Reality check
Museum MORE turns ten in 2025, and we are celebrating this milestone with Reality Check 鈥 10 Years of MORE, 10 Years of Realism. In this exhibition, MORE introduces the very latest Dutch Realism.
In Reality Check, Museum MORE presents work by more than 50 contemporary artists. From young to old, from established to recently graduated, and working in a huge variety of media: oils, photography, video, installation art, sculpture, drawing and graphic art. The most important criterion: the work is made in the Netherlands in the ten years that Museum MORE has been around.
Those keeping track of contemporary developments in art will be able to tell you: Realism is very much alive and kicking! Contemporary artists increasingly opt for figuration in their explorations of reality. Because it鈥檚 this reality that realism is all about. But what exactly is reality? This has been a significant question since the advent of realism in art, and it is perhaps more relevant than ever in modern times. Our age is characterised by a multitude of images and information. Fact checking is essential. Artificial intelligence presents us with an artificial reality, and elsewhere 鈥榓lternative truths鈥, manipulated images and Instagram filters are inescapable. There has hardly ever been such great demand for authenticity. Our age needs a reality check, and contemporary realists try to give us just that.
Every artist has their own way of addressing, mirroring and questioning reality. Artists like Wolfgang Messing, Caja Boogers and Daniela Schwabe do so by reflecting on contemporary visual culture. In a time in which huge numbers of images flash before us, and in which it is impossible to guarantee their authenticity, realism can offer a way out: an opportunity to dwell upon what is real.
Artists like Esiri-Erheriene Essi, Anya Janssen, Kaili Smith and Dion Rosina take a very different approach to challenging reality. They use their art to bring stories that were previously often ignored into the limelight: perspectives from the LGBTQIA+ community or cultural histories, for example. By showing their personal perspectives, they test reality: is it telling the whole story? Are there not multiple, personal realities, and are these all represented?
For years, realism has captured 鈥榯he real life鈥 and contemporary times. Realist artists use a recognisable, straightforward visual language to consider the real world. And this includes the darker sides of reality. Ronald Ophuis depicts international violence and conflict in his monumental paintings, in order to focus attention on the subject. During the coronavirus pandemic, Rosa Everts made a pencil drawing every day to record changing human behaviour, and with his Paper Monument for the Paperless, Domenique Himmelsbach de Vries gives a face to people without residence permits.
Realists sometimes choose innovative means to capture the contemporary reality: works in Reality Check include a digital painting by Sidi El Karchi and a 3D-printed sculpture by Telmo Pieper.
And sometimes they opt for traditional media: oil on canvas, ceramics (e.g. Koos Buster and Kira Fr枚se) and textiles (Joyce Overheul, Leonie Schneider) are all well represented in contemporary art. And by using these media, today鈥檚 realists reflect on contemporary reality: in hurried and fleeting times, a handmade, unique artwork can offer welcome refuge.
Recommended for you
Museum MORE turns ten in 2025, and we are celebrating this milestone with Reality Check 鈥 10 Years of MORE, 10 Years of Realism. In this exhibition, MORE introduces the very latest Dutch Realism.
In Reality Check, Museum MORE presents work by more than 50 contemporary artists. From young to old, from established to recently graduated, and working in a huge variety of media: oils, photography, video, installation art, sculpture, drawing and graphic art. The most important criterion: the work is made in the Netherlands in the ten years that Museum MORE has been around.
Those keeping track of contemporary developments in art will be able to tell you: Realism is very much alive and kicking! Contemporary artists increasingly opt for figuration in their explorations of reality. Because it鈥檚 this reality that realism is all about. But what exactly is reality? This has been a significant question since the advent of realism in art, and it is perhaps more relevant than ever in modern times. Our age is characterised by a multitude of images and information. Fact checking is essential. Artificial intelligence presents us with an artificial reality, and elsewhere 鈥榓lternative truths鈥, manipulated images and Instagram filters are inescapable. There has hardly ever been such great demand for authenticity. Our age needs a reality check, and contemporary realists try to give us just that.
Every artist has their own way of addressing, mirroring and questioning reality. Artists like Wolfgang Messing, Caja Boogers and Daniela Schwabe do so by reflecting on contemporary visual culture. In a time in which huge numbers of images flash before us, and in which it is impossible to guarantee their authenticity, realism can offer a way out: an opportunity to dwell upon what is real.
Artists like Esiri-Erheriene Essi, Anya Janssen, Kaili Smith and Dion Rosina take a very different approach to challenging reality. They use their art to bring stories that were previously often ignored into the limelight: perspectives from the LGBTQIA+ community or cultural histories, for example. By showing their personal perspectives, they test reality: is it telling the whole story? Are there not multiple, personal realities, and are these all represented?
For years, realism has captured 鈥榯he real life鈥 and contemporary times. Realist artists use a recognisable, straightforward visual language to consider the real world. And this includes the darker sides of reality. Ronald Ophuis depicts international violence and conflict in his monumental paintings, in order to focus attention on the subject. During the coronavirus pandemic, Rosa Everts made a pencil drawing every day to record changing human behaviour, and with his Paper Monument for the Paperless, Domenique Himmelsbach de Vries gives a face to people without residence permits.
Realists sometimes choose innovative means to capture the contemporary reality: works in Reality Check include a digital painting by Sidi El Karchi and a 3D-printed sculpture by Telmo Pieper.
And sometimes they opt for traditional media: oil on canvas, ceramics (e.g. Koos Buster and Kira Fr枚se) and textiles (Joyce Overheul, Leonie Schneider) are all well represented in contemporary art. And by using these media, today鈥檚 realists reflect on contemporary reality: in hurried and fleeting times, a handmade, unique artwork can offer welcome refuge.
Artists on show
- Tony Do膷ekal
- Abul Hisham
- Andrei Nitu
- Anna Reerds
- Anya Janssen
- Arjan van Helmond
- Bo Bosk
- Bobbi Essers
- Caja Boogers
- Casper Braat
- Daniela Schwabe
- Dion Rosina
- Domenique Himmelsbach de Vries
- Eline Brontsema
- Eniwaye Oluwaseyi
- Esiri Erheriene-Essi
- Florens Kool
- Gabrielle Pouillon
- HIMMELSBACH
- Ina van Zyl
- Jasper Hagenaar
- Jemima de Jonge
- Jhonie van Boeijen
- Joyce Overheul
- Kaili Smith
- Katrin Korfmann
- Kira Fröse
- Koos Buster
- Lenny Oosterwijk
- Leon Stoffelen
- Leonie Schneider
- Lieven Hendriks
- Lynne Leegte
- Maeve van Klaveren
- Maja Klaassens
- Marco Niemeijer
- Marjolein Rothman
- Maudy Alferink
- Menno Pasveer
- Merel Jansen
- Onno Meeuwsen
- Raafat Ballan
- Robin Speijer
- Ronald Ophuis
- Rosa Everts
- Sam Andrea
- Sam Werkhoven
- Sidi el Karchi
- Telmo Pieper
- Tengbeh Kamara
- Tinkebell.
- Tom van Veen
- Wolfgang Messing