
Aquarium III
Cardboard box, carved cedar wood, 2025, 50x48x38 cm
The first publicly accessible aquarium opened in London in 1853. Known as the Fish House, it was a major attraction on par with the great art exhibitions of the time. The aquarium revealed what had previously been invisible beneath the water’s surface. It made the mysterious wet something one could acquire. To see it was to own it.
The exhibition FISH HOUSE animates and explores the contradictory need to possess fluid life through two series of sculptures. Weighted bronze sculptures of swimming veils and empty containers with wooden legs reflect on the impossible task the aquarium takes on: the vibrant, diffuse, and boundless life in water that is simultaneously confined and exposed.
Historically in Victorian England, women were advised not to look at aquariums, as they were deemed too “dramatic” and “vulgar” for their “delicate” eyes. Perhaps it was this potent contradiction and impossibility they sensed; the aquarium must not exist. The aquarium’s popularity during the Industrial Revolution was no coincidence. Here, men could control a micro-environment in a world whose macrocosm was in total flux. Perhaps it became a tool for them to uphold and preserve gender roles, class structures, and imperialism? In this exhibition, we set it free. Let them escape and swim away.

Installation view






Aquarium I
Carved linden tree, PVC storage box, found table, ventilation pipe, 2025



Aquarium IV
Cardboard box, carved cedar wood, 2025, 50x48x38 cm


Aquarium II
Carved abachi wood, PVC storage box, ventilation pipes, brass fittings, 2025, 62x35x39 cm


Aquarium III
Carved cedar wood, cardboard box, 2025, 50x48x38 cm


Aquarium VI
Carved linden tree, PVC storage box, ventilationpipe, brass fittings, 2025, 44x40x30 cm



Untitled I
Bronze, 28x15 cm


Untitled II
Bronze, 14x13 cm


Aquarium plant
Found object, plastic, 2025, 6x3cm

A special thanks to Poul Johansen Foundation and The Hielmstierne-Rosencroneske Foundation for generously supporting the exhibition. All photographs by Morten Underbjerg.