Overview

“The thread forms itineraries, systems and textures in which our thoughts are located, and new ways of organizing matter, allowing different thoughts, opening new paths in unknown terrain. »

Cecilie Bendixen is drawn to natural phenomena, and she poetically explores the way in which essential dynamics can be captured by her sculptures though different materials and methods. Materials themselves often guide Bendixen through her empirical practice, where she gains inspiration from movement and form through touch and sight, carefully observing how a material can be approached. She considers the different qualities that make it unique: its shape, texture, strength, how it looks when it is fixed, and how it can interact with natural dynamics.

 

Working with the tactility of textiles, bamboo, threads, paper, and other fibrous materials, Bendixen invites intangible elements, such as space, sound, and light to interact with her sculptures. Her background in architecture influences her artistic practice, creating an interaction between the materials she works with and the space in which they are displayed. The space becomes a part of her pieces and the materials a part of the space: absorbed, reflected, regulated, burned, and disintegrated

 
Works
  • Tentative Spaces Under
    Tentative Spaces Under
  • Tentative Spaces Over
    Tentative Spaces Over
  • Draped Nimbostratus
    Draped Nimbostratus
  • Volume
    Volume
  • Much
    Much
  • Burned Water Images I
    Burned Water Images I
  • Burned Water Images VI
    Burned Water Images VI
  • Sun Disc. Madrid
    Sun Disc. Madrid
  • Sun Disc. Misty Sun
    Sun Disc. Misty Sun
  • Wind Construction
    Wind Construction
  • Sun Disc (Simpliciano)
    Sun Disc (Simpliciano)
  • Wave
    Wave
  • Pine Crystal
    Pine Crystal
  • Sisal Crystal
    Sisal Crystal
Biography
 
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.
Exhibitions
Publications
News
Enquire

Send me more information on Cecilie Bendixen

Please fill in the fields marked with an asterisk
Receive newsletters *

* denotes required fields

In order to respond to your enquiry, we will process the personal data you have supplied in accordance with our privacy policy (available on request). You can unsubscribe or change your preferences at any time by clicking the link in our emails.