Bread, Salt & Roses
Florit / Florit•Mar 22, 2025 — May 30, 2025
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Xenia Lesniewski is a German-born, Vienna-based ultra-contemporary artist whose practice spans medias, roles, and spaces—at once an artist, a curator, a scenographer of the everyday. Her artistic exploration weaves between art and the everyday, conjuring a delicate line that both divides and unites them. In this liminal space, they coexist—simultaneously probing and reflecting on the socio-political issues that shape our reality. Lesniewski’s objects do both—they reflect and reshape, they reveal and displace.
For this site-specific exhibition “Bread, Salt & Roses”, she has constructed a kind of mise-en-scène: a hybrid space that oscillates between the gallery space and a private interior, a site of domestic gestures and public questions. “The studio is not just a place of production,” wrote Mike Kelley, “it is a social and psychological space.” Lesniewski brings this sensibility forward—here, the studio bleeds into the gallery, and the gallery becomes an extension of...More
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Bread, Salt & Roses
Florit / Florit•Mar 22, 2025 — May 30, 2025
Press Release
Xenia Lesniewski is a German-born, Vienna-based ultra-contemporary artist whose practice spans medias, roles, and spaces—at once an artist, a curator, a scenographer of the everyday. Her artistic exploration weaves between art and the everyday, conjuring a delicate line that both divides and unites them. In this liminal space, they coexist—simultaneously probing and reflecting on the socio-political issues that shape our reality. Lesniewski’s objects do both—they reflect and reshape, they reveal and displace.
For this site-specific exhibition “Bread, Salt & Roses”, she has constructed a kind of mise-en-scène: a hybrid space that oscillates between the gallery space and a private interior, a site of domestic gestures and public questions. “The studio is not just a place of production,” wrote Mike Kelley, “it is a social and psychological space.” Lesniewski brings this sensibility forward—here, the studio bleeds into the gallery, and the gallery becomes an extension of...More