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Anticipation in counterfactual art entails envisioning future scenarios shaped by various contingencies, which serves to question conventional predictions and expectations. Artists use this approach to construct speculative narratives that examine how diverse choices and events could reshape the world, encouraging viewers to rethink their outlook on the future.
The solo project titled “…and Europe will be stunned” by Israeli Dutch artist Yael Bartana premiered at the Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven on March 24, 2012. This exhibition features a video trilogy centering on the Jewish Renaissance Movement in Poland learn more
The solo project titled “…and Europe will be stunned” by Israeli Dutch artist Yael Bartana premiered at the Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven on March 24, 2012. This exhibition features a video trilogy centering on the Jewish Renaissance Movement in Poland (JRMiP), advocating for the return of 3.3 million Jews to Poland. The trilogy, originally showcased learn more

…and Europe will be stunned, 2012

Yael Bartana
Exodus 2048 Mixed-media installation – maze, 6 texts in lightboxes 40 x 40 cm (ground floor), refugee camp (clocktower) Produced by Van Abbemuseum for Be(com)ing Dutch, Eindhoven/NL, 2008  Recreated at the New Museum, New York, 2009 The project was presented learn more
Exodus 2048 Mixed-media installation – maze, 6 texts in lightboxes 40 x 40 cm (ground floor), refugee camp (clocktower) Produced by Van Abbemuseum for Be(com)ing Dutch, Eindhoven/NL, 2008  Recreated at the New Museum, New York, 2009 The project was presented at the Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven as part of the “Be(com)ing Dutch” exhibition, Michael Blum’s learn more

Exodus 2048

Michael Blum
Project Europe will collapse under the weight of its contradictions, according to Thomas Bellinck’s House of European History in Exile. His fake museum of the future narrates the history of the European Union’s failure, examining the missteps from the early learn more
Project Europe will collapse under the weight of its contradictions, according to Thomas Bellinck’s House of European History in Exile. His fake museum of the future narrates the history of the European Union’s failure, examining the missteps from the early 21st century to the year 2063. The museum resembles a collection of bureaucratic artifacts: maps, learn more

House of European History in Exile, 2013

Thomas Bellinck