Structures en dérive
Exhibition
Structures en dérive
In 10 days: November 15, 2025 → March 1, 2026
The exhibition Structures en dérive — Unraveling Structures brings together nine artists who work with photography and explore the boundaries of the medium. Their approaches range from documentary investigations to poetic approaches. Photography is proposed here as a method for questioning and reconfiguring aesthetic and social structures. This creates a field of experimentation that sharpens perception and opens up new perspectives. The exhibition invites visitors to think of the medium as a means of seeing the world in ever new ways: a world in restless motion, which the photographic image challenges as a material object.
Against the backdrop of the currently acute, almost all-encompassing instability of familiar coordinate systems and a growing loss of confidence in existing orders, the exhibition asks to what extent photography not only captures processes of dissolution, but can also preserve traces of what is lost amid fragmentation and uncertainty. In this context, photography emerges as a tool for critical engagement with the circumstances, as a field of experimentation, and as a gesture of resistance.
Photography, perception, trust
From a historical perspective, photography plays a crucial role not least because we (as viewers) believe in the photographic image (despite everything). This trust is not necessarily based on the image itself. We believe a photograph because we choose to: out of nostalgia, aesthetic delight, boredom, or rational considerations. Since we encounter photographs as a stream of digital images as well as singular objects, they also appeal to different viewing habits.
Reinventing the gaze
In the age of AI-generated content and visual oversaturation, Structures en dérive questions the way in which viewing habits are changing. The exhibition invites us to rethink the way we see and understand photographic images at a time when visual landmarks themselves are becoming unstable. How does photography inscribe itself into processes of collapse and reconstruction, crisis and creation? How can it help to develop new ways of dealing with instability: as a legible image, abstraction, surface, material object, or experimental technique?
What happens when the focus is not on what is depicted, but on the process of working with photographic materials? Between trace and construction, archive and imagination, between analog and digital methods, works emerge that are not content to merely document: they dissolve, shift, and reconnect. Photography—understood in a broad sense—appears as an instrument of analysis, commentary, and resistance. And as attentive, sometimes tender or playful engagement with a world whose structural cohesion has become fragile.
