:host { --enviso-primary-color: #FF8A21; --enviso-secondary-color: #FF8A21; font-family: 'boijmans-font', Arial, Helvetica,sans-serif; } .enviso-basket-button-wrapper { position: relative; top: 5px; } .enviso-btn { font-size: 22px; } .enviso-basket-button-items-amount { font-size: 12px; line-height: 1; background: #F18700; color: white; border-radius: 50%; width: 24px; height: 24px; min-width: 0; display: flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; text-align: center; font-weight: bold; padding: 0; top: -13px; right: -12px; } .enviso-dialog-content { overflow: auto; } Previous Next Facebook Instagram Twitter Pinterest Tiktok Linkedin Back to top

Salty Tears, a Bare Wall, and a Playful Emergency Button

The artworks in this exhibition are loosely grouped around the question: How do we remain human in these complicated times, full of small and big questions?

up to and including 29 August 2026
Depot

Open: Thursday to Sunday

Location: Compartment A4.04

We are tossed between the romance of solitude in Mark Manders’ work, feel our vulnerability in Guido Geelen’s ‘bare wall’, taste the salty tears of Ai Ozaki, or witness the defiance of Matthew Monahan. ‘It’s all right,’ Pieter Laurens Mol whispers to us, while Amalia Pica picks up a megaphone to make her point. Thankfully, Koos Buster offers a humorous escape with his ‘World Peace button’.
The following artists are on display until August 29, 2026:

Ruben Bellinkx, Koos Buster, René Daniëls, Guido Geelen, Rezi van Lankveld, Mark Manders, Pieter Laurens Mol, Matthew Monahan, Constant A. Nieuwenhuys, Navid Nuur, Eniwaye Oluwaseyi, Ai Ozaki, Amalia Pica, Marien Schouten, Sarah van Sonsbeeck, JCJ Vanderheyden, Carel Visser, and Henk Visch.