2 – The Unknown

25.11.–19.12.2025
Vernissage
Di 25.11.2025, 18 Uhr

moholinushk · Sti (Franz Stirnimann) · Tessa Whitehead

The second exhibition of the Beyond the Frame trilogy explores that which cannot be pinned down – and yet has an effect. Memory fragments, symbolist painting, and inner imagery converge in a space of quiet intensity – between visibility and suggestion. The Unknown brings three voices into a finely balanced field of tension, creating an exhibition that is about the hidden – and the art of approaching it without fixing it in place, yet maintaining a harmonious balance.


moholinushk's work often approaches the indeterminate: circles without centres, colours without contours, repetitions without patterns. Her drawings emerge from movement – exploratory, intuitive, reaching beyond the line.

The Unknown brings these three voices into a finely balanced field of tension. An exhibition about the hidden – and the art of approaching it without fixing it in place.
www.moholinushk.com

Franz Stirnimann, also known as Sti (1915–1997), an artist of mystery from Central Switzerland, bequeathed a legacy not only of sculptures and objects but also of a potent painterly oeuvre: distorted bodies, dreamlike landscapes, and symbolic scenes. His works, precise yet disquieting, seem to echo from a realm beyond our own. (We would like to thank art-st-urban for their support.)

Tessa Whitehead (*1985, Nassau, Bahamas), a captivating artistic voice from the Caribbean, weaves memory, landscape, and intimacy into shimmering pictorial spaces. Her unique approach to portraying tropical plants, empty surfaces, and fragmented bodies makes her work both familiar and distant, speaking to the echoes of our inner voices.
www.tessa-whitehead.com

moholinushk, Otari 2, Otari vers luisant, 2016, Colour Pencil and Chalk Pastel, 30 x3 0 cm. Courtesy: moholinushk archive

Sti (Franz Stirnimann), Waiting, 1959, Oil on Canvas, 134.62 x 160.02. Courtesy: art-st-urban

Tessa Whitehead, Away from the Noise, 2025, Oil on Canvas, 138,43x215,90 cm. Courtesy: TERN Gallery, Nassau