
Form&Flux
Group Exhibition by BBProjectt
Curated by İlayda Uzunarslan
Opening times:
2nd - 4th April 11 am - 6 pm
Opening: 2nd April 5 pm - 8 pm
Form&Flux approaches form not as a static conclusion, but as a living structure in constant transformation: shifting, rupturing, reassembling, and existing in relation to its surroundings. Bringing together a group of Turkish artists working across diverse media, the exhibition proposes that form in contemporary art is not merely a visual arrangement, but also a conceptual, emotional, and temporal field of flow.
Featuring works by Yeliz Şık Çifçi, Rosy Macoro, Pemra Aksoy, Nazan Pamuk, Nazan Aksaray, Ilay Karabay Solaklı, Dila Naz Akgün, and Beliz Inal, the exhibition unfolds through a plurality of artistic voices and material approaches. Each artist contributes a distinct sensibility to the conversation, offering nuanced perspectives on transformation, continuity, fragmentation, and the evolving relationship between gesture, structure, and perception.
While “form” is often associated with structure, boundary, and definition, “flux” points to permeability, instability, and change. The convergence of these two terms establishes the exhibition’s central tension: an oscillation between permanence and transformation, control and intuition, stability and ephemerality.
Across the exhibition, the works build layered relationships between the resistance of material and the freedom of gesture, between compositional discipline and the openness of chance. Rather than presenting form as a finished whole, each work invites the viewer to consider it as an ongoing process, a trace, or a passage. In this sense, the exhibition creates a space not only for encountering objects, but also for engaging with movement, memory, fragmentation, and reconfiguration.
This presentation by BBProjectt, extending from Istanbul to London, makes visible the multiple voices of contemporary Turkish art within an international context, while opening new dialogues around shared aesthetic and conceptual concerns beyond geographical borders. Form&Flux proposes an inquiry not only into what form is, but into how it transforms, how it flows, and how it continuously acquires new meaning.
For more information contact İlayda Uzunarslan: assemblageartlondon@gmail.com

