This spring, the Kim? Contemporary Art Centre in the SPORTA 2 quarter offers an opportunity to experience two vivid and conceptually multilayered solo exhibitions — “Healthy Friends” by Jānis Dzirnieks and “Aftermath” by Nelly Agassi. While the artists differ in their approaches and chosen media, both exhibitions are united by a shared interest in the complexities of the contemporary world — from human relationships with technology and the environment to the lingering imprints of history that shape our present and imagined futures.
05.04.2025. – 08.06.2025.
- “Healthy Friends” – solo exhibition by Jānis Dzirnieks
- “Aftermath” – solo exhibition by Nelly Agassi
Kim? Contemporary Art Centre
SPORTA 2 quarter, Sporta iela 2, k-1, LV-1013, Riga
Opening hours:
- Monday: Closed
- Tuesday – Sunday: 12:00 PM – 6:00 PM
FREE ENTRY
More information: https://kim.lv/en
Jānis Dzirnieks solo show “Healthy Friends”
Curated by Kaspars Groševs
0 5.04.2025. – 08.06.2025.
Kim? Contemporary Art Centre presents Jānis Dzirnieks’ second solo exhibition at the institution, following the artist’s two-month residency at ISCP, New York in the autumn of 2024, as the recipient of the Kim? Residency Award. In New York, small corner stores — bodegas — can be found on almost every block. One such store, called Healthy Friends, offers sandwiches and fast food that are far from anything actually healthy. Yet the names of these establishments often include words like healthy, natural, organic, and other slogans praising naturalness — phrases that serve no purpose beyond drawing attention to a product range oversaturated with chemicals. The works in the exhibition include scanned scribbles and watercolor drawings, later digitally enhanced, printed, and then physically modified. These drawings depict various creatures in stages of decay and decomposition, merged with illustrations of refrigeration system optimizations. In a way, the process of decay can be seen as a form of optimization — much like the creation of these works could be viewed as a kind of self-reprocessing. Optimization, as such, is inevitable in both living and non-living organisms, as well as in economics, politics, sociology, and beyond. The prevailing high level of distrust in bodegas — from overpriced trivialities to the tastiest snacks — serves as a fitting metaphor for Dzirnieks’ reflections on themes of technological efficiency and environmental degradation, which are explored within the exhibition through elements of spatial installation and other objects created specifically for the show.
Jānis Dzirnieks’ (1992) work cuts through the facade of technological efficiency, revealing the unsettling and often sinister forms that emerge from our relentless drive for optimization. By repurposing industrial remnants into thought-provoking installations, Dzirnieks prompts viewers to confront the ecological and societal costs of progress. Solo exhibitions include: Tiled River at Gallery 427, Riga; Flat Tire at Robert Fruinstraat 56, Rotterdam; Gaidot nākamo minūti at Kim? Contemporary Art Centre, Riga; and Sharp Horizon at Nemo, Eckernförde. Duo exhibitions include: Snowlake Blockbuster (with Alise Anna Dzirniece) at Extra City, Antwerp. Group exhibitions: Soap Opera at City Surfer Office, Prague; Agents of Perception at Kai Art Center, Tallinn; Midnight Sunburn at Het Nieuwe Instituut, Rotterdam; and others. He is the recipient of the 2024 Kim? Contemporary Art Centre Residency Award and undertook a residency at ISCP, New York.
Nelly Agassi solo show “Aftermath”
Curated by Tīna Pētrsone
05.04.2025. – 08.06.2025.
“We live in a time when the past seems more unpredictable than the future,” wrote the British historian Eric Hobsbawm—a sentiment that feels ever more prescient as headlines offer reinterpretations of history with increasing frequency. History has never been a fixed entity—it has always been rewritten, reexamined, and reinterpreted. Yet today, these processes have reached an unprecedented intensity: historical understanding is entangled in ideological battles, muddled by the oversaturation of digital media, and increasingly weaponized as a tool in political discourse. When narratives compete, overlap, and shift in form, how can we orient ourselves among the versions of history they propose?
This exhibition unfolds in a time of deep instability—amid wars, shifts in power, and ideological rupture. Its central motif is rooted in the notion of “aftermath” as a layered, nonlinear, and continuously evolving process. The word aftermath first appeared in 16th-century Middle English, when farmers used it to describe grass that regrew after mowing. Over time, it acquired a broader metaphorical meaning—referring to the consequences of an event, especially in the wake of disaster, war, or major societal upheaval. Thus, the term encompasses both devastation and the potential for renewal—a cyclical process in which the past never truly disappears but transforms and returns in altered form. This notion of cyclical return forms the conceptual axis of Nelly Agassi’s first solo exhibition in the Baltic region.
At the heart of Agassi’s practice lies the idea of a “biography of site”—an approach that treats a site’s context as both a source of inquiry and a material in itself. During a week-long visit in Riga last November, Agassi visited local museums and wandered through the city, collecting visual impressions and engaging with traces of historical presence. These impressions reappear in her installations as fragments, gestures, and materials imbued with symbolic charge. Aftermath becomes both a meditation on what has been and an inquiry into a future (or a history?) still taking shape—still possible.
Nelly Agassi (b.1973, Israel) is a Chicago-based multi-disciplinary artist whose practice encompasses performance, installation, video, animation, textile, and works on paper. Her site-specific works explore the intersection of personal and architectural narratives, revealing fragments of spatial biography through the lens of her own lived experience. Working primarily with materials, body, and space, Agassi creates intimate dialogues between public spaces and their inherent histories. Agassi received her MFA from Chelsea College and BFA from Central St. Martins, London. Her work has been shown internationally at prestigious institutions including Tate Modern, The Israel Museum, Tel Aviv Museum of Art, La Triennale di Milano, and Zacheta Warsaw. In Chicago, her work has been exhibited at The Graham Foundation, Chicago Cultural Center, The Arts Club of Chicago, Hyde Park Art Center, and Poor Farm. Her work was recently acquired by The Art Institute of Chicago. Other notable presentations include the ORD T5 commission project at O’Hare International Terminal, WHOISPOLA Warsaw, Viennacontemporary art fair, and Fujiyoshida textile week (all in 2023). Agassi is currently an SAIC Residential Research Fellow at the Art Institute of Chicago Research Center. She is represented by Dvir Gallery and WHOISPOLA.