TWENTY THOUSAND YEARS
CAROLINE ACHAINTRE | CARL ANDERSON | PERRINE BOUDY | GABI DEUTSCH | SARAH DWYER | CLARE GOODWIN | HIPPOLYTE HENTGEN | YULIA IOSILZON | GUILLAUME MARTIN-TATON | GRAYSON PERRY | BECKY TUCKER | BETTY WOODMAN | RITA ZURBRÜGG
5 March - 27 June 2026
Oh, dear ceramics. You ware of the earth. You have something primal about you; you ground us. You feel like a deep breath of fresh Alpine air or like looking up from below into the crown of a thick tree trunk. This is not an exhibition of historical antiquities, but perhaps a declaration of love. An exhibition about what today's generation of artists can do with ceramics. Works that are equally virtuosic in terms of craftsmanship as they are in terms of artistry. Because that is precisely the crucial relationship. Nothing here is classical anymore, and yet the view on tradition plays a role for all artists here. We celebrate both how far the medium has come and how far one can go with it. Everything made of ceramic is fragile, and yet it is the most long-lasting earth material that can be shaped by hand. Just think of the millennia-old ceramic treasures that we can still admire today in almost intact condition. It is one of the oldest means of artistic expression. Hundreds, thousands of years ago, our Palaeolithic ancestors must have noticed the material properties of clay. They must have seen the footprints of their prey – and their own heavy footsteps – pressed into the riverbanks, retaining their shape even when water collected in them. But there was still a long way to go before clay could be processed into ceramics.1 Ceramics is a much broader concept than many might assume. It has long since emancipated itself from the ‘ceramics is just design’ pit. Interestingly, the first ceramic objects were not practical bowls, but works of art. Around 28,000 years ago, the Pavlovian culture of Gravettian Europe – a highly developed society of mammoth hunters – began using special clay kilns to fire small animal and human figures. Their most legendary work remains the Venus of Dolní Věstonice, a curvaceous figure considered to be the oldest known ceramic in the world. Still until today, it is considered one of the most direct means of expression. Nearly all of the artists here in the exhibition spoke of the immediacy to the material in translating what they want to create. In today's world, ceramics might even act therapeutic and keep us sane in the digital terror jungle. Philosophically, you can treat ceramics as this thing that turned against modernism.Today, perhaps even as the thing that turns against 2 digitalisation. Because, and this is also intrinsic to ceramics, you have to experience it. Images of the works shown here can never do justice to their surface texture, the reflections of light, their multi-sidedness and multi-dimensionality. If you leave aside the function of ceramics, what do you hold on to? From the exhibition catalogue of Hans Coper's exhibition at the Victoria & Albert Museum in 1969, he says: ‘Practising a craft with ambiguous reference to purpose and function, one has occasion to face absurdity. More than anything, somewhat like a demented piano-tuner, one is trying to approximate a phantom pitch.’ This is probably an apt description for what we find here in terms of virtuosity and ‘pitches’.