We're currently closed.We will open again on Friday 21/11 at 19:00

You have

items in your cart

Olof Marsja

Guided tour for blind and visually impaired visitors

Special guided tour in collaboration with Stichting KUBES

:

23/10/2025 –
– 30/11
A wooden and multicolored glass sculpture resembling two trumpets is suspended from a white ceiling and resting on a wooden structure. The surrounding walls are grey, and the carpet underneath is blue.

Together with Stichting KUBES, 1646 organises a free guided tour especially designed for blind and visually impaired visitors on Thursday morning October 23, starting at 11:00.

Artist Olof Marsja draws inspiration from his Sámi heritage, the only officially recognised indigenous people in Europe. Through sculptures, installations and audio, he explores his background and identity and connects them to contemporary culture.

During the tour, you will view the artworks in a small group. With descriptions, tactile materials, scents and sounds, we will discover the exhibition To carry this body of an animal forth together.

Would you like to join the tour? Let us know by sending an email to welcome@1646.nl

Info

About

Olof Marsja works with sculptural expressions that analyse and blend uncannily the ultra modern contemporary digital reality and pop culture with history and traditions connected to his Sámi heritage and Duodji (Sámi craft). Crafts and materials are central in Marsja’s research and his works are deeply marked by the plurality of practical knowledge and references that characterise the hybrid forms with which he seriously and humorously analyses questions of history, the contemporary world and identity.

Marsja holds a BFA from Konstfack University of Arts, Crafts & Design in Stockholm (2017) and was a recipient of the Stena Foundation Culture Scholarship in 2023 and the Maria Bonnier Dahlin Stipend in 2019.

He has recently exhibited at Örebro Konsthall (Örebro, 2025), Gammel Strand (Copenhagen, 2024), Buffalo AKG Art Museum (Buffalo, 2024), Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma (Helsinki, 2024), Gothenburg Museum of Art (2023), NEVVEN (Bologna, 2024 and Gothenburg, 2021), Göteborgs Konsthall (2023 and 2020), Moderna Museet (Stockholm, 2022), Lyon Contemporary Art Biennale (2022), Luleå Biennial (2022 and 2018), The Sámi Center for Contemporary Art (Karasjok, 2021), Röhsska Museet (Gothenburg, 2021), and Bonniers Konsthall (Stockholm, 2019) among others.

Marsja lives and works in Gothenburg, Sweden.

Share

Related