Memory of Touch: Chapter II

Memory of Touch: Chapter II
The Kunsthalle Praha Collection in a Dialogue

13/11 2026—12/4 2027
Gallery 3

Curator: Tevž Logar


Memory of Touch, an exhibition unfolding in two chapters, inaugurates the first major exploration of the Kunsthalle Praha Collection. Instead of treating the collection as a fixed and closed entity, it sets historical, post-war, and contemporary works in dialogue with invited Czech artists, allowing their ideas and attitudes to open the collection outward and generate new resonances.

Memory of Touch unfolds in a time that rewards control, certainty, conflict, and immaculate surfaces—a cultural landscape that celebrates efficiency and visibility while concealing what is unguarded, tentative, and imperfect. Against such imperatives, the exhibition offers a quiet counterpoint, turning our gaze toward fragility and vulnerability—not as shortcomings, but as gestures of resilience. To be open, to remain permeable in the face of risk, is not weakness; it is a conscious form of presence and action. From this sensibility, we enter the collection not as a linear chronology, but as a constellation of moments, impressions, and echoes.

The Kunsthalle Praha collection does not appear here as a commentary on history but as an undercurrent—quiet, persistent, and formative. It “choreographs” the works not as subjects but as atmospheres; not as lessons but as pulses that ask what the past awakens in us, how it lingers in memory, and how it continues to shape the present. From here, the exhibition turns toward invited contemporary artists—a generation shaped by transition, not from one stable world to another, but within a landscape of shifting systems, dissolving certainties, and fragile forms of belonging. Not those who repeat past forms, but those who inherit their emotional registers: alertness, rupture, and the necessity of quiet insistence.

Through the interplay between the collection and the invited artists, various dialogues emerge—between intimacy and distance, discomfort and pleasure, material and ephemeral. These tensions establish fragility as a method, not as a theme, while the exhibition structurally unfolds in two complementary chapters: the first explores it as a form of resistance, the second as a lived condition and presence and together they form a single movement that binds the aesthetic, historical, and affective ideas. Across generations, artists fracture form, work with unstable materials and disrupt concepts to ignite an attitude that reflects worlds marked by rupture—from avant-garde experiments and postwar works shaped by censorship to contemporary practices responding to ecological, social, and emotional precarity. These layered dialogues bring a wide spectrum of media into deliberate juxtaposition—painting, drawing, installation, sculpture, photography, and video—reawakening the past within the urgencies of the present. And in doing so, they assert fragility as a living language of our time: delicate yet resilient, uncertain yet generative."

During the exhibition, visitors will have access to a multilingual audioguide created in collaboration between Kunsthalle Praha and the Cabinet of Wonders platform.


CHAPTER I

CHAPTER II

The second chapter illuminates fragility as a lived and social condition — a mode of presence shaped by exposure, sensitivity, and the permeability of being in the world. It considers how artists across different periods have made tenderness and vulnerability visible not as signs of weakness, but as deliberate gestures of strength and self-positioning within society. The dialogue weaves together early avant-garde works in which the uncertainty of war and process towards a young republic manifests through expressive tension and open emotional gesture; postwar works forged under normalization and surveillance, where fragility appears in silences, pauses, and the bare fact of existence — yet equally in acts of quiet resilience; and contemporary practices that embrace emotional transparency, unfinished forms, and exposed gestures to address grief, care, precarious bodies, intimacy, and endurance within today’s fractured social terrain. The presence of younger artists illuminates fragility as a contemporary form of resistance — enacted through ephemerality, ambiguity, and the refusal of spectacle. Their works resonate with earlier generations not by citation, but by sustaining an ethos of openness in the face of social pressure. More intimate and contemplative in tone, this section unfolds as a sequence of encounters — quiet, vulnerable, sometimes raw — where fragility becomes not merely an aesthetic strategy, but a felt, embodied, and socially inscribed way of being.


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