
Atelier view 11
- various
- 90 × 60 cm
- exhibited
An atelier view captures how an artwork (or a group of works) is displayed in an exhibition setting. It documents the spatial arrangement of pieces within a gallery, museum, or temporary space, emphasizing their interaction with the surrounding architecture. The way works are positioned, lit, and contextualized within an environment shapes the visitor’s perception, making the atelier view an essential tool for understanding curatorial decisions and the dynamics of a presentation.
An installation view offers a glimpse into the artist’s workspace, revealing works in progress, tools, materials, and the evolving creative process. It highlights the conditions in which ideas take shape before they reach a public setting. The layering of unfinished and completed elements within this view captures not only the raw materiality of artistic production but also the atmosphere in which experimentation and transformation occur.
Since the lines between production and presentation blur, the atelier view and installation view merge into a continuous process. The studio is not only a place of making but also an ever-changing constellation of materials, compositions, and spatial decisions. Similarly, the exhibition space can become a site of ongoing negotiation, where the act of display itself is part of the work’s meaning.