Bendixen’s empirical method gracefully blurs the boundaries between art, science and architecture. Her works speak to the mind as much as to the senses, while maintaining a subtle tension between the immaterial and the tangible. It is sometimes said that one of the functions of art is to make the invisible visible. Cecilie Bendixen’s phenomenal sculptures seem to operate somewhere in these spheres.
Cecilie Bendixen’s interdisciplinary approach to art, involving science, design, crafts and architecture makes her an important contributor to the contemporary art scene. She was nominated for the Nordic Textile Awards in 2017, and the same year she received the Bindesboell Medal. Her works are part of important private and public collections, such as the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne; Danish Art Foundation; and the Galila Barzilaï-Hollander Collection, Brussels.