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These Cabinets of Curiosity Are at Once Primeval and Present-Day

These Cabinets of Curiosity Are at Once Primeval and Present-Day

Emerging throughout Renaissance Europe as conspicuous displays of wealth and knowledge, wunderkammers, or cabinets of curiosity, contained carefully amassed collections of oddities, natural elements, and era-distinctive examples of material culture. The reserve of particularly learned rulers, aristocrats, members of the clergy, and scholarly scientists, these encyclopedic assemblages of religious relics and antiquities were often housed within sumptuously adorned, holistically themed environments.

As time progressed and spatial scale reduced significantly, the act of considered hoarding moved from rooms into furnishings: intricately compartmentalized cabinets.

Two large beige abstract wall sculptures with geometric and organic shapes mounted on a white gallery wall in a bright, minimalist space.

Two small shelves built into a textured, off-white wall hold miniature sculptures—a green chair on the upper shelf and a yellow chair on the lower shelf.

Returning to this age-old paradigm while also playing up that shift is polymathic Belgian artist Katrien Van Der Schueren. Rendered in her idiosyncratic, hand-carved fragments, the new The Ark of Us wall-sculpture series transforms the traditionally elite and showy wunderkammer practice into one that feels more widespread and discreetly personal.

Three large abstract wall sculptures in neutral tones are displayed on a white gallery wall with exposed beams and a white floor.

A wooden cabinet with abstract carved patterns, featuring an open compartment displaying a white ceramic cup with a green pattern.

Though decidedly maximalist in aesthetic and formation, these puzzle-like reliefs conceal secret chambers, perfectly suited to hold anything meaningful one might want to store away for safekeeping. The sum of many parts, a single mural can conceptually become a portrait, composed of held artifacts that each represent a different lived experience.

Two abstract, textured wall sculptures hang side by side on a white wall; one light beige and the other dark brown, each featuring small recessed shelves with objects inside.

Bronze-toned sculptural wall cabinet with geometric shapes, open compartments, and textured surfaces; one compartment contains a white bottle.

Presented at former fashion entrepreneur Lisa Perry’s residential gallery concept, Onna House, in East Hampton, the intricately adorned panels — both architectonic and molten — captivate against the stark white, modernist interior. They are strikingly articulated by natural light flooding in through floor-to-ceiling windows and large skylights.

Large, abstract wooden wall art with carved geometric and organic shapes, mounted on a white wall in a minimal, well-lit room.

A small clay vase is displayed in a rectangular niche set into an intricately carved wooden wall with abstract patterns.

The works are presented as part of the group exhibition In Her Hands: From Marble to Wood, on view through July 12. They were previously shown by Galerie JAG at PAD Paris in early April.

Close-up of carved dark wood panels with abstract patterns and the name "MARIEN VAN DER SCHUEREN" engraved on the surface.

A white gallery room displays three large abstract relief wall sculptures in beige, brown, and gray tones, each composed of geometric and organic shapes.

Van Der Schueren creates these unified, almost fossil-like compositions by physically cohering natural wood, stone, metal, plaster, resin, and pigment. Pushing the conventional limits of the craft techniques involved, she creates complexly detailed topographies––worlds in and of themselves.

Stone wall with abstract, geometric, and textured carvings divided into rectangular panels, featuring various shapes, lines, and raised patterns.

Two black leather chairs face each other in front of a wooden bench with a ceramic vase, set against a white wall with a large abstract dark wood art piece.

Dark carved wooden wall with abstract geometric patterns and a rectangular brass wall sconce attached near the center.

A white-walled gallery space with abstract, geometric wooden wall sculptures displayed inside, viewed through a large open doorway.

Large glass doors reveal a modern interior with abstract wall art, viewed from a gravel garden with mossy rocks and a tree in the foreground.

To learn more about this and other programming, visit onnahouse.com.

Photography by Rodrigo Rize.

Adrian Madlener is a Brussels-born, New York-based writer specializing in collectible and sustainable design. With a particular focus on topics that exemplify the best in craft-led experimentation, he’s committed to supporting talents that push the envelope in various disciplines.

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