Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Dublin Business Directory
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Dublin Business Directory
    Home»Culture»Time and space flow in Ebba Matz’s visual world
    Culture

    Time and space flow in Ebba Matz’s visual world

    RaymondBy RaymondFebruary 24, 2026Updated:February 25, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Time and space flow in Ebba Matz’s visual world
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    This is a review. The author is responsible for the opinions in the text.

    Exhibition

    Ebba Matz: “Journey”

    Brother Hjorth’s house, Uppsala. Shown until March 15th

    Space is really useless. Mostly empty space, just a few degrees above absolute zero. The images of space are another matter. From six-thousand-year-old Sumerian star maps to the science fiction illustrations of Chris Foss, it is as if the immeasurable dimensions sharpen the ability to create.

    Ebba Matz can also be placed somewhere between these reference points. Her “journey” can now be seen in the slightly curved room in Bror Hjorth’s house in Uppsala. The first thing the audience encounters are two tables on which gently rounded, smooth-cut glass objects and mirrors are placed. And yes, it could be a collection of beautiful art glass at Blås och knåda, the arts and crafts collective in Stockholm.

    But there’s something about the way the tables are placed, how a framed vector geometric representation of a sphere obscures the glass objects from certain angles and, last but not least, how these objects are placed in relation to each other.

    Image 1 of 3

    Ebba Matz, excerpt from “Reflections of the Present Looking Back”, 2025, with glass lenses and silver-plated glass ball.

    Photo: Ebba Matz

    Ebba Matz, excerpt from “Reflections of the Present through Looking Back”, 2025, with mirrors and pyrite balls.

    Image 2 of 3

    Ebba Matz, excerpt from “Reflections of the Present through Looking Back”, 2025, with mirrors and pyrite balls.

    Photo: Ebba Matz

    Ebba Matz, “Journey”, painting, 2024.

    Image 3 of 3

    Ebba Matz, “Journey”, painting, 2024.

    Photo: Ebba Matz

    There’s something next to it resembles a destroyed armillary sphere (a kind of ancient model of the solar system), with several blue celestial bodies piled up on the bottom. Or is it a spherical lottery drum without a crank, opening and with unnumbered balls?

    The universe as a lottery with unclear drawing routines?

    The blue returns. On another table sits a painted papier-mâché model of a strictly symmetrical ancient temple complex dedicated to observing the movements of the sun and planets. From a distance it looks like lapis lazuli, the surreal blue stone that resembles a fallen sky and has been excavated for thousands of years in Afghanistan’s harshest mountainous regions to become monuments to kings, jewelry for queens or ultramarine pigments for Renaissance artists.

    Ebba Matz, “Observations”, collage, 2025.

    Ebba Matz, “Observations”, collage, 2025.

    Photo: Ebba Matz

    About these works Unsettling space and space on various levels, a series of new collages depict the collapse of dimensions. The means are simple, but the execution is so precise. Matz has cut and pasted images of celestial bodies into landscape views, and natural scenes appear where one would expect a moon or a planet. Reflections and duplicates, unexpected views and black holes.

    The geometry is flawless, but time and space pass. Like in a nightmare, when everything is clear and nothing is right.

    Ebba Matz’s “Journey” is a journey into the coordinate system of existence, an attempt to relate to the fleeting. All space programs have been aesthetically inferior, while the images of and about space, from Stonehenge to the Matz exhibition, almost always have their own beauty.

    It has now been over thirty years since she achieved her breakthrough with an installation in the Aronowitsch Gallery, which no one who saw it will forget. In the room there were several simple, fragile funnels made of white paper that came from old gramophones. Just as quiet as it is intrusive and strangely seductive. They reminded what everyone already knew, that in space no one can hear you scream. But also shown how the siren song of art opens doors to eternity.

    Read more about art on dn.se

    Source link

    Ebba flow Matzs space time visual world
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Raymond

    Related Posts

    The war in Ukraine could be affected by the US attack on Iran

    March 2, 2026

    It’s impossible not to sympathize with the cheering Iranians

    March 2, 2026

    Stoptime drew the ire of the Russian regime – set in Sweden

    March 2, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Recent Posts
    • The war in Ukraine could be affected by the US attack on Iran
    • It’s impossible not to sympathize with the cheering Iranians
    • Clear motivational window related to the intervention
    • Here, 9 out of 10 young people become drug-free
    • Stoptime drew the ire of the Russian regime – set in Sweden
    Recent Comments
      Archives
      • March 2026
      • February 2026
      • January 2026
      Categories
      • Auto
      • Culture
      • Economy
      • Food & Drink
      • Personal finance
      • Psychology
      • Science
      • Sport
      Meta
      • Log in
      • Entries feed
      • Comments feed
      • WordPress.org
      Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
      © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

      Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.