5 offseen Exhibitions You Need to See in June
by Rachel Cecília de Oliveira
17.06.2026
The five exhibitions this month each begin from different questions, but they all share a sense of unease: what happens when form tries to hold itself, even as it can no longer fully depend on its own stability? In Agent of Birth, the body is assembled at the boundary between generation and fabrication. Moments of Grace shows serenity that relies on a balance always near collapse. Similarly, in Systema non Tenet, order keeps taking shape, even as it remains necessarily incomplete. In contrast, in Figure, not Figure, the figure emerges as it becomes less clear. Finally, in And Here I Bloom, For a Short Hour Unseen, matter appears on the threshold between life and object.
Agent of Birth
Artist: Deng Shiqing
Curator: Charles Moore
C+N Gallery CANEPANERI, Milan, Italy
On view until June 24, 2026
Agent of Birth exhibition views, ph Mattia Mognetti, courtesy the artist and the gallery
Moments of Grace
Artist: Yelena Popova
osnova gallery, Valencia, Spain
On view until July 16, 2026
Moments of Grace exhibition views, ph Enrique Pascual, courtesy the artist and the gallery
Systema non Tenet
Artist: Juanjo Barreda
Litostudio, Milan, Italy
On view until June 11, 2026
In Juanjo Barreda’s Systema non Tenet, order emerges as an unattainable goal. The exhibition is structured around a visual system that pursues cohesion through repetition, modularity, and the proximity of similar elements. Yet the more this order asserts itself, the more clearly it reveals its own impossibility. Each work reiterates a common logic while maintaining its distinct deviation. Thus, cohesion functions as an illusion that gives continuity to the viewer’s experience while simultaneously underscoring the underlying chaos. Within this dynamic, the suspended structures of the images form unstable constellations. Repetition produces an expectation of regularity that soon unravels in the face of each work’s internal differences. The exhibition is built around this contradiction. Order is necessary because it connects the works; chaos is inevitable because it prevents that connection from becoming a closed system. From this tension, Barreda constructs a pendular experience: the eye seeks patterns, but each attempt uncovers new inconsistencies.
Juanjo Barreda – Systema non Tenet exhibition views, courtesy the artist and the gallery
Figure, not Figure
Artists: Emmanuelle Castellan, Scott McCracken, Mirela Moscu, Luca Zarattini
RIBOT, Milan, Italy
On view until July 17, 2026
Figure, not Figure, can be read as a series of visual questions about what allows a figure to appear without stabilizing as representation. The title’s ambiguity creates tension. To figure may mean making something recognizable or producing a presence that resists immediate identification. To figure is not necessarily to fix, and to disfigure is not always to destroy. The exhibition opens an unstable zone in which the figure survives precisely by losing definition. Each artist explores when a form begins to take shape without becoming fully legible. In Scott McCracken’s work, the image is formed through the tension between improvisation and structure. Mirela Moscu’s practice investigates the figure’s progression toward metamorphosis. Luca Zarattini’s pieces appear to emerge from burial, from accumulated matter. Across the exhibition, the gaze is made to work where the image fails as evidence. Figuration becomes a problem rather than a solution.
Figure, not Figure exhibiton views, courtesy the artist and the gallery
And Here I Bloom, For a Short Hour Unseen
Artists: Chryssa Kotoula & Katerina Moschou
Curator: Lida Koutromanou
The Paddocks Gallery, Volos, Greece
On view until July 4, 2026
In And Here I Bloom, For a Short Hour Unseen, materiality serves as the exhibition’s guiding thread. The show brings together two investigations by different artists, each exploring the body through unstable states: in one, matter seems to come alive; in the other, the body moves closer to the inanimate. Both artists are connected by their construction of an imaginary rooted in the specific properties of their chosen materials. In Chryssa Kotoula’s work, ceramics arise from residues and processes of reuse. The clay retains within its final form the memory of previous cycles of use and transformation. The animate arises from matter’s own becoming, from a material that bears the marks of time, decomposition, and recomposition. In Katerina Moschou’s work, the focus shifts to the body in contact with everyday technologies; the inanimate becomes a force that reorganizes the body. The exhibition unfolds through this contrast: Kotoula animates matter itself, while Moschou shows the body losing autonomy as it adheres to things. In both practices, materiality is where forms of life and memory become entangled.
And Here I Bloom, For a Short Hour Unseen, ph Andrew Anetopoulos, courtesy the artist and the gallery
Edited by Dobroslawa Nowak
Copyrights: the authors, offseen and partnering platforms;