Sculpture, photography, and audio-visual installations—along with videographic works, textile practices, drawing, painting, ceramics, and even artificial intelligence—converge to form a broad panorama of today’s most dynamic creative discourse. This spectrum serves as a field of plastic research that yields visual metaphors and becomes a record of a time marked by turbulence, tension, and uncertainty, yet also imbued with opportunities and bold experimentation. The show presents a mosaic of voices, each contributing to a collective conversation about how art can interpret, respond to, and influence the social and ecological realities of our era.
Selected artists include Roberto Aguirrezabala, Ana Beltrán Porcar, Carla Cañellas, María Carbonell, Alejandro Cerón, Pilar del Puerto, Ana Devora, Olga Diego, Pau Figueres Ortiz, Leticia Gaspar García, Antonio Guerra, Miriam Isasi, Elena Jiménez, Damià Jordà, Gala Knörr, Silvia Lerín, Elisa Lozano Chiarlones, Rocío Villalonga, Victoria Maldonado, Pascual+Vincent, Pablo Sandoval, Pilarú And Joseph Turner. Their practices span a wide range of mediums and approaches, reflecting contemporary concerns and experiments that challenge conventional boundaries between disciplines and genres, inviting dialogue across audiences and contexts.
View from the exhibition at MUA INFORMATION
The artist collective featured in this show threads together social, vital, political, and environmental concerns through transformative works. Audiences encounter works that confront the dehumanization witnessed in war, the censorship and restrictions on creative freedom, and the pressures of overconsumption and commodification that shape modern societies. The exhibition also engages with memory recovery in relation to early feminist struggles, the repurposing and overlooking of industrial spaces, and the lasting impacts of political and economic shifts such as Brexit. Additional lines of inquiry are raised through examinations of artificial intelligence biases, the depletion of natural resources, and the fragility of ecosystems, prompting viewers to reflect on their own roles within these global systems.
The exhibition remains open for visitors until July 16.