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Oct 9th 2026 to May 9th 2027

Experience the first solo exhibition in Denmark by the internationally acclaimed Norwegian-Nigerian contemporary artist Frida Orupabo (b. 1986). The exhibition is created specifically for Alvar Aalto’s exceptional architecture and transforms the museum’s spaces into a sensory universe where gazes, bodies, and narratives meet and are woven together anew.

Frida Orupabo creates captivating visual narratives that move between the personal and the collective, between past and present. In Orupabo’s works, a vibrant dialogue unfolds between the familiar and the unexpected, between the stories we know and those that have yet to be told. This is the focal point of Frida Orupabo’s first solo exhibition on Danish soil, where, in a universe created especially for Kunsten, you can allow yourself to be enveloped, confronted, challenged, and moved.

To see and be seen

Frida Orupabo’s works are grounded in found photographs and material sourced from both digital and physical archives, encompassing popular culture as well as references dating back to the colonial era. In Orupabo’s hands, these materials are recomposed into collages that rewrite and challenge dominant historical narratives. Through her collages, Orupabo simultaneously creates new meanings and stories, giving space to figures who have previously been rendered invisible.

Frida Orupabo’s artistic practice is shaped in part by her upbringing in Norway as the child of a Norwegian mother and a Nigerian father, growing up in an environment where she stood out. Through her works, she processes experiences of gazes, identity, race, belonging, and power—and directs the gaze back at the viewer. It is an encounter that can feel both physical and emotional as we are confronted with the figures’ intense stares, which carry discomfort, strength, and vulnerability all at once.

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Værk af Frida Orupabo

© Frida Orupabo

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Værk af Frida Orupabo

© Frida Orupabo

About the artist

Frida Orupabo (b. 1986) lives and works in Oslo, Norway. She originally trained as a sociologist, but in 2013 she began creating digital collages, which she shared on the social media platform Instagram as a kind of digital diary and archive.

Orupabo's solo exhibitions include: Kunsthall Trondheim, Norway – How did you feel when you came out of the wilderness (2021), Fotomuseum Winterthur, Switzerland – I have seen a million pictures of my face and still I have no idea (2022), Bonniers Konsthall, Stockholm and Astrup Fearnley Museet, Oslo – On Lies, Secrets and Silence (2024/2025). Group exhibitions and biennials include: 34th Bienal de São Paulo, Brazil (2021), 58th Venice Biennale, Italy (2019), 15th Gwangju Biennale (2024), Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), USA – group exhibition Imagining Black Diasporas: 21st‑Century Art and Poetics (2024). In 2025, Orupabo received the SPECTRUM Internationaler Preis für Fotografie for her photographic and collage‑based practice.

Orupabo's works are represented in major collections including Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Museum Ludwig, Cologne/Vienna, the National Museum, Oslo, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebæk and Kunsten Museum of Modern Art Aalborg.

Frida Orupabo: Now You Can See Me
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