Alexander May Bonds with Dries Van Noten
May drew inspiration from the Japanese art of Ikebana, where each piece plays with placement and arrangement. The backdrops and environments are kept neutral, without any colors and forms, and are placed within the context of a manmade object. The objects' placement becomes the art, and viewers get an entirely new perspective on the harmony between the natural and the manmade.
But, how did this collaboration between SIZED and Dries Van Noten come to be? Curator and creative director Alexander May shares that collaboration is the core of every project and exhibition that SIZED puts forward. He says, “Of course, I was excited when Dries Van Noten reached out because I have been a fan of theirs for years. I have always been drawn towards their eclectic use of color, shape, and material, and with each Dries Van Noten location being so uniquely curated, it felt like the perfect match for SIZED to curate an exhibition.”
May's curatorial process is grounded in intuition, trusting what attracts him and letting himself get pulled towards what he feels most creatively energizes him. He loves a lively mixture of textures, from gloss to matte and grain. With an exhibition like this, the viewers are pulled into the world of physicality and get to see what happens when natural and artificial objects are together.
As for the conversation around which artists to include, May explains that he was most attracted to the areas in which objects connect to each other through placement, arrangement, material, and history. The exhibition brings together everything that SIZED stands for — form, texture, color, overall environment, and diversity. BOND showcases hyper-local as well as global curation with local artists, and international works brought together just for the exhibition.
View selections from the exhibition below.