There are moments when the world appears unfinished.
Not incomplete, but still forming.
Before objects became fixed, before structures hardened into permanence, before distinctions between nature and construction, body and landscape, matter and thought had fully emerged, there was a state of becoming.
The World Was Still Soft brings together five artists whose practices explore this condition—not as a historical moment, but as a lasting possibility. Across sculpture, painting, and textile, the exhibition presents works where form remains open, matter suspended in transformation, and the boundaries of our world appear fluid.
The exhibition is driven by emergence: not the finished object, but the forces that shape it.
Daniele Basso's polished steel flints revisit one of humanity's earliest technological gestures. Monumental yet primordial, they occupy a threshold between nature and invention, suggesting a world still soft enough to be shaped by imagination.
Stevens Dossou-Yovo treats structure as a living system. Emerging from hand-drawn geometries, his sculptures balance stability and instability, where architecture becomes organism and drawing becomes space.
Tamas Melkovics transforms geometry into organic growth. His sculptures bend, fracture, and multiply into forms that are simultaneously architectural, crystalline, and biological, existing in a constant state of mutation.
Joana Schneider's textile reliefs, built from reclaimed maritime materials, evolve through thousands of gestures into tactile landscapes. Rope and fiber become living topographies where time itself is embedded in the surface.
Katrin Fridriks captures the instant when energy becomes form. Her paintings preserve the force of movement, turning the canvas into a field where abstraction remains charged with motion.
Across these practices, matter is never passive. Steel bends toward movement. Textile behaves like landscape. Paint carries the memory of velocity. Form emerges as a temporary balance between competing forces rather than a fixed condition.
The exhibition proposes a world understood through transformation rather than categories—a world where boundaries remain porous and materials retain the memory of their own becoming.
The title, The World Was Still Soft, evokes neither nostalgia nor origin, but a condition that persists beneath the apparent solidity of things. Every object, every system, every identity was once fluid.
The works gathered here do not represent that process.
They inhabit it.
