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Superglue, or Inventing the Friend
Project Info
- đ Contemporary Art Centre
- đ Valentinas KlimaĆĄauskas
- đ€ List is in text
- đ Valentinas KlimaĆĄaukas
- đ Andrej Vasilenko
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Jakub Choma, âDead Endâ, 2025. Mixed-media installation with automated elements, 222 Ă 220 Ă 140 cm. Courtesy of the artist. âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Photo: Andrej Vasilenko.
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âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, exhibition view. Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Curator: Valentinas KlimaĆĄauskas. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, exhibition view. Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Curator: Valentinas KlimaĆĄauskas. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, exhibition view. Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Curator: Valentinas KlimaĆĄauskas. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, exhibition view. Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Curator: Valentinas KlimaĆĄauskas. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, exhibition view. Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Curator: Valentinas KlimaĆĄauskas. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, exhibition view. Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Curator: Valentinas KlimaĆĄauskas. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, exhibition view. Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Curator: Valentinas KlimaĆĄauskas. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, exhibition view. Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Curator: Valentinas KlimaĆĄauskas. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
JĆ«ratÄ KazakeviÄiĆ«tÄ, âMagnolia/Closedâ, 2013(2021);Isaac Lythgoe,âYou only need eyes to see, you only need a tongue to tell the differenceâ, 2024, CAC, 2026. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, exhibition view. Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Curator: Valentinas KlimaĆĄauskas. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, exhibition view. Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Curator: Valentinas KlimaĆĄauskas. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, exhibition view. Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Curator: Valentinas KlimaĆĄauskas. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, exhibition view. Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Curator: Valentinas KlimaĆĄauskas. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
KNAF (Leszek Knaflewski, 1960â2014), series of drawings, dimensions variable. Courtesy of the artistâs family and Piktogram, Warsaw. âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, Contemporary Art Centre, 2026.Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, exhibition view. Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Curator: Valentinas KlimaĆĄauskas. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
Martin KĂĄĆa, âGolemâ, 2016. Fibreglass, five sculptures, 100 Ă 75 Ă 80 cm each. Courtesy of the artist. âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
Kateryna Lysovenko, âThe Old Air Dependent Dreamâ, 2026.Installation: triptych and wall painting;oil on canvas.Courtesy of the artist and TBA gallery, Warsaw.âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, CAC, 2026. Photo: Andrej Vasilenko.
âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, exhibition view. Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Curator: Valentinas KlimaĆĄauskas. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
Arvida Byström, âPET: Projected Emotional Technologiesâ, 2025. Video (6 min 29 sec). Courtesy of the artist. âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, Contemporary Art Centre, 2026. Photographer: Andrej Vasilenko
The international group exhibition âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ, marks a new phase for the Contemporary Art Centre (CAC), inaugurating the exhibition programme under its new director. Predominantly presenting figurative art, the exhibition invites a reconsideration of the CACâs relationship with its audience. The exhibitionâs abundance of figures creates an aesthetic and social environment grounded in diversity â one that may both facilitate encounters with the other while questioning identity (of the individual, the depicted figure, or the (post)human), the possibility of connection with the other, and the authenticity and meaning of contemporary art itself.
Against the backdrop of growing polarisation and fragmentation in the world â and in our own society â the exhibition seeks to create conditions for a more open debate about the changing relationship between contemporary art and its audience in times of multiple crises. One of the exhibitionâs key references is a scene from Algirdas Araminasâs 1968 film When I Was a Child. It depicts a school excursion to one of the first exhibitions held at the newly established Art Exhibition Palace in Vilnius (today the CAC). The film emphasises the viewerâs uneasy relationship with modernity: the provincial character played by actor Bronius Babkauskas repeatedly bumps into the buildingâs large windows â symbols of modernist transparency. High culture is embodied by the modernist exhibition and the guideâs mannered voice, while the teacher assumes a disciplinary role. This pressure brings a pair of schoolchildren closer together: they slip away from the guided tour and begin a romantic relationship.
Bringing together historical and contemporary works, âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ reflects on encounters with the other through different notions of otherness, the emergence of the posthuman figure, and contemporary art itself as something not entirely knowable â something foreign. Assemblages of new and historical figures, individual and collective, implicitly raise the question: what kind of glue today could bind together a fragmented, combative, and rather narcissistic society? What role can art play in a world where opinions are becoming increasingly rigid? And, in the hell of ideological excess, what might still allow us to imagine relationships that open the possibility of authentic, unpredictable, non-commodified experiences â friendships, or even the possibility of falling in love with the other rather than rejecting them?
Figurative art has existed for at least 50,000 years; however, over the past decade, contemporary art has seen a clear return â even an inflation â of the figure. This phenomenon may be interpreted as a response to the uncertainty, disinformation, speculation, simulation, hyperrealism, and the excess of big data accompanying the growing dominance of technology, as well as an attempt to make use of the possibilities offered by posthumanism, new materialisms, postcolonial perspectives, post-robotics, artificial intelligence, and other processes. By returning to the figure and to narrative, artists are rethinking strategies for constructing and recognising identity.
The second part of the title â âInventing the Friendâ â refers to the anti-ideological essay âInventing the Enemyâ by the Italian philosopher and writer Umberto Eco. According to Eco, âhaving an enemy is important not only in order to define our identity, but also to provide us with an obstacle against which to measure our system of values and, in seeking to overcome it, to demonstrate our own worth. Therefore, when there is no enemy, we have to invent one.â Today, enemies â or antagonists â abound in both politics and the art world; yet the inner reconciliation that an external enemy is meant to facilitate never quite occurs.
Where did it all begin? Modernism â whose legacy is continued by contemporary art â never promised to be friendly to its viewers. Quite the opposite: through the use of military metaphors, proclaiming itself the artistic avant-garde and vowing to sweep away the old order, it consciously took pleasure in rejecting and shocking what it perceived as philistine, bourgeois taste.
Today, however, this relationship has shifted. The once-advocated strategy of âinventing the (art) enemyâ â ridiculing a public unfamiliar with the codes of art â has gradually transformed into museumsâ and galleriesâ efforts to build friendlier relationships with their audiences. Most cultural institutions today run friendsâ or patronsâ programmes (often paid) and strive to appear more open and welcoming. Yet this friendliness often comes at a price: the banalisation or vulgarisation of the artistic experience. Exhibitions and artworks become over-explained and illustrative, leaving little room for an open, ambiguous or personal encounter. Acknowledging these risks, âSuperglue, or Inventing the Friendâ inevitably navigates the tension between attempting to create multilayered, ambiguous â or even contradictory â relationships between the art institution, the exhibition, the artworks and their visitors, and critically reflecting on these very relationships.
But what about now? What forces still compel us to form connections amid growing polarisation, narcissism, constant networking, the commodification of relationships, and multiple crises and wars? Is it still possible to establish a relationship with the other? Can we construct ourselves positively through the other â seeing them not only as an enemy or a friend? And if so, might this be one of the functions of contemporary art? What frightens us today â and what might make us flee an exhibition? Finally: how, despite everything, can we become friends?
Artists: Noor Abed, Rebecca Ackroyd, Danas Aleksa, Nils Alix-Tabeling, Algirdas Araminas (1931â1999), Andrius Arutiunian, Maty Biayenda, Yuliya Bokhan, Arvida Byström, Jakub Choma, Tony Cokes, Milda DrazdauskaitÄ (1951â2019), Saskia Fischer, Dorota GawÄda & EglÄ KulbokaitÄ, IndriÄ·is Äąelzis, VolungÄ AuĆĄra GriĆĄkonytÄ, Vida GruzdaitÄ (1940â1993), Rodrigo HernĂĄndez, Roberts Jansons, Martin KĂĄĆa, JĆ«ratÄ KazakeviÄiĆ«tÄ, KNAF (Leszek Knaflewski, 1960â2014), Magdalena Lazar, Kris Lemsalu, Ghislaine Leung, Kateryna Lysovenko, Isaac Lythgoe, Tomas MartiĆĄauskis, Katsiaryna Miats, MiÄ·elis MĆ«rnieks, Terje Ojaver, Agata Orlovska, Pakui Hardware, Goda PalekaitÄ, Karol Radziszewski, ArtĆ«ras Raila, EglÄ RakauskaitÄ, TomĂĄĆĄ Roubal, Janina SabaliauskaitÄ, Piotr Skiba, Antanas Sutkus, Jurga Ć arapova, Virgilijus Ć onta (1952â1992), Pol Taburet, Jonathan Vinel
Valentinas KlimaĆĄaukas