17 July — 25 August 2025

Group show

BODYSCAPES

Participating artists

Farrah Carbonell
Dancevatar
Maria Fynsk Norup
Natalie Karpushenko
Lindsay Kokoska
Christy Lee Rogers
SERIFA
Ivona Tau
X New Worlds
Zhuk

What does it mean to inhabit a body—or a place? Bodyscapes begins with this question, tracing how artists turn the body into terrain, a site where emotions, memories, and meanings unfold. 

Through the eyes of ten female artists, the body undergoes transformations, deformations, and mutations: challenging beauty standards, mirroring the endless loop of social media validation, defying gravity in search of freedom without ever leaving itself. Some bodies remain whole, quiet, grounded, insisting on their right simply to exist. In these works, the body is a sanctuary, a space for healing and connection with the inner self and nature. Finally, the digital bodies in the exhibition reflect the same embodied approach: they speak not of escape or disembodiment, but of inhabiting the virtual realm through the body—living with it, rather than attempting to leave it behind.

Across photography, AI, video, and performance, the body speaks for itself. Nature appears not as backdrop but as collaborator, particularly in the recurring presence of water, which functions as lens, and a force of change. What unites the works in the exhibition is a shared understanding of the body not as separate from spirit or nature, but as fully integrated, positioned within a larger ecological and existential order. The body is neither object nor ornament; it is a living part of the world’s fabric, as vital and complex as any landscape.

What does it mean to inhabit a body—or a place? Bodyscapes begins with this question, tracing how artists turn the body into terrain, a site where emotions, memories, and meanings unfold. 

Through the eyes of ten female artists, the body undergoes transformations, deformations, and mutations: challenging beauty standards, mirroring the endless loop of social media validation, defying gravity in search of freedom without ever leaving itself. Some bodies remain whole, quiet, grounded, insisting on their right simply to exist. In these works, the body is a sanctuary, a space for healing and connection with the inner self and nature. Finally, the digital bodies in the exhibition reflect the same embodied approach: they speak not of escape or disembodiment, but of inhabiting the virtual realm through the body—living with it, rather than attempting to leave it behind.

Across photography, AI, video, and performance, the body speaks for itself. Nature appears not as backdrop but as collaborator, particularly in the recurring presence of water, which functions as lens, and a force of change. What unites the works in the exhibition is a shared understanding of the body not as separate from spirit or nature, but as fully integrated, positioned within a larger ecological and existential order. The body is neither object nor ornament; it is a living part of the world’s fabric, as vital and complex as any landscape.

What does it mean to inhabit a body—or a place? Bodyscapes begins with this question, tracing how artists turn the body into terrain, a site where emotions, memories, and meanings unfold. 


Through the eyes of ten female artists, the body undergoes transformations, deformations, and mutations: challenging beauty standards, mirroring the endless loop of social media validation, defying gravity in search of freedom without ever leaving itself. Some bodies remain whole, quiet, grounded, insisting on their right simply to exist. In these works, the body is a sanctuary, a space for healing and connection with the inner self and nature. Finally, the digital bodies in the exhibition reflect the same embodied approach: they speak not of escape or disembodiment, but of inhabiting the virtual realm through the body—living with it, rather than attempting to leave it behind.

Across photography, AI, video, and performance, the body speaks for itself. Nature appears not as backdrop but as collaborator, particularly in the recurring presence of water, which functions as lens, and a force of change. What unites the works in the exhibition is a shared understanding of the body not as separate from spirit or nature, but as fully integrated, positioned within a larger ecological and existential order. The body is neither object nor ornament; it is a living part of the world’s fabric, as vital and complex as any landscape.

Christy Lee Rogers

Lindsay Kokoska

Natalie Karpushenko

Maria Fynsk Norup

Dancevatar

Farrah Carbonell

ADDRESS

Carrer Llull, 134, 08005 Barcelona, Spain

CONTACT

visit@load-gallery.com

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OPENING HOURS

4 PM — 8 PM, Thursday–Saturday

Gallery admission is free

For collectors, artists and potential collaborators visits are available by appointment—please email us to arrange a private viewing

LEGAL

Privacy policy

T&C

@Load Gallery 2023-2025

ADDRESS

Carrer Llull, 134, 08005 Barcelona, Spain

CONTACT

visit@load-gallery.com

SIGN UP FOR UPDATES

OPENING HOURS

4 PM — 8 PM, Thursday–Saturday

Gallery admission is free

For collectors, artists and potential collaborators visits are available by appointment—please email us to arrange a private viewing

LEGAL

Privacy policy

T&C

@Load Gallery 2023-2025

ADDRESS

Carrer Llull, 134, 08005 Barcelona, Spain

CONTACT

visit@load-gallery.com

SIGN UP FOR UPDATES
OPENING HOURS

4 PM — 8 PM, Thursday–Saturday

Gallery admission is free

For collectors, artists and potential collaborators visits are available by appointment—please email us to arrange a private viewing

LEGAL

Privacy policy

T&C

@Load Gallery 2023-2025

ADDRESS

Carrer Llull, 134, 08005 Barcelona, Spain

CONTACT

visit@load-gallery.com

SIGN UP FOR UPDATES

OPENING HOURS

4 PM — 8 PM, Thursday–Saturday

Gallery admission is free

For collectors, artists and potential collaborators visits are available by appointment—please email us to arrange a private viewing

LEGAL

Privacy policy

T&C

@Load Gallery 2023-2025