Out of Ousia
Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen, Denmark, 2018/2019


OUT OF OUSIA

The exhibition title Out of Ousia sets the tone for Alicja Kwade’s first solo exhibition in Denmark: With her poetic minimalism and powerful sculptures, she created an exhibition that questions science and social conventions. A vase created by the dust from a blended PowerMac, surreal mirror reflections, and a brand-new work created specially to the exhibition consisting of massive stone spheres which lightly float in the air, are some of the sculptural elements that make up the exhibition and surprises and awakens reflection.

Alicja Kwade’s sculptural landscapes often consist of familiar objects and natural materials stripped of their usual function and imbued with new qualities and value. Mass, surfaces and materials act in new ways: pebbles have been cut and polished as if they were diamonds, coal is disguised as gold bars, and branches, glass and copper rise up from the ground, defying gravity. The laws of nature are suspended as Alicja Kwade draws us into her warped version of reality, which is both recognisable and alien, near and far away, real and unreal.

Her works challenge our understanding of abstract concepts such as the nature of time, space and light, the laws of physics, the mysteries of science and the deeply embedded social conventions that form the bedrock of our perception of reality. She raises these large questions in a light-hearted, poetic and humorous way that provokes curiosity, wonder and amusement.

The exhibition is produced in collaboration with Creator Projects and curated by mag. art, Marie Nipper, current Director of Copenhagen Contemporary, and former chief-curator at ARos Aarhus Art Museum and senior curator at Tate Liverpool, UK. Marie Nipper curated the critically acclaimed exhibition of John Kørner Altid Mange Problemer at Kunsthal Charlottenborg during the summer 2017.

The exhibition is supported by 15. Juni Fonden, 303 GALLERY (New York), A. P. Møller Foundation, KÖNIG GALERIE (Berlin/London), the Danish Arts Foundation and Obel Family Foundation.

@ Images Roman März