Art as Consciousness, on view at Thomas Erben Gallery from January 15 to February 21, 2026, brings together a group of artists whose practices engage with perception, awareness, and the unseen structures that shape reality. Featuring works by Anna and Bernhard Blume, Eli Bornowsky, Mike Cloud, Róza El-Hassan, Barry Gerson, Harriet Korman, Mehran Mohajer, Dona Nelson, and Adrian Piper, the exhibition reflects a growing cultural turn toward spirituality and alternate modes of understanding in response to the limitations of materialist worldviews.
For centuries, Western thought has been organized around the assumption that matter precedes mind. Recent scientific and philosophical inquiries have unsettled this hierarchy, suggesting instead that consciousness may be fundamental rather than incidental. Within this framework, reality is no longer fixed or singular, but fluid, relational, and continuously unfolding. The works in
Art as Consciousness resonate with this shift, proposing art as a means of accessing states of awareness that exist beyond empirical measurement or linear logic.
Across a wide range of materials and approaches, the artists in the exhibition explore how meaning arises through sensation, memory, and intuition. Some works gesture toward altered states or ritualized processes, while others investigate repetition, fragmentation, and abstraction as pathways into deeper forms of attention. Rather than offering definitive statements, these works remain open-ended, inviting viewers to engage with ambiguity and to recognize perception itself as an active, creative force. Form and matter function not as endpoints, but as conduits through which inner experience becomes momentarily visible.
Rooted in Thomas Erben Gallery’s long-standing interest in the intangible dimensions of art,
Art as Consciousness proposes that artistic practice can act as a bridge between the material and the immaterial. Here, art is not merely an object to be observed, but an encounter—one that encourages reflection on the nature of existence, individuality, and interconnectedness. The exhibition ultimately frames consciousness not as a private phenomenon, but as a shared field in which creativity, perception, and meaning continuously evolve.
Image:
Adrian Piper. Food for the Spirit (Image no.1), 1971
B/W silver gelatin print
14.5 × 15in. © Adrian Piper