
Rosa Brun
Paisajes para un mundo inestable
26 Mar - 20 May 2026
There is a suspicion that runs through our time: that reality has ceased to be a stable territory and has become instead a construction subject to multiple layers of mediation. Fiction no longer presents itself as a separate realm, but as an agent infiltrated into the everyday, capable of reorganizing what we understand as truth. In this context, the experience of the world is shaped by devices of representation that not only describe, but actively model perception.
Rosa Brun’s work is situated at this point of friction. Her practice does not respond to the need to represent a recognizable landscape, but to activate a space where the visible is articulated as a superimposition of layers. Each work functions as a condensation of times, decisions, and intensities that are not offered immediately, but instead require a gaze that lingers, that adjusts, that learns to read in depth.
In an environment saturated with images that seek impact and rapid consumption, the insistence on the work of art—and even more so, on a work constructed through the rigor of color—acquires a dimension that cannot be separated from a certain form of commitment. This is not a programmatic stance, but a practice that assumes the responsibility of generating spaces of experience in which perception is not entirely predetermined.
Color, in Brun’s work, operates both as structure and as event. Far from any historical suspicion that has associated it with the decorative or the superficial, here it unfolds with an intensity that asserts its capacity for thought. In this sense, one might speak of a chromophilic practice, grounded in a trust in color as a vehicle of knowledge, as a field in which tensions, rhythms, and balances are organized and directly affect the viewer.
The works presented in the exhibition—both wall-based pieces and those that extend into the sculptural—configure a territory in which painting approaches the architectural. Not in the sense of imposing order, but in that of constructing spaces of passage. In contrast to the proliferation of contemporary spaces that Marc Augé defined as “non-places,” zones of circulation devoid of identity, Brun’s work proposes an inverse experience: that of a space which, rather than neutralizing the subject, activates them, placing them in a conscious relationship with what they perceive.
This activation, however, does not occur through spectacle, but through a precise economy of means. Repetition, modulation, and minimal variation generate a vibration that displaces the work from the realm of the fixed image toward an almost temporal condition. Planes of color seem to oscillate, as if each contained the possibility of becoming another, as if time did not move linearly but folded back upon itself.
In this sense, the landscapes Brun proposes do not refer to any identifiable place. They function instead as constructions in which perception, memory, and experience intersect. Forms never fully settle; they remain in an unstable balance, as if the image were always in the process of adjustment. The landscape thus ceases to be understood as a setting and becomes something that happens—something that is configured within the act of looking itself.
The title of the exhibition introduces a key that deserves attention. Instability is not presented as an anomaly, but as a structural condition of the contemporary. We live in a time in which systems of reference are constantly reconfigured, in which identity is constructed through external stimuli, and in which experience is fragmented into discontinuous sequences. In this context, Brun’s painting does not seek to offer certainties, but to generate a space in which this complexity can be experienced without simplification.
As Guy Debord pointed out, contemporary alienation does not reside solely in the separation of the subject from their activity, but in the appropriation of their own time. In the face of this logic, these works introduce a suspension. They demand a form of attention that cannot be accelerated, that resists reduction to immediate consumption. In this demand lies, perhaps, one of their most incisive forms of resistance.
Landscapes for an Unstable World does not propose an image of the world, but a way of inhabiting its uncertainty. It is precisely in this openness, in this refusal to fix a single meaning, that Rosa Brun’s work finds its power: in offering the viewer the increasingly rare possibility of constructing their own experience of the real.
José Luis Pérez Pont