Monday, 9 February 2026

Oswaldo Maciá: Migratory Movements

 
Oswaldo Maciá - Red Admiral Vanessa - Migration North Africa to UK (rondo), 2025



Certain other artists working with the butterfly motif naturally arouse my interest. I am curious to see in what ways they use the motif in comparison to me. A new discovery was the artist Oswaldo Maciá whose exhibition - Oswaldo Maciá: Migratory Movements, is currently running at the Elizabeth Xi Bauer Gallery on Exmouth Market. Like myself Maciá is interested in certain butterfly characteristics chiefly migration, and other urgent issues facing not only butterflies but wider animal/insect/plant species such as extinction with the overuse of pesticides etc. affecting natural habitats and the environment. In the exhibition we see Maciás drawing studies and paintings of different species (some now sadly thought to be extinct), with accompanying colour charts and field notes. the drawings are quite energetic and loose, whereas the paintings are more studied. There are also two large sepia hangings of a cockroach and a magnolia flower. Like myself (hereMaciá addresses the theme of butterfly migration creating drawings with arrows indicating migratory routes, whereas I use stitched thread to denote flight paths. Maciá too is aware of the work of noted literary figure and lepidopterist Vladimir Nabokov (previously here), and his work with butterflies and their migratory habits, using the author's research and findings in his own investigations. Nabokov hypothesised that Blue butterflies arrived in the Americas from Asia by crossing the Bering Strait over a period of millions of years. When he made these findings public in 1945, he was ridiculed by the scientific community, who thought his hypothesis wrong due to the short lifespan of a butterfly. Today though, through DNA sequencing techniques, we know Nabakov's findings to be true. Maciá is a multi-disciplinary artist known for his work with scents. This show also includes an element of his signature scent pieces entitled Consciousness contained within a glass carafe on a pedestal from which the visitor can pump the scent and consider what consciousness can smells like. Maciá also works with sound and there are two special Jasper Morrison designed benches which sporadically emit birdsong. This sound installation was inspired by clergyman John Wilkins who attempted to determine all the species that embarked on Noah’s legendary Ark – the first and most archetypal mass displacement of species in Christian mythology. Wilkins’ efforts, made in 17th-century Britain, informs Maciá’s acoustic piece- Tomorrow will be Cloudy (2001–25), with sounds from all the species listed by Wilkins, sourced by the artist from the British Library’s archives. I found this to be a fascinating exhibition which opens up further possibilities with the butterfly motif within my own practice.





Installation View

Long-tailed Blue

Observation: Turnip Moth


Observation: Green Hairstreak (diptych)

Observation on Lac insect (i)

Observation on migration: crossing the Bering (i)

Chalk Hill Blue


Observation on migration: crossing the Bering (ii)

Observation: Common Swift, Apus Apus (diptych)


Observation: Migración Mariposa Azul

Adonis Blue


Observation: Cucaracha Americana (diptych)

Maculinea Arion - Big Blue - Extinct UK 1979. Reintroduced from EU 1980s (rondo)

Observation: Xerces Blue Butterfly - Gone!




Red Admiral Vanessa - Migration North Africa to UK (rondo)

Helicodiceros Muscivorus, Dead Horse Lily

Observation: Common Swift, Apus Apus. Consumes 20,000 insects per day

Observation on the Migration Theory of Polyommatus Butterflies


Morpho (inside)

Morpho (outside)

Tomorrow will be Cloudy (i) & Tomorrow will be Cloudy (ii)


The smell of consciousness


Strangalia Famelica


Magnolia Virginiana





Oswaldo Maciá: Migratory Movements
until 15th February

Elizabeth Xi Bauer
Exmouth Market
London
EC1R

Sunday, 1 February 2026

Iris Van Herpen: Sculpting the Senses

 



"For me fashion is an expression of art that is very closely related both to me and to my body. I see it as an expression of identity combined with desire, moods and a cultural setting." - Iris van Herpen


I finally managed to get a first look at an Iris Van Herpen dress at close quarters at the Louvre Museum's - Louvre Couture. Art & Fashion: Statement Pieces exhibition. I was intrigued by her process and unique futuristic-looking take on fashion which includes collaborating with artists and adopting new technologies to stunning effect I was unable to get to her show when it opened at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in 2023, and thought I'd never get to see it as it subsequently travelled to Singapore. On hearing that Iris Van Herpen Sculpting the Senses would be not only returning to Europe, but the designers home country of the Netherlands, I seized the opportunity and made a visit to Rotterdam's Kunsthal to immerse myself in Van Herpen's visionary world. The exhibition is a retrospective of Van Herpen's couture designs to date, and features more than one hundred haute couture pieces and accessories like shoes and iconic headpieces worn by the likes of singer Björk. An important aspect of Van Herpen's process is the collaborative process with other artists and designers who feed her imagination. There are original artworks by artists who have collaborated in the creation her designs such as Rogan Brown and Wim Delvoye, and other sources of inspiration such as ancient corals, fossils and biological specimens which have also fuelled Van Herpen's imagination. As interesting as seeing the finished dresses is a section containing original sketches depicting her dress designs and fabric swatch samples illustrating her sudio's process documenting the development of the designs. Van Herpen practiced classical and contemporary dance from an early age and so is aware of the body, movement and its relationship to clothing. This background may also explain the theatricality of much of her oeuvre. Van Herpen spent time learning her craft in Alexander McQueen's studios before starting her own Maison in Amsterdam in 2007. Van Herpen broke new ground when in 2010 she presented her first £D printed dress in her Crystallization collection. Water in its various states, and its importance in the role of the origins of life on planet Earth appears to have been a theme that has fascinated Van Herpen throughout her career. Indeed the opening rooms of the exhibition presents an aquatic tableau of water-themed dresses seemingly immersed in an underwater projection. The exhibition has nine rooms all with specific themes and titles. The first of which is titled Water and Dreams and features dresses inspired by water in its liquid, solid or gaseous forms. There is are dresses formed of bubbles, another inspired by the motion of a splash of water caught mid-motion, and another whose vivid blue folds appear like the roll and swell of an ocean. Life From The Deep, is the next room's theme continuing the fascination with water but looking at microscopic life forms that inhabit the deep, as well as the artwork of zoologist Ernst Haeckel and the glass artworks of 19th century artists Leopold and Rudolf Blaschka. The ways in which Van Herpen's dresses evoked the spirit of the sea or animal life forms associated with the deep was stunning. The Forces of Life is the next room of the exhibition where Van Herpen plays with elemental forms from nature inspired by the exquisite feathery papercuts of artist Rogan Brown. The next room - Alchemical Workshop affords visitors to the exhibition the opportunity to examine fabric samples, sketches, small mannequins and the technological techniques used in Van Herpen's craft. It is like being immersed in the design process in the designers atelier. The Embodied Skeleton is the theme of the dramatically darkened next exhibition space, the better to view the mostly white and cream skeletal form dresses on display taking their cue from the bodies skeletal, mucle tissues and fascia structures. Van Herpen makes excellent use of 3D printing technology and innovative materials to create these wonderfully sculptural creations. The Dynamics of Structures is the next room's theme and looks at how the designer combines elements of physical architecture with the architecture of the body. This was another room that contained some of my favourite Van Herpen creations including The Cathedral dress which resembles a gorgeous piece of Gothic architecture like one of the many ancient churches found in her home country. The next section of the exhibition is entitled Dark Mythology and focuses on the amazing, futuristic accessories such as footwear, eye and headpieces created by Van Herpen in collaboration with other creatives. It presented in a darkened space with the pieces displayed on shelves like a cabinet of curiosities. New Nature is the theme of the penultimate room of the exhibition and here Van Herpen presents her vision of the future through striking silhouettes that attempt to blur the distinctions between artice and the natural. Intrigued by the possibilities of future worlds Van Herpen embraces technology to try to change the body into hybrid being with some typically startling results. The final room entitled Cosmic Journey is a real tour de force. It is inspired by science, space exploration and theories of the cosmos. It contains a tableau of mannequins sporting her designs floating in space and time with others suspended upside down from the ceiling and shooting sideways out of columns in much the same way as Antony Gormley's Matrix III sculptural installation in which his figures project from the gallery walls and ceiling. Colours and textures clash against a sculptural glass backdrop composed of circles which refract light, shadow and colour adding to the sense of chaos and being contained within a multiverse or different dimension. The exhibition was an amazing introduction to the whole of Van Herpen's ouevre to date and a fantastic opportunity to the details, techiques and processes of the designers vision of couture.


















 













































































































































































































Iris Van Herpen: Sculpting the Senses
until 1st March 2026

Kunsthal
Museumpark
Westzeedijk 341
3015 AA 
Rotterdam