Group show curated by What, How & for Whom / WHW and Georg Schöllhammer with work by Anna Artaker, Josef Dabernig, Joana Hadjithomas & Khalil Joreige, David Maljkovic, Emeka Ogboh, Uriel Orlow.
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Group show curated by What, How & for Whom / WHW and Georg Schöllhammer with work by Anna Artaker, Josef Dabernig, Joana Hadjithomas & Khalil Joreige, David Maljkovic, Emeka Ogboh, Uriel Orlow.
Ground Zero takes the ground as its starting point—a place where memories are inscribed, narratives are brought to life, and new beginnings are envisioned. The works invite a sensitive and critical examination of historical legacies, social and ecological issues, and the possibilities for transformation, suggesting a space for reflection, regeneration, and collective creation.
Group exhibition curated by Black Atlas, with works by Catarina Leitão, Cristina Ataíde, Jermay Michael Gabriel, Marcelo Moscheta, Mónica de Miranda, Nii Obodai, Nithya Iyer, Susana Anángua, Marta Machado and Sofia Yala
In 1951, the Festival of Britain acted as a beacon of post-war hope, launching a landmark touring exhibition that brought world-class art to local museums and art centres across the UK. Seventy-five years later, Hayward Gallery Touring honours this legacy with Small Wonders: Reimagining British Art, a contemporary reimagining of that original vision.
The exhibition brings together 50 acclaimed artists who have participated in the British Art Show – the UK’s definitive five-year curated survey of contemporary art – since its inception in 1979. Taking inspiration from Marcel Duchamp’s Boîte-en-valise – a “portable museum” contained within a suitcase – each artist has created a new, small-scale work that responds to their original British Art Show presentation. The result is a condensed yet expansive overview of a half-century of British art history.
With works by Abake, Tomma Abts, Caroline Achaintre, Simeon Barclay, Zarina Bhimji, Kathrin Böhm, Frank Bowling, Pablo Bronstein, Andrea Büttner, Varda Caivano, Ergin Çavuşoğlu, Michael Craig-Martin, Nicholas Deshayes, Mandy El-Sayegh, Doug Fishbone, Martino Gamper, and many others.
SIBYLLA unfolds as an exhibition, curated by Sónia Taborda and Joerg Bader, that evokes the Latin name as a way of thinking about human connection beyond time.
A performance by Uriel Orlow unfolds in parallel with his presentation at the Giardini of La Biennale di Venezia, extending its conceptual and sensory inquiry into the context of Basel.
Developed in collaboration with Maria João Pires and Martin Masan, music curators of the project, the work takes place in the garden, where musicians perform with and for plants, activating a subtle dialogue between human and more-than-human forms of listening.
Date and Location
Tuesday June 16, 2026
6 pm
Gellertgut Park
Gellertstrasse 33
4052 Basel
Forest Futures will be screened as part of Rencontres Internationales – New Cinema and Contemporary Art at silent green Kulturquartier, Berlin.
The film will be presented alongside works by Eva Giolo, Jean-Baptiste Perret, Susannah Sayler, Edward Morris, and Benjamin Balcom.
07 June 2026, 6 pm.
Uriel Orlow will present his performance Reveries of Collective Walkers (Zurich) as part of the The Zurich Archipelago – Recreating Common Grounds, curated by Mirjam Varadinis.
Dates and Location
Saturday, 20 June · 3–3.45 pm · Arboretum
Saturday, 27 June · 3–3.45 pm · Platzspitz · in the presence of the artist
Sunday, 5 July · 3–3.45 pm · Arboretum
Screening of Forest Futures as part of the VIDEOEX, Experimental Film & Video Festival at Festivalzentrum Kunstraum Walcheturm (Kanonengasse 20, 8004 Zurich).
23 May, 17:45, Festivalkino Cinema Z3
30 May, 17:45, Festivalkino Cinema Z3
Uriel Orlow is presenting Mangoes of Goan Origin (An Archive) as part of the group show Mangoes and Meaning: Histories, Ecologies and Cultural Imagination at Museum of Goa.
Expect to encounter the mango in ways you may not have before. After all, this isn’t just any fruit-it’s aam, the common thread that connects us all. This exhibition brings together personal, cultural, ecological, and communal perspectives, reflecting on what it means to grow a mango, to sit in the shade of its tree, to share it with neighbours, and to spend long summers in its presence. The exhibition explores how this fruit becomes a symbol of place, of season, and of belonging.
Uriel Orlow is invited to the 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia by Koyo Kouoh.
With the support of Pro-Helvetia, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation and CREAM.
Ground Zero takes the ground as its starting point—a place where memories are inscribed, narratives are brought to life, and new beginnings are envisioned. The works invite a sensitive and critical examination of historical legacies, social and ecological issues, and the possibilities for transformation, suggesting a space for reflection, regeneration, and collective creation.
Group exhibition curated by Black Atlas, with works by Catarina Leitão, Cristina Ataíde, Jermay Michael Gabriel, Marcelo Moscheta, Mónica de Miranda, Nii Obodai, Nithya Iyer, Susana Anángua, Marta Machado and Sofia Yala
Screening of Forest Futures (2025), as part of the KINETIK programme at CineLab Giuseppe Bertolucci.
10 April 2026, 18:00pm