Joline Kwakkenbos
Dutch, b. 1997
Misplaced Lens Cap
tumblr dot com
Monterey Bay Aquarium
KIROKAZE
Mike Driver
dirt enthusiast
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

shark vs the universe

No title available

titsay
NASA

★

JBB: An Artblog!
Xuebing Du
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Cosmic Funnies
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
No title available
RMH
ojovivo
seen from Canada
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Argentina

seen from Czechia

seen from South Africa
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Poland

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from Philippines
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from France
@kunstpaleis
Joline Kwakkenbos
Dutch, b. 1997
Cy Twombly b. 1928, Lexington, Virginia; d. 2011, Rome, Italy. Untitled. Oil, graphite, and oil stick on canvas
Mateo Pedrali (It. 1913-1980) Self portrait with laughing horses (1935)
"WALKING GUN"LAURIE SIMMONS // 1991 [gelatin silver print | U/D]
Joline Kwakkenbos (Dutch 1997)
God forgive her, and it was not her mother (2025)
Gouache on paper (38 x 28 cm)
Nonna Hoogland (Dutch)
Amazon in Chainmail (2025)
Ceramics, earthenware, glaze (30 x 30 x 20 cm)
Robert Smithson: Spiral Jetty (1970) location: Rozel Point, Great Salt Lake, Utah
Edward Hopper - Study of Jo Hopper Reading (1925)
Carl Gustav Carus - Faust in His Study (1852)
Évariste Carpentier - The foreigners (1887)
Vik Muniz, Spiral Jetty after
Robert Smithson, 1997
Louise Bourgeois
CURATORIAL STATEMENT
TOGETHER ALONE - online exhibition 2025
About the exhibition: TOGETHER ALONE In an era dominated by digital interactions, the online exhibition TOGETHER ALONE confronts the paradox of connection and disconnection that defines our virtual world. Divided into three themes: Touching the Screen, Digital Inimacy and Social Touch, the exhibition delves into the emotional and sensory void left by modern technologies such as Artificial Intelligence (AI), Virtual Reality (VR) and modern phenomena as social networking, online gaming and online dating. While technology has extended our ability to connect with each other, bridging distances and enabling real-time communication, it has also accentuated the digital divide—not merely as a gap in access but as a break in human intimacy. The impossibility of a real human physical touch in the virtual world underscores the limitations of our interactions in the digital world, revealing the fragility of true, genuine human relationships built on digital foundations. Is a true human connection possible in the virtual world? Through works by o.a. Margeet Kramer, Noor Nuyten, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, and Thomas Hirschhorn and an interview with LI-MA curator Sanneke Huisman, TOGETHER ALONE explores these tensions, examining how the absence of the ability to physically touch each other manifests itself in virtual environments. Increasingly people establish their lives in the real world and in a digital world. Our online persona established trough social media can feel just as real as our physical selves and are an essential part of our personality and our lives and critical for our emotional well-being. Who we meet and how we meet and interact is increasingly shaped by algorithms. TOGETHER ALONE offers a critical look at the emotional and physical estrangement wrought by these technological advancements. By examining the possibility and impossibility of true human connections in the digital age, the exhibition not only critiques our dependence on virtual systems but also seeks to inspire new ways of understanding and options to bridge the digital divide that separates us. TOGETHER ALONE invites the visitor to reflect on the spaces in between—where touch becomes memory, connection becomes longing, and humanity persists in a search for closeness. As Sanneke Huisman states: “if artists dare to look for the poetry, digital touch can be intimate”.
TOUCH COLLECTIVE
Richard Diebenkorn (US 1922-1993)
Sink (1967)
Ink, charcoal watercolor on paper (63 × 48 cm)
Anne Schillings (Dutch 1995)
Lalala spring garden (2024)
Oil on canvas (160 x 200 cm)