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Tuesday, May 26, 2026 |
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| SUPERFLEX submerges Denmark's ARKEN museum beneath the sea in futuristic exhibition |
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SUPERFLEX, The Ark Factory, 2026. ARKEN Museum for Samtidskunst. Foto: Anders Sune Berg.
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ISHØJ.- The artist group SUPERFLEX submerges ARKEN beneath the surface of the sea, inviting audiences to imagine the exhibition space, The Axis, as a contemporary ark. Which species and life forms will come along, and what will we leave behind as the ark moves into the future with its cargo?
The exhibition presents works from more than 30 years of SUPERFLEXs practice. It also introduces a new, site-specific project created for Come Hell or High Water, which in the years ahead will be deployed in oceans around the world. The exhibition runs from May 7th 2026 to January 3rd 2027.
SUPERFLEX has famously stated that the best idea might come from a fish. If so, the second-best idea may have come from SUPERFLEX themselves. In this solo exhibition, the Danish artist group takes as its point of departure the possibility that, centuries from now, ARKEN may lie beneath the sea. The museum is reimagined as a modern ark for all species like a sunken vessel resting deep below the oceans surface.
At the entrance, sandbags and barricades suggest attempts to keep the water out, while raw shipping crates are stacked throughout the space. These crates contain works spanning more than three decades from early pieces from 1993 to new productions forming both an archive of SUPERFLEXs practice and the cargo of a ship: ready to be transported, opened along the journey, or perhaps left behind.
Curator Dorthe Juul Rugaard explains: Come Hell or High Water unfolds as a space for collaboration, imagination and preparation for the future to come. For SUPERFLEX, the life forms of other species and interspecies coexistence serve as a source of inspiration for transforming human anxiety about the future into action.
In recent years, SUPERFLEX has developed works that function both as art and as habitats for fish and other species. This practice culminates in the exhibitions new long-term project, The Ark Factory. At the centre of the exhibition, a factory-like space presents the collectives ongoing production of sculptural blocks for a large scale ark, intended to create improved conditions for marine life.
These blocks will function as an artificial reef, supporting biodiversity as sea levels rise. Elements of the ark will be placed on the seabed around the world, becoming a vessel for interspecies coexistence an ark carrying life into the future, with or without humans on board.
SUPERFLEX is a Danish artist collective founded in 1993 by Jakob Fenger (b. 1968), Bjørnstjerne Reuter Christiansen (b. 1969) and Rasmus Nielsen (b. 1969). Since then, they have used their art to address social and political issues and to generate concrete action and change. Their works often operate at the intersection of artwork and functional object.
Their projects include Supergas (1996), a biogas unit developed in Africa; Superchannel (2000), their own TV station; Superkilen (2012), a public park in Copenhagen; and Hospital Equipment (2017), a fully functional operating table used in hospitals in places such as Gaza and Syria.
SUPERFLEX has exhibited internationally at major institutions and has also created permanent public artworks, including the decoration of Havneholmen Metro Station in Copenhagen.
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