Explore Installation Artists
Discover artists working in the Installation style
Beso Uznadze
Uznadze's sculptures and installations, often incorporating found objects and industrial materials, explore themes of urban decay, memory, and the passage of time. His work is marked by a sense of raw materiality and poetic resonance.
Nika Kutateladze
Kutateladze's sculptures and installations, often incorporating natural materials and found objects, explore the relationship between nature, culture, and the human body. His work is marked by a sense of organic form and tactile materiality.
Irakli Bugiani
Bugiani's sculptures and installations, often incorporating found objects and industrial materials, explore themes of urban life and social commentary. His work is marked by a raw and direct aesthetic.
Rene Matić
Matić's multidisciplinary work, spanning photography, film, and sculpture, explores Blackness, queerness, and the complexities of identity within the diaspora. Their work is rooted in personal experience and cultural observation.
Jesse Darling
Darling's sculptures and installations, often incorporating found objects and industrial materials, explore themes of fragility, vulnerability, and the body. Her practice critiques power structures and dominant narratives.
Amanda Ross-Ho
Ross-Ho's sculptures and installations, often incorporating oversized objects and architectural elements, explore themes of scale, perception, and the everyday. Her work is marked by a sense of playful subversion.
Jack Lavender
Lavender's sculptures and installations, often incorporating found objects and DIY aesthetics, explore themes of consumerism, nostalgia, and the everyday. His work is marked by a sense of playful improvisation.
Magali Reus
Reus's sculptures and installations, often incorporating industrial materials and found objects, explore the relationship between technology, design, and the human body. Her work is marked by a sense of formal precision.
Sandra Mujinga
Mujinga's multimedia works, encompassing sculpture, video, and performance, explore themes of visibility, invisibility, and the politics of representation. Her practice challenges dominant narratives and power structures.
Kira Freije
Freije's sculptures and installations, composed of industrial materials and found objects, explore the relationship between architecture, technology, and the human body. Her works are both visceral and cerebral.