Monica Bonvicini: It is Night Outside
Opening: 2 May, 6–9pm
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The two-channel video installation, which lends its title to the exhibition, is screened in the lower exhibition space, while announcing itself with immersive sounds that resonate throughout the upper galleries. It features three performers navigating an undefined environment. Unrelenting and restless, they repeatedly rearrange the interior. The continuous nature of their actions transcends individual gestures and can be interpreted as a broader reflection on the societal condition and an act of resistance.
Bonvicini consistently explores how we perceive space and the meanings ascribed to it, the role of architecture in relation to safety and identity, and the restless struggle for self-determination. These concerns have been central to her practice since her iconic early video installations Wallfuckin’ (1995/96) and Destroy She Said (1998), and continue in more recent films like I See a White Building, Pink and Blue (2020).
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A new series of sculptures feature delicate glass facsimiles of classic English coat and hat hooks, rendered in an almost ethereal materiality. However, instead of supporting coats or hats, the hooks hold underwear. Here, the act of undressing transcends everyday utility. More than just an expression of comfort, it points to a sense of safety and self-empowerment. Bonvicini interrogates how intimacy is staged, displayed, and preserved – negotiating the ambivalence between voyeurism and control.
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Monica Bonvicini
Love Is Blind (Nero Lucido), 2025Colored mirror, stainless steel, stainless steel chain and handcuffs
150 x 100 x 4 cm
59.1 x 39.4 x 1.6 inches -
In the main gallery, a group of monolithic sculptures, a synergy of metal and leather, are on view. They are covered in interwoven leather belts, asserting their presence so forcefully that they nearly evoke a feeling of physical discomfort. The use of leather suggests discipline, power and masculine dominance. The belts surround the armatures, yet they do not fully conceal them, instead revealing smooth metal beneath. This outward display of stability offers a glimpse into a fragile structure, akin to the current state of society, one which asks to be dismantled.
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Bonvicini also debuts a series of works on paper: Bitch, Vamp (light), and Vamp (pink) – terms historically used to categorize and demean women. By isolating these words, Bonvicini urges viewers to reconsider them through a progressive lens, as part of a feminist process of linguistic reclamation.
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We must be strong, we must be militant, we must be dangerous. We must realize that Bitch is Beautiful and that we have nothing to lose. Nothing whatsoever.
– Jo Freeman
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With It is Night Outside, Monica Bonvicini reflects on the tensions of our time, both on an individual and societal level. The exhibition raises questions about self-representation, alienation, and interpretive authority, while drawing attention to the fragility of societal structures, a subject of pressing political urgency.
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