• About us
  • Magazine
  • Submissions
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
No Result
View All Result
Ceramics Now
Subscribe now
  • News
  • Artist profiles
  • Articles
  • Exhibitions
  • Ceramic art
  • Interviews
  • Resources
    • Ceramics Now Weekly
    • 2026 Ceramics Calendar
    • Open call for ceramic artists
    • Ceramics job board
    • Pottery classes
Ceramics Now
  • News
  • Artist profiles
  • Articles
  • Exhibitions
  • Ceramic art
  • Interviews
  • Resources
    • Ceramics Now Weekly
    • 2026 Ceramics Calendar
    • Open call for ceramic artists
    • Ceramics job board
    • Pottery classes
No Result
View All Result
Ceramics Now
Home Exhibitions

Karen Bennicke: Manhattan Portraits at HB381 Gallery, New York

September 23, 2024
in Exhibitions
MP IIIA, 2023
MP IV, 2023
MP IVA, 2024
MP VI, 2023
MP VIB, 2024
MP VII, 2023

Karen Bennicke: Manhattan Portraits is on view at HB381 Gallery, New York

September 6 – October 19, 2024

HB381 is pleased to announce Manhattan Portraits, an exhibition by Karen Bennicke (b. 1943, Denmark). In this new body of work, Bennicke interprets cartographic renderings of the city and its flows of movement, transmuting them into abstract, three-dimensional forms. The artist’s systematic process transforms data points describing urban and architectural space into a complex network of carvings, excavations, and crisscrossing topographies. City streets, urban parks, traffic routes, and subway lines are layered on top of one another, compressed into an afterimage of the forces that created them. Ultimately, Bennicke’s slab-formed sculptures develop a quality of artifacts or fossils. While each work arises from the implementation of a set of rules, the end result is enigmatic and magnetic, charged with arcane symbolism. The earth-toned terracotta and monochrome geometries prompt philosophical rumination on the city as a set of contested relations; her sculptures suggest that, obscured by time, traffic, and constant dynamism, our environment is ultimately unknowable, constantly in a process of formation and sedimentation.

With Manhattan Portraits, Bennicke returns us to a project carried out in the late 1970s by architect Bernard Tschumi titled The Manhattan Transcripts. This book-length series of diagrams, photographs, drawings, and short texts sought to find new ways of thinking about architecture through the use of narratives of motion. Many of these accounts were tinged with the tropes of hardboiled fiction: a chase scene in Central Park culminating in murder, a lethal fall from a high-rise tower, a “border crossing” along Manhattan’s 42nd Street, and a series of unusual actions performed in inner courtyards. In staging these narratives within the vernacular of the built environment, Tschumi suggests that, in one way or another, “all architecture … is about love and death.”

Bennicke’s Manhattan Portraits reinterprets the same web of streets, piers, and subway lines that fascinated Tschumi. Zeroing in on nine locations in Lower Manhattan, she inserts an emotional tenor and sculptural sensibility unfamiliar to the formalist project of mapping, yet which feels like a natural extension of Tschumi’s earlier Transcripts. The elongated, angular, and precise ceramic sculptures she produced synthesize the three worlds the architect sought to unite: the world of objects, the world of movements, and the world of events.

Bennicke’s work is featured in numerous museum public collections, including the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Museum of Modern Ceramic Art in Gifu, the Nationalmuseum of Stockholm, and the Designmuseum Danmark in Copenhagen. She is the recipient of the Thorvald Bindesboll Medal from the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts and a Lifelong Achievement Award from the Danish Arts Foundation.

Contact
info@hb381gallery.com

HB381
381 Broadway
New York, NY 10013
United States

Captions

  • Installation views by Joe Kramm.
  • Karen Bennicke, MP IIIA, 2023, Terracotta, slab built, 39.25″ H x 6.25″ W x 10″ D. Photo credit Dorte Krogh
  • Karen Bennicke, MP IV, 2023, Terracotta, slab built, 34.75″ H x 6.25″ W x 6″ D. Photo credit Dorte Krogh
  • Karen Bennicke, MP IVA, 2024, Terracotta, slab built, 40.5″ H x 13.5″ W x 9.25″ D. Photo credit Dorte Krogh
  • Karen Bennicke, MP VI, 2023, Terracotta, slab built, 18.5″ H x 13.75″ W x 4.5″ D. Photo credit Dorte Krogh
  • Karen Bennicke, MP VIB, 2024, Glazed faience, slab built, 15.75″ H x 18.5″ W x 6.75″ D. Photo credit Dorte Krogh
  • Karen Bennicke, MP VII, 2023, Terracotta, slab built, 16.5″ H x 15″ W x 4.75″ D. Photo credit Dorte Krogh
Tags: HB381HB381 GalleryKaren BennickeNew York

Related Posts

Chenlu Hou and Chiara No ceramics
Exhibitions

Chenlu Hou and Chiara No: What the Hands Remember to Hear at The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield

April 27, 2026
Magdalena Suarez Frimkess ceramics
Exhibitions

Magdalena Suarez Frimkess. Organized by Shio Kusaka at David Zwirner, Los Angeles

April 23, 2026
Camila Capra ceamics
Exhibitions

Camila Capra: punto de encuentro (meeting point) at Abra Espacio, San José

April 22, 2026
Lotte Westphael ceramics
Exhibitions

Lotte Westphael: Where Colours Dissolve into Weightless Nothingness at Galerie Maria Wettergren, Paris

April 20, 2026

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *





Latest Artist Profiles

Sarah Gross ceramics
Artists

Sarah Gross

April 28, 2026
Daniela Bergschneider ceramic artist
Artists

Daniela Bergschneider

April 27, 2026
Jeanne Rimbert ceramics
Artists

Jeanne Rimbert

March 26, 2026
Japheth Asiedu-Kwarteng ceramic artist
Artists

Japheth Asiedu-Kwarteng

March 25, 2026

Latest Articles

Nina Malterud ceramics
Interviews

The Narrative Lies in the Material: An interview with Norwegian ceramic artist Nina Malterud

by Ceramics Now
April 28, 2026
Linda Rotua Sormin ceramics
Articles

Linda Rotua Sormin’s Uncertain Ground at the Gardiner Museum

by Ceramics Now
April 21, 2026
Julia Phillips ceramic art
Articles

Julia Phillips: Inside, Before They Speak at the Barbican

by Ceramics Now
April 15, 2026
Andile Dyalvane ceramics
Articles

Ceramics as Living Presence: Experiencing Andile Dyalvane’s iNgqweji

by Ceramics Now
April 9, 2026
Instagram Facebook LinkedIn
Ceramics Now

Ceramics Now is a leading independent art publication specialized in contemporary ceramics. Since 2010, we promote and document contemporary ceramic art and empower artists working with ceramics.

Pages

  • About us
  • Magazine
  • Submissions
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Subscribe to Ceramics Now Magazine

Join a vibrant community of over 25,000 readers and gain access to in-depth articles, essays, reviews, exclusive news, and critical reflections on contemporary ceramics.

SUBSCRIBE TODAY

© 2010-2026 Ceramics Now - Inspiring the next generation of ceramic artists.

  • Subscribe to Ceramics Now
  • News
  • Artist profiles
  • Articles
  • Exhibitions
  • Ceramic art
  • Interviews
  • Resources
    • Ceramics Now Weekly
    • Ceramics Calendar 2026
    • Open call for ceramic artists
    • Ceramics job board
    • Pottery classes
  • About us
    • Ceramics Now Magazine
    • Submissions
    • Advertise with Ceramics Now
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result

© 2010-2026 Ceramics Now - Inspiring the next generation of ceramic artists.