May 19, 2025

ALICJA KWADE: TELOS TALES AT PACE GALLERY NEW YORK



ALICJA KWADE: TELOS TALES AT PACE GALLERY

508 & 510 WEST 25th STREET NEW YORK

May 7, 2025 – August 15, 2025




ALICJA KWADE: TELOS TALES AT PACE GALLERY

508 & 510 WEST 25th STREET NEW YORK

May 7, 2025 – August 15, 2025

New York – Pace is pleased to present Alicja Kwade: Telos Tales, an exhibition of new work by Alicja Kwade, at its 508 and 510 West 25th Street galleries in New York. Featuring never-before-seen monumental sculptures alongside new mixed media works, this marks Kwade’s debut solo show at Pace in New York since the gallery began representing her in 2023. On view from May 7 to August 15, the exhibition coincides with this year’s edition of Frieze New York.

Kwade is known internationally for sculptures, large-scale public installations, films, photographs, and works on paper that engage poetically and critically with scientific and philosophical concepts. Through a distinctive vocabulary encompassing reflection, repetition, and the manipulation of everyday objects and natural materials, the artist raises questions about structures and systems that govern and shape our daily lives. In her contemplative works, which dismantle boundaries of perception, she challenges commonly accepted ideas and beliefs while proposing new modes of seeing and understanding reality.

Kwade’s work is represented in the collections of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C., the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin, the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra, mumok – Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig in Vienna, and the Yuz Museum in Shanghai, among other international institutions. Her public sculptures can also be found around the world—at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California and MIT in Cambridge, Massachusetts as well as sites in Germany, Italy, Sweden, and other countries. Her practice is part of a lineage of pioneering 20th century abstractionists within Pace’s program, including Louise Nevelson—who shaped what would come to be known as installation art with her iconic sculptural “environments”—and Agnes Martin, whose work was exhibited alongside Kwade’s in a two-artist exhibition at the gallery’s Los Angeles space in 2024.

At the center of Alicja Kwade: Telos Tales are three large-scale sculptures in which powder-coated steel frames gradually transform into amorphous, tree-like bronze forms. The architectural, linear structures slowly dissolve into organic shapes, as if one material is evolving into the other. The sculptures unfold into a distinct, self-contained configuration—complete in itself, yet intrinsically connected to a larger conceptual framework. Each work is named for a concept from Aristotle’s fourfold theory of causes: Causa Materialis, Causa Efficiens, and Causa Formalis. The fourth cause, Causa Finalis—the purpose, or telos—remains unnamed but not unconsidered: it is implicit in the exhibition’s title.

Another work, PhaseChase, explores the intangible nature of time. This piece consists of a highly polished stainless steel pipe suspended from the ceiling. Embedded within the pipe is a double-sided clock face, mirrored from within to create a multiplication of reflections that appear to dissolve into a curved, reflective surface.

Though distinct in form and concept, these works engage in a dynamic dialogue. Material and time intersect, literally and conceptually, generating a space in which perception, causality, and temporality become intertwined.

In this immersive exhibition, Kwade deepens her long-standing interest in time as a structuring principle of perception, reality, and causality. Her works reflect on the cyclical, linear, and ultimately elusive nature of temporal experience and its interdependence on both natural and constructed systems—an ongoing theme in her practice. This presentation showcases new developments in Kwade’s engagement with material, form, and concept, and it exemplifies the experimental spirit that has defined her work from the very beginning of her career.

Kwade’s exhibition at Pace in New York will follow her first solo institutional presentation in Hong Kong, which was presented this year at Tai Kwun. In the fall, the artist will mount a solo exhibition at M Leuven in Belgium.

https://www.pacegallery.com/exhibitions/alicja-kwade-telos-tales/





TELOS TALES, 2025

Stainless Steel, Powder Coated Stainless Steel,

Patinated Bronze, Clock and sSound Installation

Dimensions Variable

© Pace Gallery

























CAUSA FORMALIS, 2025

Patinated Bronze, Powder Coated Stainless Steel

Dimensions: 447.9 cm × 909.6 cm × 574.2 cm

© Pace Gallery







SUNDERSTATE VI, 2025

Polished Glass, Clock, Patinated Bronze

Dimensions: 65.7 cm × 30 cm

© Pace Gallery





SUNDERSTATE VIII, 2025

Polished Glass, Clock, Patinated Bronze

Dimensions: 70.8 cm × 60 cm

© Pace Gallery































ALICJA KWADE STUDIO





































ALICJA KWADE STUDIO












ALICJA KWADE TELOS TALES

In Telos Tales, Alicja Kwade composes an environment in which philosophical inquiry is crystallized as sculpture. Kwade’s new works extend her longstanding exploration of time, nature, and perception by orchestrating our embodied experience of materiality, reflection, and void. The environment she has constructed, in which architectonic structures seem locked in an arrested metamorphosis—transforming from open, rectilinear bronze forms into gnarled tree branches whose patinated surfaces suggest lichen—raises foundational and often deeply metaphysical questions. Her work engages the classic philosophical question of whether we complete nature or merely replicate it—investigating the porous border between what we create and what, in turn, creates us.

The crux of Kwade’s questioning revolves around both the concept and the everyday experience of time. Folding space and substance into an architecture of perceptual dislocation, Kwade draws on Immanuel Kant’s idea that time is not an external constant—not some “thing” out there in the world—but rather an inner framework, a subjective “inner clock.” Through a strange tension between fact and illusion, Kwade literalizes time’s interiority through the form of the tube. We move through time, yet we never truly experience it; we are always in a perpetual "now,” a kind of “inner tube” suspended in the inexorable unfolding of events.

Kwade has long used clocks as elements in her practice, harnessing the image of the clock for all its cultural references, but also utilizing its everyday function as sculptural material. In Telos Tales, this forest of metamorphosing steel structures is interwoven with discrete sculptures consisting of long, stainless-steel tubes embedded with working clocks. These works function like spatial riddles. They evoke inner organs or conduits, suggesting that time is not just something we move through, but something we are made of—and that we participate in making through the activity of thought and perception. “All the clocks display the same seemingly significant now-time, and they do so in a strikingly insistent way: their perfectly synchronized ticking is audible throughout the space, and all three show exactly the same quasi-now at once.” Yet the “now” that they represent is always already an illusion; by the time we register it, it has already slipped away.

As one moves through the gallery, the reflections of the clock on the concave inner surfaces of the tube—and the distorted images of the surrounding environment on its exterior—ripple and shift, registering our own bodily presence. Two kinds of movement intersect: the movement of the hand of the clock, and the shifting reflections of both exterior and interior space. “The reflection inside is about time as movement,” Kwade explains. Space is segmented into dual realms, inner and outer, mirrored and distorted, echoing the way our own embodiment divides objective reality from our own inner perceptions through the threshold of the senses. This dreamlike warping effect created through the play of reflection and metamorphosis suggests a surreal unbinding of the temporal fixities that would otherwise be associated with the authority of the clock.

Kwade’s engagement with the notion of telos harkens back to Aristotle, who understood it as a concept of intrinsic purpose—an endpoint already embedded in all beginnings. In Aristotle’s thought, telos is not simply an end; it is the seed, a hidden future nestled in the origin of everything. The titles of the patinated bronze sculptures, which are half-organic and half-industrial, are drawn from Aristotle’s own categories: Causa Materialis, Causa Efficiens, and Causa Formalis. These terms respectively refer to the raw matter to be shaped, the effect that brings about the end result of that shaping, and the shape of matter itself as form. This engagement with the ontology of matter undergirds Kwade’s efforts not to imitate nature but to complete it, to extend it, to give it “another turn.” In this way, her sculptures hover between architecture, engineering, and organic form—they are as much “grown” as they are forged. They are not defined by a category but exist in between, like strange creatures half-grown in logic, half-born from myth.

There is also a mystical and haunting quality to Kwade’s environment, which suggests another notion of time: the passing away of organic life and the memories it leaves in the form of residues and revenants. The tree branches that Kwade used to cast the bronze forms were collected from discarded matter on the streets of Berlin, traces of urban planning. Kwade gathered them while working together with local municipal gardening authorities who were responsible for their removal. “They are,” says Kwade, “the wild and dead ends of urban park, garden, and forest planning.” The resulting works are marked by the history of their former lives as trees. In the gallery space, they appear almost sentient—their branches twisting like sea monsters, suggesting the surreal hallucinations of a forest at night, the shapes the mind projects onto chaos. This “inner picture” we cast onto the external world is materialized through Kwade’s fusion and confusion of natural and artificial. Her forms are machines of memory and bodies of wonder. They suggest an inner monster of instinct and affect wrapped in a skeleton of mathematics and precision.

Memory itself becomes an active presence in Kwade’s work. What happens to the world, to objects, when we try to remember them? What happens to time when we try to pin it down? Kwade’s sculptures feel like memory’s scaffolding, the bones of things lost or yet to be. They carry a dystopian undertone—a quiet reckoning with what we are leaving behind, and an ominous attempt to reconstruct nature in our own distorted image.

Telos Tales is a meditation on the human condition: to be embodied in time and space, to navigate the tension between the affective and the metaphysical, the instinctual and the constructed. The works pulse with contradiction—unsettling and serene, logical and wild, fixed and fluid. In places, they seem to struggle, merge, or transform. The result is not resolution but resonance—a space where philosophy is sculpted into form and time itself is given shape.

Oliver Shulz

https://alicjakwade.com/exhibitions/telos-tales





PHASECHASE, 2025

Stainless Steel, Clock, Sound Installation

Dimensions: 198 cm × 102 cm

© Pace Gallery



























WHAT PART OF ME DON’T YOU KNOW, 2023

Paper, Glass, Marble, Brass

Dimensions: 254 cm × 80 cm × 80 cm

© Pace Gallery











































ALICJA KWADE

Alicja Kwade (b. 1979, Katowice, Poland) investigates and questions universally accepted notions of space, time, science, and philosophy by breaking down frames of perception in her work. Kwade’s multifaceted practice spans sculpture, installation, video, and photography. She utilizes quotidian and found objects such as rocks, mirrors, lamps, and clocks to explore profound ideas about the fabric of reality. Kwade’s use of elements such as copper, iron, human-made plastics, and recycled materials reflects her interest in both physics and chemistry, using art to bring core concepts together and examine the phenomena of the physical world.

Her works often utilize the alchemical properties of her chosen materials to reveal the nature of the systems we use to understand the world— such as those for marking time or uncovering the origins of the universe—distilling complex ideas through form, material, and composition. Through her practice, Kwade examines planetary systems, molecular compositions, and mathematical frameworks, challenging conventional modes of thinking and exploring both the physical and metaphysical. While her work is often associated with Minimalism, Kwade approaches her practice with an eye toward Conceptual art.

Important exhibitions of Kwade’s work include Alicja Kwade: Von Explosionen zu Ikonen Piepenbrock Förderpreis für Skulptur 2008 WerkRaum. 25, Hamburger Bahnhof, Museum für Gegenwart, Berlin (2008); Alicja Kwade: Probleme massereicher Körper, Westfälischer Kunstverein, Münster, Germany (2010); Alicja Kwade: Warten auf Gegenwart, Kunstmuseum St. Gallen, Switzerland (2014), which traveled to Kunsthalle Nürnberg, Germany (2015); Alicja Kwade: Monolog aus dem 11ten Stock, Haus am Waldsee, Berlin (2015); Perception is Reality - Über die Abbildung von Wirklichkeit und Virtuellen Welten, Frankfurter Kunstverein, Germany (2017); Alicja Kwade: Out of Ousia, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen (2018); Alicja Kwade: “Being...”, Neuer Berliner Kunstverein, Berlin (2018); Alicja Kwade: LinienLand, Museum Haus Konstruktiv, Zurich (2018); Alicja Kwade: Kausalkonsequenz, Langen Foundation, Neuss, Germany (2020); Alicja Kwade: In Abwesenheit / In Absence, Berlinische Galerie – Landesmuseum für Moderne Kunst, Berlin (2021); Alicja Kwade: Au Cours Des Mondes, Place Vendome, Paris (2022); Alicja Kwade: In Agnosie, Lehmbruck Museum, Duisburg, Germany (2023–24); Alicja Kwade, Museum Voorlinden, Wassenaar, the Netherlands (2024); and Alicja Kwade: Pretopia, Tai Kwun Contemporary, Hong Kong (2025). In 2017, she participated in Viva Arte Viva, curated by Christine Macel at the 57th Venice Biennale. In 2019, The Metropolitan Museum of Art commissioned her to create ParaPivot, which was on view at the roof garden through October of that year. Her work is held in numerous public collections worldwide, including Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Kunsthalle Mannheim, Germany; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebæk, Denmark; and Wroclaw Contemporary Museum, Poland. Kwade lives and works in Berlin.









PACE GALLERY

Pace is a leading international art gallery representing some of the most influential artists and estates of the 20th and 21st centuries, founded by Arne Glimcher in 1960. Holding decades-long relationships with Alexander Calder, Jean Dubuffet, Agnes Martin, Louise Nevelson, and Mark Rothko, Pace has a unique history that can be traced to its early support of artists central to the Abstract Expressionist and Light and Space movements. Now in its seventh decade, the gallery continues to nurture its longstanding relationships with its legacy artists and estates while also making an investment in the careers of contemporary artists, including Torkwase Dyson, Loie Hollowell, Robert Nava, Adam Pendleton, and Marina Perez Simão. Under the current leadership of CEO Marc Glimcher and President Samanthe Rubell, Pace has established itself as a collaborative force in the art world, partnering with other galleries and nonprofit organizations around the world in recent years. The gallery advances its mission to support its artists and share their visionary work with audiences and collectors around the world through a robust global program anchored by its exhibitions of both 20th century and contemporary art and scholarly projects from its imprint Pace Publishing, which produces books introducing new voices to the art historical canon. This artist-first ethos also extends to public installations, philanthropic events, performances, and other interdisciplinary programming presented by Pace. Today, Pace has nine locations worldwide, including two galleries in New York—its eight-story headquarters at 540 West 25th Street and an adjacent 8,000-square-foot exhibition space at 510 West 25th Street. The gallery’s history in the New York art world dates to 1963, when it opened its first space in the city on East 57th Street. A champion of Light and Space artists, Pace has also been active in California for some 60 years, opening its West Coast flagship in Los Angeles in 2022. It maintains European footholds in London and Geneva as well as Berlin, where it established an office in 2023 and a gallery space in 2025. Pace was one of the first international galleries to have a major presence in Asia, where it has been active since 2008, the year it first opened in Beijing’s vibrant 798 Art District. It now operates galleries in Hong Kong and Seoul and opened its first gallery in Japan in Tokyo’s Azabudai Hills development in 2024.