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The Blackboard shows a loose collection of events organized by the Städelschule Community. The Hochschule für Bildende Künste–Städelschule is not responsible for the content.The Blackboard shows a loose collection of events organized by the Städelschule Community. The Hochschule für Bildende Künste–Städelschule is not responsible for the content. The Blackboard shows a loose collection of events organized by the Städelschule Community. The Hochschule für Bildende Künste–Städelschule is not responsible for the content. 
Analytische Malerei und DeKonstrukte
En Suite
Lecture
Deferred Artistic Production
DUFTPYRAMIDE XXS
Lucie Stahl, Machinist I, 2019, Inkjet print mounted on aluminium, plexiglass, steel screws, 70 x 105 cm
Basel Social Club 2025
TOWN
Unsettled Territories
TWINGO
Cosima von Bonin: 7000 Palmen, 2025 © Cosima von Bonin, documenta und Museum Fridericianum gGmbH
7000 Palmen
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How The Universe Works

Jennie Bringaker, Yngve Holen, Anawana Haloba, Are Mokkelbost, Christian Tony Norum, Roman Signer, William Wegman, Kiyoshi Yamamoto

Opening Wednesday 29th May 7pm
31st May-25th August 2019

How The Universe Works is an art exhibition especially for children and also adults. Kunsthall Oslo has been transformed into a space for exploration, experiment and play, and the usual art gallery rules have been suspended.

Free entrance, all welcome.
Yes, you can touch the sculptures, but remember: Don't Eat The Pictures.

We know that the appreciation of art often demands an understanding of aesthetics, politics, history; it's about critique, or connoisseurship. But art, for adults and children, can operate in other modes too. We asked some of our favourite artists to take up the challenge of making artworks for a viewer who comes with an open mind and a functional imagination but who may not yet have learnt to read. The result is physical, material and sensual but also draws on older versions of art's role as an impure interface between worlds and disciplines, from ritual performance to constructivism.

Are Mokkelbost's sculpture and exhibition design energises the room and suggests new ways to move around the gallery; Jennie Bringaker's strange idol has a heavy, material presence, her body stuffed with straw, her face a bronze mask, but her brood are digital, living in a parallel, virtual world; Anawana Haloba's contribution draws on traditions from her Zambian childhood, where to get rid of certain illnesses, you would shout into a clay mortar filled with crushed herbs; Yngve Holen's VERTICALSEAT is a section of security fence presented as a ready-made sculpture, with one small change - the permission to climb it - that undoes its original function; Christian Tony Norum exhibits paintings on top of paintings, cascading down the gallery walls; Kiyoshi Yamamoto's masks and silk capes bring the spirit of carnival and the spirit of Helio Oiticica together - you can admire them, or you can wear them, or you can admire people wearing them.

Alongside the new-commissioned works we present a film and video programme that includes early Super 8 films by Roman Signer (with thanks to Kunstmuseum Basel), episodes from the surreal Norwegian children's puppet show The Repairmen (Pompel og Pilt), and segments made for Sesame Street by William Wegman.

How The Universe Works is part of a year-long series of projects at Kunsthall Oslo aimed primarily at children and young people. The next project in the series, the Rostockgata Sculpture Park, will open at the end of June. This exhibition is supported by a grant from Norsk Kulturråd. Kunsthall Oslo is funded by Norsk Kulturråd, Oslo Kommune and Hav E.

Kunsthall Oslo
Rostockgata 4
0191 Oslo
Norway

Opening hours during exhibitions
Monday closed
Tuesday-Sunday 12pm-5pm

Contact
Hochschule für Bildende Künste–Städelschule
Dürerstraße 10
60596 Frankfurt am Main
Daimlerstraße 32
60314 Frankfurt am Main
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