Recent exhibitions
“What Will People Think?”
“What Will People Think?” brings together four artists whose work challenges cultural expectations, reclaiming identity, memory, and softness as radical forms of resistance.
Contemporary Bosnia
“Contemporary Bosnia” brings together a new generation of artists whose work navigates identity, memory, and transformation in a post-conflict society still reckoning with its past.
Andre Hemer
André Hemer explores the tension between the digital and the painterly, capturing fleeting light and material texture through a hybrid process of scanning, painting, and image-making.
Reuben Paterson, In The Stars I Trust
“In The Stars I Trust” by Reuben Paterson is a shimmering cosmic journey where glitter, mythology, and Māori spirituality converge to explore guidance, ancestry, and the infinite.
‘Girl's’ Night Out’
Sergio Farias’ Girls’ Night Out is a bold, pop-infused debut that satirizes celebrity culture and pays tribute to the chaotic glamour of early 2000s fame.
Kamilla Talbot
Kamilla Talbot’s exhibition at Jutta Gallery presents a series of luminous, intuitively layered landscapes that blur the line between observation and abstraction. Drawing from memory, direct experience, and prior works, her paintings evoke shifting light, space, and emotion—offering a poetic meditation on place and perception.
‘00’ Room-File
Room-File presents a curated collection of conceptual design pieces that blur the lines between furniture and sculpture, exploring the transformative potential of interior spaces through a hybrid of set design and functional art.
40 Years Later: Art, Resilience, and the Legacy of 1984
“40 Years Later: Art, Resilience, and the Legacy of 1984” reflects on a pivotal year in history through the eyes of artists whose work confronts memory, survival, and the enduring impact of political upheaval.
Maria Angelica Tan
Maria Angelica Tan’s work navigates diasporic identity through delicate, material-driven installations that speak to migration, memory, and belonging.