MADRID.- Sabrina Amrani presents What Silence Keeps, a group exhibition featuring works by :mentalKLINIK, Carlos Aires, Manal AlDowayan, Joël Andrianomearisoa, Gabriela Bettini, Alexandra Karakashian, Waqas Khan, Nicène Kossentini, Mónica de Miranda, Timo Nasseri, Wardha Shabbir and Jorge Tacla.
There are silences that do not emerge from calm, but from disappearance. Silences slowly constructed through time, power, fear, or erosion. Silences that cover what was once alive: a language, a territory, a memory, an emotion, a collective gesture. What Silence Keeps brings together twelve artists from different geographical and cultural contexts around a shared intuition: silence is not emptiness, but an active matter that preserves, conceals, erodes, and transforms.
The exhibition begins with a simple question that is, at the same time, impossible to fully answer: what does silence truly keep? Sometimes it protects what cannot yet be named; at other times, it acts as a form of slow erasure, turning the visible into something inaccessible. Between these two possibilities, the exhibition understands art as a tool capable of approaching what remains outside official narratives, complete archives, and transparent images.
The works presented here do not illustrate a single idea; rather, they construct different relationships to loss, persistence, and reconstruction. In Joël Andrianomearisoas work, grief and desire appear as suspended states, transformed into dark surfaces where emotion acquires physical density. Manal AlDowayans pieces recover voices and forms of knowledge linked to female experience and to modes of cultural transmission that have historically been marginalized or rendered invisible. Nicène Kossentini approaches the fragility of history and of the image itself, what barely manages to endure before disappearing entirely. In Rincón (2014), Gabriela Bettini constructs a silent and suspended space shaped by absence and memory. The empty architecture, marked by light and a sense of waiting, becomes an image of what remains only briefly before vanishing. Her work thus approaches the fragile traces of a history that can only ever be partially preserved.
Against what seems destined to disappear, other works insist on the possibility of endurance. In Salt Island, Mónica de Miranda creates images where landscape, memory, and displacement intertwine, evoking histories marked by exile, diaspora, and the silent resistance of bodies. Wardha Shabbir works within a spiritual and symbolic dimension in which painting becomes almost a space of contemplation, an intimate architecture from which to imagine other forms of connection between the human and the invisible. Waqas Khans drawings, made through thousands of tiny repeated marks, transform time and concentration into visible matter; each gesture seems to insist on the possibility of constructing silence through attention, patience, and something close to ritual.
In other works, silence appears shaped by destruction and by the need to invent new forms of memory. Alexandra Karakashian explores the fragility of contemporary narratives and the sensation of inhabiting a present built upon emotional and historical ruins that are still recent. Jorge Tacla works with damaged architectures, wounded surfaces where painting preserves the trace of violence without turning it into spectacle. Within Timo Nasseris geometries, calculation, spirituality, and science coexist; structures that seem to emerge equally from mathematical logic and ancient cosmologies, as though they belonged to a language yet to be deciphered. The works of :mentalKLINIK and Carlos Aires introduce, through very different registers, a reflection on the excess of images, desire, consumption, and death within contemporary culture, where even crisis can become spectacle and emotion risks being emptied of lived experience.
Throughout the exhibition, materials deteriorate, surfaces erode, patterns repeat themselves to the limit, and images seem to remember something they never actually lived through. Many of these works exist in a constant tension between presence and disappearance, between what still resists and what can only be partially recovered. Silence emerges, then, not as an ending, but as an ambiguous space where remnants, fragments, and signals may still be heard.
What Silence Keeps brings together diverse voices through which a specific understanding of contemporary art has been shaped: not as a decorative object or a closed discourse, but as a place from which to question the world and its fractures. The exhibition speaks about what disappears, but also about what persists thanks to those who insist on looking at it, naming it, and sustaining it before it is lost forever.