SUPERFLEX: Rainbows, Sponges, Flies, and Spoons brings three decades of work by the Danish collective to the MAK Center at the Schindler House from June 12 to September 13, 2026. The exhibition uses four distinct works to explore how familiar objects and images can be rearranged into something slightly off balance, and how that shift changes the way they read.
The setting fits the project well. Designed in 1922 by R.M. Schindler as a multi-family dwelling, the Schindler House was built around shared life and individual space. SUPERFLEX responds to that history by giving each work its own area while keeping them in quiet relation to one another. The result is less a single narrative than a sequence of encounters, each one self-contained and yet connected by tone and method.
Included in the show are
The Spoons (1994), an early photographic lightbox of spoons arranged in a circle;
Hunga Tonga Rainbow (2016), in which a mirrored rainbow creates a false sense of symmetry;
Proposal for the World’s Second-Tallest Building, a sculptural work made from ceramic sponge that imagines an architecture built from an unlikely material; and
Two Flies Staring at Each Other (on a Glass of Water) (2025), a carefully staged sculptural vignette that feels almost impossible in nature but precise in form.
SUPERFLEX has long worked with humor, repetition and small disruptions to address larger questions around systems, infrastructure and shared life. That approach appears clearly here. The objects are ordinary at first glance, but each one slips away from expectation and opens a space for attention. A rainbow is doubled. A sponge becomes a building material. Flies are turned into a formal composition. A handful of spoons becomes a pattern with a strange kind of order.
Organized by Beth Stryker with Susan Sherrick and Caroline Ellen Liou, the exhibition keeps its focus on how collective systems and private perception meet in everyday things. It is a small show in scale, but it carries a sharp view of how images and objects can quietly reshape what seems familiar.
Image:
The Spoons, 1994 © R.M. Schindler