Vladas Urbanavičius challenges the body and space at (AV17) Gallery
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Vladas Urbanavičius challenges the body and space at (AV17) Gallery
Vladas Urbanavičius, Between Structures, exhibition view, 2026. Photo: Evgenia Levin.



VILNIUS.- Vladas Urbanavičius is one of the most significant Lithuanian sculptors of the 21th century, whose work has made a substantial contribution to the development of contemporary Lithuanian sculpture. He creates monumental, laconic forms that explore the relationship between sculpture and its environment, scale, and the viewer. His artistic practice is characterized by minimalism and by the transformation of industrial materials often marked by the passage of time and found objects into autonomous spatial bodies that deliberately distance themselves from decorativeness and conventional notions of beauty. Works by Urbanavičius such as “Hanging Stones” in Taikos Av. in Kaunas, “Quay’s Arch” on the embankment of the Neris River in Vilnius or “Club” in the MO Museum Sculpture Park, have today become an inseparable part of the cultural landscape of Lithuanian cities.

The solo exhibition “Between Structures” presents the artist’s most recent works, in which sculpture is understood not as a self-contained object, but as a process whose integrity is completed through the participation of the viewer. Movement through space, shifts in position, and the bodily perception of scale and distance become integral to the experience, drawing the visitor into a constantly changing relationship with the works and their surrounding context. The monumental sculptures of abstract forms exhibited generates a dynamic spatial environment. Through the conscious construction of physical obstacles and trajectories of movement, Urbanavičius reflects on the influence of the environment on human states of being and awareness. The artist raises the question of how much our perception and everyday experience are shaped by encounters with physical and immaterial structures that constrain us.

The industrial materials used in Urbanavičius’ works – defined by their weight, coarse texture, and monumental presence function not only as visual elements but also as direct experimental agents. Sculptures formed from rusted steel create a palpable tension between the body and space, while their scale and physical resistance operate as metaphors for broader structures that exist beyond the boundaries of the gallery. The exhibition invites viewers to reconsider how much of our existence is determined by external circumstances, and how much we ourselves shape and transform it.

Vladas Urbanavičius (b. 1951) graduated from sculpture studies at the Art Institute (now the Vilnius Academy of Arts) in 1977. Since 1978, he has participated in exhibitions and outdoor sculpture symposiums in Lithuania. The sculptor has been recognized with awards and prizes: the Lithuanian National Culture and Art Prize (2015), the III Prize of the Vilnius Telecenter Defenders Monument Competition (1991), the I Prize at the Lithuanian Contemporary Art Quadrennial (2005), the Golden Mark of the Lithuanian Artists‘ Union (2006). The artist‘s works have been acquired by private and museum collections in Lithuania and beyond.

The exhibition “Between Structures” will be open until March 3 at (AV17) Gallery, Totorių str. 5, Vilnius, Lithuania.










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