Jan van Munster

Ekstasis. A universe of light and sound

From stunning installations to subtle shadows, Ekstasis will transform the museum into a pleasure garden for the senses. The exhibition Ekstasis. A Universe of Light and Sound, curated by art historian and curator Sanneke Huisman and contemporary artist Nick Verstand, features works by

Heleen Blanken, Casimir Geelhoed, Mariska de Groot, Nazif Lopulissa, Jan van Munster, Anni Nöps, Jan Schoonhoven and Nick Verstand, among others.

Discover the unknown
Ekstasis is the ancient Greek word for ‘being outside oneself’ or ‘transcending the mundane’. Artists understand better than anyone that art is a means of escaping reality. The Ekstasisexhibition reveals how they use the latest devices and tools to evoke a temporary, different reality – and how this changes from one era to the next. What do you want to escape? And how do you do that? Sanneke Huisman and Nick Verstand present four installations by contemporary makers that offer possible answers to these questions. They are juxtaposed with works from the museum’s collection, most of which date from the 1960s and 1970s.

New worlds and laws
Many artists of the 1960s and 1970s, including those of the Zero movement and early light artists, used everyday materials to engage the visitor physically and spiritually. Take Jan Schoonhoven’s abstract work, for example, which seems to move through the interplay of light and shadow as the viewer’s position changes. In today’s technological society, artists have new tools at their disposal. Their approach is also more holistic, creating new worlds where different laws apply. Locomotion – Paynes grey (2021) by Nazif Lopulissa is a staggered, swirling mass frozen in time. The artist challenges visitors to unravel the logic behind this impressive painting.