blank projects
Gerda Scheepers ‘Mallarmé’s Pillow’ | 26.03 - 16.05.2026

Kemang Wa Lehulere on ‘In Minor Keys’, curated by Koyo Kouoh.
For the 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia, Kemang Wa Lehulere presents a newly commissioned large-scale installation titled ‘I Bleach My Words For Your Comfort’.
The artist states, “There is a common African proverb stating that when an elder dies, a library burns down. If we accept this, we must ask: what becomes of the banned or censored book? Do alphabets possess a memory? If so, what do we make of alphabets that split open the pages of repressive regimes like razors? When the physical library is destroyed or forbidden, does the body become the final archive - the last site of resistance?”
Wa Lehulere’s monumental work can be viewed in the Arsenale, until 22 November.
#labiennaledivenezia #kemangwalehulere @labiennale @kemangwalehulere

Kemang Wa Lehulere on ‘In Minor Keys’, curated by Koyo Kouoh.
For the 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia, Kemang Wa Lehulere presents a newly commissioned large-scale installation titled ‘I Bleach My Words For Your Comfort’.
The artist states, “There is a common African proverb stating that when an elder dies, a library burns down. If we accept this, we must ask: what becomes of the banned or censored book? Do alphabets possess a memory? If so, what do we make of alphabets that split open the pages of repressive regimes like razors? When the physical library is destroyed or forbidden, does the body become the final archive - the last site of resistance?”
Wa Lehulere’s monumental work can be viewed in the Arsenale, until 22 November.
#labiennaledivenezia #kemangwalehulere @labiennale @kemangwalehulere

Kresiah Mukwazhi is part of the new presentation at Boros Collection.
Tickets are available on our website.
@kresiahmukwazhi
@jan_kaps
@blankprojects
Photo: @nevenallgeier

Now open: ‘in situ: Igshaan Adams. Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’ at Guggenheim Museum Bilbao. Exhibition continues until 1 November 2026.
The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao presents the latest chapter of its ‘in situ’ series, with Igshaan Adams transforming the gallery into an immersive environment shaped by movement, memory and material. Working across weaving, sculpture and installation, Adams employs rope, beads, wire and found objects to construct intricate surfaces that register the entanglement of race, religion, sexuality and lived experience.
Developed through an ongoing dialogue between weaving and dance, the works originate in performances where dancers moved across canvases, leaving behind layered traces of gesture, rhythm and release. These “dance prints” are translated into large-scale woven tapestries that hang within the gallery as spatial encounters, inviting viewers to circulate around and through them. Their presentation foregrounds the dual-sided nature of the weave, while smaller cloud-like forms appear to gather and release fragments of movement, colour and memory.
At once immersive and introspective, ‘Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’ gives material presence to invisible forces: memory, empathy and collective experience, proposing weaving as a deeply embodied and communal act, and movement as both a record of lived histories and a means of transformation.
Curated by Lekha Hileman.
‘in situ: Igshaan Adams’
‘Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’
5 May–1 November 2026
Guggenheim Museum Bilbao
Avenida Abandoibarra, 2
48009 Bilbao
Spain
(Galleries: 204, 208)
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲: Installation view ‘in situ: Igshaan Adams. Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’, Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, 2026 © Igshaan Adams. Photos: Guggenheim Museum Bilbao
#IgshaanAdams
#GuggenheimBilbao
@igshaan.adams
@museoguggenheim

Now open: ‘in situ: Igshaan Adams. Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’ at Guggenheim Museum Bilbao. Exhibition continues until 1 November 2026.
The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao presents the latest chapter of its ‘in situ’ series, with Igshaan Adams transforming the gallery into an immersive environment shaped by movement, memory and material. Working across weaving, sculpture and installation, Adams employs rope, beads, wire and found objects to construct intricate surfaces that register the entanglement of race, religion, sexuality and lived experience.
Developed through an ongoing dialogue between weaving and dance, the works originate in performances where dancers moved across canvases, leaving behind layered traces of gesture, rhythm and release. These “dance prints” are translated into large-scale woven tapestries that hang within the gallery as spatial encounters, inviting viewers to circulate around and through them. Their presentation foregrounds the dual-sided nature of the weave, while smaller cloud-like forms appear to gather and release fragments of movement, colour and memory.
At once immersive and introspective, ‘Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’ gives material presence to invisible forces: memory, empathy and collective experience, proposing weaving as a deeply embodied and communal act, and movement as both a record of lived histories and a means of transformation.
Curated by Lekha Hileman.
‘in situ: Igshaan Adams’
‘Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’
5 May–1 November 2026
Guggenheim Museum Bilbao
Avenida Abandoibarra, 2
48009 Bilbao
Spain
(Galleries: 204, 208)
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲: Installation view ‘in situ: Igshaan Adams. Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’, Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, 2026 © Igshaan Adams. Photos: Guggenheim Museum Bilbao
#IgshaanAdams
#GuggenheimBilbao
@igshaan.adams
@museoguggenheim

Now open: ‘in situ: Igshaan Adams. Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’ at Guggenheim Museum Bilbao. Exhibition continues until 1 November 2026.
The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao presents the latest chapter of its ‘in situ’ series, with Igshaan Adams transforming the gallery into an immersive environment shaped by movement, memory and material. Working across weaving, sculpture and installation, Adams employs rope, beads, wire and found objects to construct intricate surfaces that register the entanglement of race, religion, sexuality and lived experience.
Developed through an ongoing dialogue between weaving and dance, the works originate in performances where dancers moved across canvases, leaving behind layered traces of gesture, rhythm and release. These “dance prints” are translated into large-scale woven tapestries that hang within the gallery as spatial encounters, inviting viewers to circulate around and through them. Their presentation foregrounds the dual-sided nature of the weave, while smaller cloud-like forms appear to gather and release fragments of movement, colour and memory.
At once immersive and introspective, ‘Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’ gives material presence to invisible forces: memory, empathy and collective experience, proposing weaving as a deeply embodied and communal act, and movement as both a record of lived histories and a means of transformation.
Curated by Lekha Hileman.
‘in situ: Igshaan Adams’
‘Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’
5 May–1 November 2026
Guggenheim Museum Bilbao
Avenida Abandoibarra, 2
48009 Bilbao
Spain
(Galleries: 204, 208)
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲: Installation view ‘in situ: Igshaan Adams. Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’, Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, 2026 © Igshaan Adams. Photos: Guggenheim Museum Bilbao
#IgshaanAdams
#GuggenheimBilbao
@igshaan.adams
@museoguggenheim

Now open: ‘in situ: Igshaan Adams. Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’ at Guggenheim Museum Bilbao. Exhibition continues until 1 November 2026.
The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao presents the latest chapter of its ‘in situ’ series, with Igshaan Adams transforming the gallery into an immersive environment shaped by movement, memory and material. Working across weaving, sculpture and installation, Adams employs rope, beads, wire and found objects to construct intricate surfaces that register the entanglement of race, religion, sexuality and lived experience.
Developed through an ongoing dialogue between weaving and dance, the works originate in performances where dancers moved across canvases, leaving behind layered traces of gesture, rhythm and release. These “dance prints” are translated into large-scale woven tapestries that hang within the gallery as spatial encounters, inviting viewers to circulate around and through them. Their presentation foregrounds the dual-sided nature of the weave, while smaller cloud-like forms appear to gather and release fragments of movement, colour and memory.
At once immersive and introspective, ‘Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’ gives material presence to invisible forces: memory, empathy and collective experience, proposing weaving as a deeply embodied and communal act, and movement as both a record of lived histories and a means of transformation.
Curated by Lekha Hileman.
‘in situ: Igshaan Adams’
‘Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’
5 May–1 November 2026
Guggenheim Museum Bilbao
Avenida Abandoibarra, 2
48009 Bilbao
Spain
(Galleries: 204, 208)
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲: Installation view ‘in situ: Igshaan Adams. Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’, Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, 2026 © Igshaan Adams. Photos: Guggenheim Museum Bilbao
#IgshaanAdams
#GuggenheimBilbao
@igshaan.adams
@museoguggenheim

Now open: ‘in situ: Igshaan Adams. Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’ at Guggenheim Museum Bilbao. Exhibition continues until 1 November 2026.
The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao presents the latest chapter of its ‘in situ’ series, with Igshaan Adams transforming the gallery into an immersive environment shaped by movement, memory and material. Working across weaving, sculpture and installation, Adams employs rope, beads, wire and found objects to construct intricate surfaces that register the entanglement of race, religion, sexuality and lived experience.
Developed through an ongoing dialogue between weaving and dance, the works originate in performances where dancers moved across canvases, leaving behind layered traces of gesture, rhythm and release. These “dance prints” are translated into large-scale woven tapestries that hang within the gallery as spatial encounters, inviting viewers to circulate around and through them. Their presentation foregrounds the dual-sided nature of the weave, while smaller cloud-like forms appear to gather and release fragments of movement, colour and memory.
At once immersive and introspective, ‘Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’ gives material presence to invisible forces: memory, empathy and collective experience, proposing weaving as a deeply embodied and communal act, and movement as both a record of lived histories and a means of transformation.
Curated by Lekha Hileman.
‘in situ: Igshaan Adams’
‘Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’
5 May–1 November 2026
Guggenheim Museum Bilbao
Avenida Abandoibarra, 2
48009 Bilbao
Spain
(Galleries: 204, 208)
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲: Installation view ‘in situ: Igshaan Adams. Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’, Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, 2026 © Igshaan Adams. Photos: Guggenheim Museum Bilbao
#IgshaanAdams
#GuggenheimBilbao
@igshaan.adams
@museoguggenheim

‘in situ: Igshaan Adams. Unsettling Dust: The Body’s Archive’ opens next week, 5 May, at Guggenheim Museum Bilbao. Curated by Lekha Hileman the exhibition is on view until 1 November 2026.
The works presented, developed through Adams’ collaboration with Garage Dance Ensemble in O’okiep (Northern Cape, South Africa), originated from performances staged in 2024 during a residency and exhibition at NEON in Athens. Emerging from his ongoing dialogue between weaving and dance, they began with dancers moving across canvases laid over painted linoleum floors, leaving behind layered traces of gesture, rhythm and release. At Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, these traces are translated into large-scale woven tapestries suspended in space and accompanied by smaller woven ‘clouds’, giving form to memory and movement, and proposing weaving as a bodily, communal practice of healing.
Opening Talks with Igshaan Adams, 4 May 6pm.
Performance by Garage Dance Ensemble and Talk with Igshaan Adams, 5 May 6:30pm.
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲: Igshaan Adams, ‘Breaking linear’ (2025) (detail)©️Igshaan Adams. Photo: Mario Todeschini
@igshaan.adams @museoguggenheim @lekha_hileman
#igshaanadams #guggenheimmuseumbilbao

blank and Jan Kaps are pleased to announce Kresiah Mukwazhi’s participation in the fourth iteration of the NGV Triennial 2026 at the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne, Australia opening 13 December 2026.
Mukwazhi examines the politicisation and instrumentalization of the female body as a contested site upon which the power dynamics of patriarchal society are played out. Her practice is an expression of her commitment to solidarity, empowerment, and care for marginalized communities and strives to provide a platform for resistance and self-empowerment.
According to the exhibition’s organisers, “NGV Triennial 2026 is a dynamic and multilayered exhibition experience that unfolds across all four levels of NGV International. In dialogue with the NGV’s historical collections and spanning painting, video, sculpture, installation, fashion, textiles, ceramics and design, the 2026 NGV Triennial offers visitors a global journey through contemporary practice.”
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲 𝟭: Portrait by Neven Allgeier
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲 𝟮: ‘Nyenyedzi nomwe (the Seven Sisters Pleiades)’ (2024) | Stitched bra straps on canvas, 350 × 800 cm (138 x 315 in) (detail)
#NGVTriennial #NGV @ngvmelbourne #blankprojects #jankaps #kresiahmukwazhi

blank and Jan Kaps are pleased to announce Kresiah Mukwazhi’s participation in the fourth iteration of the NGV Triennial 2026 at the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne, Australia opening 13 December 2026.
Mukwazhi examines the politicisation and instrumentalization of the female body as a contested site upon which the power dynamics of patriarchal society are played out. Her practice is an expression of her commitment to solidarity, empowerment, and care for marginalized communities and strives to provide a platform for resistance and self-empowerment.
According to the exhibition’s organisers, “NGV Triennial 2026 is a dynamic and multilayered exhibition experience that unfolds across all four levels of NGV International. In dialogue with the NGV’s historical collections and spanning painting, video, sculpture, installation, fashion, textiles, ceramics and design, the 2026 NGV Triennial offers visitors a global journey through contemporary practice.”
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲 𝟭: Portrait by Neven Allgeier
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲 𝟮: ‘Nyenyedzi nomwe (the Seven Sisters Pleiades)’ (2024) | Stitched bra straps on canvas, 350 × 800 cm (138 x 315 in) (detail)
#NGVTriennial #NGV @ngvmelbourne #blankprojects #jankaps #kresiahmukwazhi

Gerda Scheepers’ solo exhibition ‘Mallarmé’s Pillow’ is currently on view at the gallery until 16 May.
Across the exhibition, abstraction remains tethered to the world of things, while the image is kept fragmentary, shaped and contained within the picture plane. A visual syntax emerges across the compositions, forming a constellation of relations in which forms feel at once finite and open-ended.
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲: Installation view at blank projects, Cape Town @slater_studio
#blankprojects #gerdascheepers

blank is pleased to present
‘Mallarmé’s Pillow’, Gerda Scheepers’ sixth solo exhibition with the gallery.
Opening Thursday, 26 March
6 - 8pm
The exhibition’s title, itself an unlikely and intriguing associative merge, invokes the French symbolist poet Mallarmé’s understanding of meaning as emerging through the relation between form, content and language, an approach that resonates with Scheepers’ treatment of painting as a medium to be both constructed and read: an evolving process through which she continually holds the boundaries between abstraction and pictorial representation in tension. Across the exhibition, abstraction remains tethered to the world of things, while the image is kept fragmentary, shaped and contained within the picture plane. A visual syntax emerges across the compositions, forming a constellation of relations in which forms feel at once finite and open-ended.
The show will culminate with the publication of a new book focussing on the artist’s recent practice, accompanied by a text from Owen Martin, Senior Curator at Astrup Fearnley Museet, Oslo, and curator of ‘Space Making’ (2025) at the same museum.
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲: Gerda Scheepers, ‘Mallarmé’s Pillow‘ (2026) | Acrylic and acrylic ink on canvas, 181 x 244 x 3 cm
#gerdascheepers #blankprojects

It’s the last week to view Gregory Olympio’s solo exhibition, ‘Vaisseaux’, closing this Saturday 14 March.
In this latest body of work, Olympio presents the reclining figure as a central motif for the works; a subtle allusion to art histories of the painted recumbent body in renderings of devotion, intimacy and looking, from the Pietà to the odalisque and more contemporary meditations on rest and vulnerability. Aware of this lineage, Olympio however draws on it only lightly, presenting his reposing figures in a quieter register, as if in a state of suspension, where meaning is held in reserve.
Copies of Olympio’s first-ever publication, ‘Je ne suis pas un produit fini’, are available to purchase at the gallery.
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲: Gregory Olympio, ‘Corps Flottants’ (2025) | Acrylic on canvas, 183 x 80.5 x 3.5 cm
#gregoryolympio #blankprojects

We are pleased to announce that Kemang Wa Lehulere has been invited to participate in the 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia, “In Minor Keys”, curated by the late Koyo Kouoh. Congratulations Kemang!
Working in a variety of media, including sculpture, installation, drawing and performance, Wa Lehulere uses found objects and salvaged materials to create environments and events that situate personal memories within, and in contrast to, collective narratives. Using conceptually loaded materials such as school desks, tyres, chalkboards and ceramic dogs, he poeticises the ‘double lives’ of objects - their potential for multiple interpretations - to tease out their ambivalent or subversive meanings through reconfiguration and assemblage.
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲: DNA photographers
#kemangwalehulere #galerietschudi #blankprojects #labiennaledivenezia

blank is pleased to present Gregory Olympio’s first-ever publication, ‘Je ne suis pas un produit fini’, featuring an overview of his practice to date, and an accompanying text in which the artist is in conversation with Prof Rory Bester.
Copies are available to purchase at the gallery
Designed by Ben Johnson

blank is pleased to present Gregory Olympio’s first-ever publication, ‘Je ne suis pas un produit fini’, featuring an overview of his practice to date, and an accompanying text in which the artist is in conversation with Prof Rory Bester.
Copies are available to purchase at the gallery
Designed by Ben Johnson

blank is pleased to present Gregory Olympio’s first-ever publication, ‘Je ne suis pas un produit fini’, featuring an overview of his practice to date, and an accompanying text in which the artist is in conversation with Prof Rory Bester.
Copies are available to purchase at the gallery
Designed by Ben Johnson

blank is pleased to present Gregory Olympio’s first-ever publication, ‘Je ne suis pas un produit fini’, featuring an overview of his practice to date, and an accompanying text in which the artist is in conversation with Prof Rory Bester.
Copies are available to purchase at the gallery
Designed by Ben Johnson

blank is pleased to present Gregory Olympio’s first-ever publication, ‘Je ne suis pas un produit fini’, featuring an overview of his practice to date, and an accompanying text in which the artist is in conversation with Prof Rory Bester.
Copies are available to purchase at the gallery
Designed by Ben Johnson

blank is pleased to present Gregory Olympio’s first-ever publication, ‘Je ne suis pas un produit fini’, featuring an overview of his practice to date, and an accompanying text in which the artist is in conversation with Prof Rory Bester.
Copies are available to purchase at the gallery
Designed by Ben Johnson

blank is pleased to present Gregory Olympio’s first-ever publication, ‘Je ne suis pas un produit fini’, featuring an overview of his practice to date, and an accompanying text in which the artist is in conversation with Prof Rory Bester.
Copies are available to purchase at the gallery
Designed by Ben Johnson

Come visit us @investeccapetownartfair
📍 Galleries | Booth C15
Preview 19 February
Public days 20 - 22 February
Featuring works by Igshaan Adams, Annabelle Agbo Godeau, Jared Ginsburg, donna Kukama, Sabelo Mlangeni, Kyle Morland, Kresiah Mukwazhi, Asemahle Ntlonti, Gregory Olympio, Zoë Paul, Gerda Scheepers, Kemang Wa Lehulere, James Webb, Kamva Matuis and Monika Emmanuelle Kazi
@igshaan.adams @annabelle.agbo.godeau @jaredglnsburg @donnakukama @mlangenisabelo @_kylemorland @kresiahmukwazhi @iqaba_lasengcobo @gregoryolympio @zoe_paul_studio @gerdascheepers @kemang.absent.magician @theotherjameswebb @matuiskamva @monikaemmanuelle
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲: @slater_studio
#blankprojects #investeccapetownartfair

blank will be at the Investec Cape Town Art Fair
📍 Galleries | Booth C15
Preview 19 February
Public days 20 - 22 February
@investeccapetownartfair #investeccapetownartfair
#blankprojects
𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗴𝗲: Jared Ginsburg, ‘No talk’ (2026) (detail)
Le visionneur d’histoires Instagram est un outil simple qui vous permet de regarder et de sauvegarder secrètement les histoires Instagram, vidéos, photos ou IGTV. Avec ce service, vous pouvez télécharger du contenu et l’apprécier hors ligne quand vous voulez. Si vous trouvez quelque chose d’intéressant sur Instagram que vous souhaitez vérifier plus tard ou si vous voulez voir des histoires tout en restant anonyme, notre Visionneur est parfait pour vous. Anonstories offre une excellente solution pour garder votre identité cachée. Instagram a lancé la fonctionnalité Stories en août 2023, rapidement adoptée par d’autres plateformes en raison de son format engageant et temporaire. Les histoires permettent aux utilisateurs de partager des mises à jour rapides, qu’il s’agisse de photos, vidéos ou selfies, agrémentés de texte, emojis ou filtres, visibles pendant 24 heures seulement. Cette fenêtre de temps limitée crée un fort engagement par rapport aux publications régulières. Aujourd’hui, les histoires sont l’un des moyens les plus populaires de se connecter et de communiquer sur les réseaux sociaux. Cependant, lorsque vous regardez une histoire, le créateur peut voir votre nom dans leur liste de visionneurs, ce qui peut poser un problème de confidentialité. Et si vous souhaitez naviguer dans les histoires sans être repéré ? C’est là qu’Anonstories devient utile. Il vous permet de regarder du contenu public sur Instagram sans révéler votre identité. Il vous suffit d’entrer le nom d’utilisateur du profil qui vous intéresse, et l’outil affichera ses dernières histoires. Fonctionnalités du visionneur Anonstories : - Navigation anonyme : Regardez des histoires sans apparaître dans la liste des visionneurs. - Aucun compte requis : Regardez du contenu public sans vous inscrire à un compte Instagram. - Téléchargement de contenu : Sauvegardez directement du contenu d’histoires sur votre appareil pour une utilisation hors ligne. - Voir les highlights : Accédez aux Highlights Instagram, même après la période de 24 heures. - Suivi des reposts : Suivez les reposts ou l’engagement sur les histoires des profils personnels. Limitations : - Cet outil fonctionne uniquement avec les comptes publics ; les comptes privés restent inaccessibles. Avantages : - Respect de la vie privée : Regardez n’importe quel contenu Instagram sans être repéré. - Simple et facile : Aucune installation d’application ni inscription requise. - Outils exclusifs : Téléchargez et gérez du contenu de manière que Instagram ne permet pas.
Suivez les mises à jour Instagram en toute discrétion tout en protégeant votre vie privée et en restant anonyme.
Consultez les profils et photos anonymement avec aisance grâce au visionneur de profil privé.
Ce service gratuit vous permet de voir les histoires Instagram anonymement, garantissant que votre activité reste cachée de l’uploader.
Anonstories permet aux utilisateurs de voir les histoires Instagram sans alerter le créateur.
Fonctionne parfaitement sur iOS, Android, Windows, macOS et les navigateurs modernes comme Chrome et Safari.
Privilégie la navigation sécurisée et anonyme sans nécessiter de coordonnées de connexion.
Les utilisateurs peuvent voir des histoires publiques en entrant simplement un nom d’utilisateur — sans compte requis.
Télécharge les photos (JPEG) et les vidéos (MP4) facilement.
Le service est gratuit.
Le contenu des comptes privés n’est accessible qu’aux abonnés.
Les fichiers sont destinés à un usage personnel ou éducatif uniquement et doivent respecter les règles de droit d’auteur.
Entrez un nom d’utilisateur public pour voir ou télécharger des histoires. Le service génère des liens directs pour sauvegarder le contenu localement.