A few days ago I attended the opening of the latest exhibition at UH42 in Copenhagen. UH42 is a creative house for young people where art, community, and experimentation come together through long-term artistic programmes and workshops. Since January, 27 young participants have been working alongside the artists Halfdan Venlov, Jules Fischer, Samara Sallam and SOFTER. Through exercises, conversations, and experiments with materials, they created new works for the house’s growing collection. What I find particularly interesting about UH42 is that the results of these programmes do not simply disappear when the workshops end. Instead, the house is gradually building a collection of artworks created through these collaborations, preserving both artistic outcomes and traces of the communities that produced them. One of the highlights is Astrid Specht Seeberg’s Reflections of the Sea (Havets spejlinger, 2025), a ceramic relief and sound work created together with participants from an earlier UH42 programme. Made from clay sourced locally in Zealand, the work evokes a submerged landscape of fish, coral-like formations, fossils, sediments, and marine life. The piece feels simultaneously ancient and alive. Looking at it, one has the impression of encountering a fragment of a seabed discovered centuries in the future. This is very much in line with Astrid Specht Seeberg’s broader artistic practice, which often explores the relationships between bodies, marine ecologies, identity, and the more-than-human world. Here these themes are intertwined with another idea: that a work of art can also become a record of collaboration. Perhaps that is what impressed me most about the exhibition. The artworks are not merely representations of a process. They are evidence that artistic practice can create new forms of attention, new relationships, and new ways of being in the world together.

05/30/2026 16:25:05


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