OSLO.- Grammars of Light brings together the work of three contemporary artistsCerith Wyn Evans, Ann Lislegaard, and P. Staffwho explore the potential of light as an artistic medium. Their immersive environments, architecturally scaled video projections, and luminous sculpturesfashioned from repurposed consumer, medical, and industrial lightingtransform the museums galleries and stimulate the senses. Perception is impacted in unexpected ways, and essential questions are raised about how we see the world as a thinking, feeling body.
The representation of natural light through illusion, particularly in painting, has been an enduring concern for the visual arts. Yet it was only with the advent of mass-produced artificial lighting in the early twentieth century that artists began using it as an artistic medium. These early experiments within Constructivism and the Bauhaus gave way to more intensive experimentation in the 1960s and 1970s, in which artificial light became a defining feature of Minimalism and Post-Minimalism. While Evans, Lislegaard and Staff are informed by these traditions, they create associations that extend beyond the strict seriality and phenomenology of minimalism. They draw as much on the traditions of post-structuralist film theory, where meaning in a work of art is understood as fluid and context dependent. Working with light as a tangible material presence, as well as an intellectual framework, their works explore both the expressive and analytical potential of this medium.
Many of the works dynamically respond to the surrounding architecture: light columns are duplicated in the museums glass ceiling, video installations have been scaled to the galleries that theyre presented in, and holographic fans form a corridor of intense luminosity, flashing poetic texts. Instead of illustrating a principle or providing simple answers, we are pulled into affecting scenarios that open space for the unknown and blur the distinctions between interior and exterior.
Taking a cue from the strategies of the artists in this exhibition, Grammars of Light choreographs works in dialogue with the unique architecture of Astrup Fearnley Museet. Each installation is provided with a dedicated space, yet rather than isolating practices, works overlap each other, encouraging encounters between and among practices and ideas.
Curated by Owen Martin.
Grammars of Light is organized in parallel with Henie Onstad Art Centers exhibition Ann Lislegaard: ANIMOID (9 JanuaryApril 19, 2026). A joint public program will provide visitors with an opportunity to engage with the artists practice in depth across the two institutions.