Next week is the last chance to experience Mette Winckelmann’s exhibition SLIP at Wilson Saplana Gallery. One of the things I appreciate about Wilson Saplana is that there is a remarkable consistency to the quality of what appears both on the walls and on the floor. The programme feels carefully built rather than merely scheduled. This exhibition is no exception. In SLIP, Winckelmann continues her long investigation of geometry, textiles, patterns, memory, and materiality. The exhibition brings together painting and textile works in a way that challenges some of the old hierarchies between so-called fine art and craft traditions. The title itself refers to a movement of yielding, losing control, or allowing something to shift position — physically as well as mentally. The painting in the photo captures much of what makes the exhibition compelling. At first glance it appears rigorously geometric, almost architectural. But the longer one looks, the more unstable it becomes. Layers of triangles, grids, textiles, traces, and textures interfere with one another. The surface seems simultaneously constructed and eroded, precise and vulnerable. It feels less like a fixed composition than a memory of one. What I particularly enjoy in Winckelmann’s works is how abstraction never becomes sterile. Beneath the geometry there is always something bodily, domestic, and lived. The paintings carry the feeling of materials that have histories before entering the canvas. The exhibition closes next week, so this is genuinely the last opportunity to see it.

05/30/2026 16:52:02


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