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On Show After Sunset: Visual Margin

Mar 20, 2021 - May 23, 2021

With Visual Margin, the Nederlands Fotomuseum proudly presents innovative art pieces, made by three talented artists, which are projected onto the windows of the museum. This exhibition comes to life as soon as the sun has set and can be admired by everyone from outside the building. Yu-Ching Chiang, Andreas Drosdz and Ana Brumat, three artists who recently graduated from the Piet Zwart Institute in Rotterdam, were inspired by the Gallery of Honour of Dutch Photography, which shows the development of 180 years of Dutch photography. In Visual Margin, their work offers a glimpse into photography’s future.

Visual Margin is the fourth edition of Night in / Day out, a project by the Nederlands Fotomuseum in which artworks are projected onto the windows of the museum from sunset to sunrise. In 2021, Night in / Day out will focus on collaboration with students from various art academies who will be asked to reflect on the Gallery of Honour of Dutch Photography and showcase their interpretation through their work. Go here to see previous editions of Night in / Day out.

What innovations will arise within the art of photography and how will they impact the Gallery of Honour in the future? More and more devices are capturing images in a way that goes beyond traditional photography, and people are increasingly using this technology to capture the world. Cell phones, satellite cameras, QR codes, and even photographic network practices show that the spectator is not always a human being. How long will humans be the only narrators of history? What would photographs look like if Artificial Intelligence (AI) had created them?

Visual Margin offers the viewer a peek into the future through the windows of the museum. It challenges the concept of the Gallery of Honour and raises questions about the contemporary and future status of photography and imaging.



With Visual Margin, the Nederlands Fotomuseum proudly presents innovative art pieces, made by three talented artists, which are projected onto the windows of the museum. This exhibition comes to life as soon as the sun has set and can be admired by everyone from outside the building. Yu-Ching Chiang, Andreas Drosdz and Ana Brumat, three artists who recently graduated from the Piet Zwart Institute in Rotterdam, were inspired by the Gallery of Honour of Dutch Photography, which shows the development of 180 years of Dutch photography. In Visual Margin, their work offers a glimpse into photography’s future.

Visual Margin is the fourth edition of Night in / Day out, a project by the Nederlands Fotomuseum in which artworks are projected onto the windows of the museum from sunset to sunrise. In 2021, Night in / Day out will focus on collaboration with students from various art academies who will be asked to reflect on the Gallery of Honour of Dutch Photography and showcase their interpretation through their work. Go here to see previous editions of Night in / Day out.

What innovations will arise within the art of photography and how will they impact the Gallery of Honour in the future? More and more devices are capturing images in a way that goes beyond traditional photography, and people are increasingly using this technology to capture the world. Cell phones, satellite cameras, QR codes, and even photographic network practices show that the spectator is not always a human being. How long will humans be the only narrators of history? What would photographs look like if Artificial Intelligence (AI) had created them?

Visual Margin offers the viewer a peek into the future through the windows of the museum. It challenges the concept of the Gallery of Honour and raises questions about the contemporary and future status of photography and imaging.



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Statendam 1 Rotterdam, Netherlands 3072

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