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Marguerite Humeau

The ambitious exhibition by Marguerite Humeau unfolds as an imaginative landscape of installations in the large open space of HAM’s grand gallery. Her organic, sculptural works are brought to life through light and sound. Like a giant musical instrument, the works in the exhibition resonate and connect across times and places, vibrating with the rhythms of different worlds.

Start date

21.11.2025

End date

15.03.2026

Through selected bodies of works, the exhibition unfolds like an opera with various scenes, each telling a speculative story. What if humans would become collective beings, attempting to synchronise with all life forms? In her work Marguerite Humeau examines the formation of life, ancient human history and possible scenarios for how life will survive in the future.  

Marguerite Humeau (born 1986 in France; lives in London) uses a wide range of materials in her beautifully detailed works that vary from 150-year-old walnut to hand-blown glass, from alabaster to cyanobacteria, and from beeswax to wasp venom, just to mention a few. She primarily works with sculpture and immersive installations, often incorporating sound and light. In her art, she creates scenarios that spark imaginings of alternative worlds.   

 “Being an artist is a way I filter and channel the knowledge that I’m gathering and then bring physical worlds alive through my large-scale installations. For many years I’ve been imagining things that are extinct, prehistoric or do not exist anymore, or trying to imagine worlds that will happen in the future.” (Marguerite Humeau in Louisiana Channel’s interview To Be Alive is a Great Responsibility, 2024) 

The immersive, multisensorial exhibition marks Humeau’s first presentation in Finland. The exhibition is a collaboration with Arken Museum of Contemporary Art in Denmark.


The exhibition is curated by HAM’s director Arja Miller.

Marguerite Humeau, 2024. Photography by Eoin Greally. Image courtesy of the artist.

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