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Thursday, May 29, 2025 |
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Kunstverein in Hamburg presents Coumba Samba, Gordon Baldwin, and Hanne Darboven's House |
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© Coumba Samba, 2025. Courtesy of the artist and Arcadia Missa, London.
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HAMBURG.- Coumba Sambas exhibition deutschland for the Kunstverein in Hamburg negotiates the intricate relationship between structure, form, and colour as constituents of coded systems of global infrastructure. Monochromatic containers, stacked throughout the gallery, evoke the visual language of international supply chains, while strobe lights that lend the space a sense of rhythm mark pathways on the floor. The containers rest at different degrees of ease. Their rigid geometries recall the compositions of early 20th-century abstract geometric paintings. Sambas installation, however, diverges from this art-historical precedent by lending the monochromes a sense of coded meaning and cultural resonance, transforming deutschland into an opaque system whose logic remains elusive, like a glitching interface that never fully resolves.
deutschland builds on Sambas exhibition Red Gas (2024) at Arcadia Missa, London, in which painted radiators become the endpoint and signifier of the Russian gas industrys entanglement with the African and European continents. Here, the containers evoke a similar tension between the static and material residue amidst globalisations sleepless flow. As ubiquitous symbols of global trade now central to debates around U.S. tariff warsthey also interrogate the uneasy relationship between free trade agreements and sovereignty, which international supply chains willingly or unwillingly transform. In this context, the colours, chosen to resonate with both cultural and emotional connotations, become a language through which Samba dissects a world dominated by networks of capital.
The directional, strobe lights echo the architecture of the stateless hubguiding the flow of goods, data and people. Viewers navigating the exhibition become participants in this ecology, moving through the space as though traversing a port or a terminal at nightzones that are both material and conceptual, and where the logic of borders is increasingly porous. This interplaybetween the mechanical and the affective, between a sense of direction and being without coordinates reveals how infrastructure, often unseen, comes to reflect and define human experience within vast, impersonal frameworks.
As this matrix of endpoints, remote nodes and opaque ideology strains under its own logic and latently begins to warp, geometries of power and place scramble. Where deutschland began as a metaphor for a sense of locale within a larger network of flows, it becomes a disorientingly intimate experience of globalisations distorting abstraction, as a system of navigation adrift, eroding the sense of geography that conjured it.
deutschland is curated by Milan Ther.
The exhibition is organised in collaboration with Lumiar Cité, Lisbon, and is kindly supported by the Zeit Stiftung Bucerius, Bernard Ruiz-Picasso, Francesco Francica and Silvia Valentini, and Arcadia Missa Gallery.
Gordon Baldwin: Inscape
Gordon Baldwin (b. 1932 in Lincoln, England) is a pivotal figure in the history of British modernism and his pioneering use of organic forms, their captivating asymmetry and textured surfaces redefined the potential of clay as a medium. Gordon Baldwin: Inscape captures his lifes work by connecting five decades of his sculptural practice to his poetry and drawings.
In Baldwins exploration of the vessel, as both a form and a negative space, his poetry resonates with a profound awareness of embodiment and relationality. The vessel, as structure and metaphor, delineates an inner space with a sense of place and shelter, but also an absence, an openness, and the void that shapes its form. This duality is mirrored in Baldwins interpretation of the world: simultaneously vivid and elusive, felt yet uncertain. His language carries the weight of inhabiting spaces that both reveal and obscure meaning, much like the vessel as a membrane between in- and outside.
In Baldwins poetics, the vessel draws upon the inscape, a term coined by the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins, where the essence of a thing or being is not fixed but perceived in its inner dynamic: pulsing, shifting, tangled and tethered at different intensities to its surroundings. In Baldwins work, the self is adrift as a point of encounter between interiority and a vast, shifting landscape, oscillating between grounding and disorientation, between inhabiting and being exposed to the world. The vessel is the body of the permeable boundary between the meeting of this internal and external reality, inviting reflection upon how to sense and articulate the self in relation to others, to space, and to the unknowable.
Inscape is curated by Milan Ther.
The exhibition is organised in collaboration with Fondazione Officine Saffi, Milan, and is kindly supported by Grundig, with additional thanks to Corvi-Mora, London.
Hanne Darbovens House
Symposium
The Kunstverein in Hamburg is delighted to announce Hanne Darbovens House, a symposium dedicated to the life and work of Hanne Darboven, held at her former home in Harburg (Am Burgberg 26-28,
21079 Hamburg). This symposium marks the launch of a new collaboration between the Kunstverein and the Hanne Darboven estate. Beginning in 2026, the Kunstverein will organise exhibitions in the historic Darboven family villa in dialogue with Darbovens legacy. The event will take place on Saturday, June 28, starting at 11 am, followed by a summer party on the premises featuring food and live music beginning at 6 pm.
Participants: Kirsty Bell, Esther Dörring, Matilde Guidelli-Guidi, Sam Lewitt, and Sung Tieu
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Today's News
May 26, 2025
The National Gallery acquires one of only 14 paintings by 17th-century Dutch pioneer of bird's-eye view banquets
Freedom and captivity - first painting by German Romantic artist Carl Gustav Carus to enter a UK public collection
Ancient secrets emerge: How tiny obsidian chips are rewriting Mexica history
Street smarts meet museum walls: Schiedam's bold new exhibit brings abstract art indoors
British Museum announces partnership with Outernet London
What was a sculpted African head doing in the desert? Rare 1,500-year-old figurines were discovered in the Negev
Kimsooja's bottari transform the Oude Kerk in a solo exhibition connecting Amsterdam's many nationalities
Galerie Parisa Kind opens an exhibition of works by Niquu Eyeta, Tobias Krämer, and Charlotte Thrane
Lyndhurst presents Alexander Jackson Davis: Designer of Dreams
Andrea Büttner's new exhibition explores the multifaceted world of labor
Les invités: Exhibition by Gretel Weyer at La Grande Place, Musée Saint-Louis
Foam opens first dutch retrospective of pioneering Surinamese photographer Augusta Curiel
The Alvar Aalto Museum's main summer exhibition highlights Artek's invisible masters
Poes takes viewers on a 'road trip' through imagination at Wallworks Gallery
Museum Folkwang exhibition unveils a bold look at feminist graphic design
Dirk Braeckman challenges perception in new solo show "No Denial, No Explanation"
A Gentil Carioca opens solo exhibitions of works by Mariana Rocha and Siwaju
Seattle's Museum of History & Industry opens Mandela: The Official Exhibition
Kunstverein in Hamburg presents Coumba Samba, Gordon Baldwin, and Hanne Darboven's House
Hum II: Hajra Waheed opens at Fragmentos, Bogotá
CMCA opens "The Shape of Memory": Carlie Trosclair explores home, body, and beyond
Rothschild Fine Art Gallery opens an exhibition of works by Meir Appelfeld
Museum MACAN presents Kei Imazu: The Sea is Barely Wrinkled
Francis Picabia's women take center stage in new Beverly Hills exhibition
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