship to the city. The columns also resemble flood markers, pointing to the history of flooding in the area (such as the great flood of 1966, exactly 60 years ago) and proposes a new way of building infrastructure in preparation for future flooding.
 
There Are Other Fish In The Sea transforms Palazzo Strozzi into an encounter between past and future. The once-innovative aspects of Renaissance architecture are reimagined as part of a future renaissance for fish.
 
There Are Other Fish In The Sea is promoted and organised by Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi and Fondazione Hillary Merkus Recordati. In collaboration with Kunsthal Spritten, Aalborg, Denmark. Special Partner: Fondazione Henraux.
Designed in collaboration with KWY.studio.

More Info

Diana Thater in Inaugural Installation of LACMA's Collection at the New David Geffen Galleries

Diana Thater
Opening April 19, 2026 | Los Angeles County Museum of Art

Visitors in the David Geffen Galleries, photo © Museum Associates/LACMA

Los Angeles County Museum of Art's David Geffen Galleries will open on April 19 with a ribbon-cutting celebration, marking the beginning of two weeks of priority member access to the galleries as well as a series of events. From April 19 through May 3, LACMA members and donors will have the opportunity to see the inaugural installation of the museum’s collection. 

Visitors will enjoy seeing artworks spanning the entirety of art history, including museum favorites: Georges de La Tour’s The Magdalen with the Smoking Flame (1640); Henri Matisse’s La Gerbe (1953); Antonio de Arellano and Manuel de Arellano’s Virgin of Guadalupe (Virgen de Guadalupe) (1691); and more. Notable recent acquisitions will also be on view, including Francis Bacon’s Three Studies of Lucian Freud (1969) and Vincent van Gogh’s Tarascon Stagecoach (1888). Adding to the presentation of art from around the world and across time are special commissions by Todd Gray, Lauren Halsey, Sarah Rosalena, Do Ho Suh, Diana Thater, and others. 

More Info

Rirkrit Tiravanija in ‘A Thousand Ways to Be Berlin: Nationalgalerie Collection at Hamburger Bahnhof'

Rirkrit Tiravanija
Opening June 12, 2026 | Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin

Rirkrit Tiravanija, untitled 2010 (All the Days on the Autobahn), 2010, exhibition view, Hamburger Bahnhof – Nationalgalerie der Gegenwart 2018-2019 © Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Nationalgalerie / Courtesy the artist / Foto: Thomas Bruns

Berlin is a place of ongoing movement and negotiation, where artistic, political, and migratory trajectories intersect. For its 30th anniversary, Hamburger Bahnhof presents its new iteration of the collection in the west wing, focusing on Berlin’s art scene in global dialogue from 1989 to today. Over 70 works by more than 50 artists, including paintings, drawings, sculptures, photographs, and video installations, reflect Berlin’s myth of hedonism and subculture in an international context.

Berlin is shaped by the city’s historical division, competing narratives, and the complexity of different forms of belonging. International artists living and working here transform the city into a microcosm of global political movements and crises. This interplay between art and the city is explored in the new collection presentation through works by Cemile Sahin, Katharina Grosse, Mona Hatoum, Pierre Huyghe, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Katharina Sieverding, Thomas Struth, Danh Vo, and many others.

For this new presentation, Hamburger Bahnhof continues its long-standing exchange with the art collection of the German Federal Government. The exhibition will be further enriched by a selection of new acquisitions. Familiar major works will be shown alongside others that have rarely, if ever, been shown before.

A Thousand Ways to Be Berlin: Nationalgalerie Collection at Hamburger Bahnhof' is curated by Sam Bardaouil, Director Hamburger Bahnhof – Nationalgalerie der Gegenwart, and Charlotte Knaup, Curator at Hamburger Bahnhof – Nationalgalerie der Gegenwart.

More Info

Pae White: pushmi-pullyu

Pae White
May 2 – August 8, 2026 | Galerie Neugerriemschneider, Berlin

Pae White, Untitled, 2026; Photo: Santiago Vega, Guadalajara.

In pushmi-pullyu at Galerie Neugerriemschneider, Berlin, Pae White presents a dazzling universe of creatures such as crabs, snails, flies, butterflies, and other insects, rendered in colorful thread paintings, tactile textiles, and vibrant ceramics.

The new works stem from White’s longstanding engagement with traditional materials andcraft techniques, whose possibilities she continually expands. The techniques featured in the exhibition include indigenoushandcrafts, Jacquard weaving, and experimental technologies, through which the artist depicts the animals as if viewed under a magnifying glass. Encouraging introspective reflection on our own relationship with nature, the compositions honor the overlooked:creatures that, despite their complexity, are usually perceived only marginally or not at all are brought into focus as bearers of visual andconceptual richness.

In an increasingly fragile world, White slows down the gaze in her artistic practice and focuses her attention to capture thefleeting beauty. Wafts of smoke, crumpled foil, popcorn, glistening water, and even the passage of timeare isolated for visual analysis, translated compositionally and materially, and recontextualized. A key elementof this approach is dichotomies and contradictions, such as those between craftsmanship and technology or between expectations ofthe respective media and objects. The latter are regularly subjected to a fundamental reevaluation as Whitequestions perception by imbuing the everyday with a new aura.

More Info