Esben Weile Kjær b. 1992
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Esben Weile Kjær (b. 1992, Copenhagen) graduated from the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in 2022, having previously completed his studies in Music Management at the Rhythmic Music Conservatory, Copenhagen. Interested in identity politics in the age of constantly evolving new media, his performance, installation, and stained-glass work examines his generation’s construction of selfhood and the rise of popular culture and technology in determining one’s experience of community and authenticity. Though the artist lives in Denmark, his practice is heavily informed by the notion of “The American Dream.” His curiosity is sparked by theme parks, toys-as-branding, and the complete consumerist meltdown in the West.Kjær has performed at Amant, Brooklyn (2025); Museum Der Moderne, Salzburg (2024); MUMOK, Vienna (2023); Centre Pompidou, Paris (2022); Tinguely Museum, Basel (2022); New Carlsberg Foundation, Copenhagen (2022) and National Gallery of Denmark (2019), amongst others. Solo exhibitions have been held at numerous institutions, including Rønnebæksholm, Næstved (2025); Salzburger Kunstverein, Salzburg (2025); Rudolph Tegners Museum and Statue Park, Dronningmølle (2025); Kunsten Museum of Modern Art, Aalborg (2024); Albion Jeune, London (2023); Museum of Contemporary Art, Roskilde (2020); Copenhagen Contemporary (2020); and Kunstforening GL Strand, Copenhagen (2020). In 2023, Kjær was invited to curate the ARKEN Museum of Modern Art’s permanent collection and to perform BUTTERFLY! for which Kjær was awarded the Carl Nielsen & Anne Marie Carl-Nielsens Foundation Talent Award. His work is in the permanent collection of ARKEN Museum of Modern Art, Denmark; Malmö Art Museum, Sweden; Kunsten Museum of Modern Art, Aalborg; the National Gallery of Denmark, Copenhagen; and Brandts Museum, Denmark.
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'FOOL', 2026
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'I WANT TO BELIEVE', 2023
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Exhibitions
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FOOL
Esben Weile Kjær 11 Feb - 21 Mar 2026Read more -
I Want to Believe
Esben Weile Kjær 5 Oct - 25 Nov 2023Albion Jeune, a new contemporary art gallery founded and directed by Lucca Hue-Williams, presents I Want to Believe , by multimedia artist, Esben Weile Kjær (b. 1992, Copenhagen). Consisting of...Read more
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Past Exhibitions
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FLASH!, Rønnebæksholm, Naestved, Denmark, 2025
FLASH!, created by artist Esben Weile Kjær, invites visitors to a spectacular, sensory and thought-provoking total installation. The barn was transformed into a scenic space where art and nature merge. Weile Kjær draws inspiration from the garden outside and its diverse insect life, which he enlarges and transforms into monumental luminous mirror sculptures.
Weile Kjær is inspired by the Garden outside and its diverse insect life, which he enlarges and transforms into monumental luminous mirror sculptures. In the dark center of the Barn, these gigantic, mirror-clad insects gather in a swarm, hanging at different heights like sparkling, moving disco balls. With FLASH!, Weile Kjær points to a meeting between an artificial, spectacular nature, where biodiversity meets pop aesthetics and glitter.With rhythmic light and a pulsating sound universe, FLASH! transforms the barn into a vibrating, almost hypnotic universe, where an insect rave, with light reflections, dances in all directions. The space opens up to the Garden outside, and at the same time points further, towards the future and distant galaxies. Pop cultural references, sci-fi aesthetics and the organic forms of nature merge in a spectacular encounter that both arouses fascination and contemplation. The exhibition focuses on the fragility of biodiversity and the crucial role of insects in the ecosystem. At the same time, it points out the challenges that climate change and human intervention create. The light-reflecting bodies of the insects become symbols of both the fragility of life, the beauty of nature and the impact of humans, reminding us of our responsibility and fascination. -
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thousands of small explosions at the same time, Salzburger Kunstverein, Salzburg, Austria, 26 July - 14 September 2025
Esben Weile Kjær practice operates within the logic of contemporary Western self-optimization, high-gloss desire, and the relentless pursuit of aesthetic perfection. In thousands of small explosions at the same time, Weile Kjær mirrors a contemporaneity obsessed with visibility, display, and endless surface manipulation. It thrives in the hyper-now, reflecting the quiet violence of neoliberal self-surveillance, where submission can be mistaken for empowerment. For the context of Salzburger Kunstverein Weile Kjær created a sculptural scenario that collapses Rococo decadence into digital overstimulation, producing an uncanny landscape where the body is both a commodity and an avatar.
Alongside the exhibition, the performance DEEPFAKE utilizes the Salzburg Festival’s costume archive as a stage of glitchy déjà vu. Historic garments are worn and looped through by performers trained in physical theatre, mimicking the repetition and absurdity of meme culture. In this exhibition, the artist intentionally enters a dialogue with the artistic practice of Laila Shawa whose works are presented in parallel in the Studio space. Shawa’s Breast Bombs—sculptural forms that merge prosthetic breast molds with the aesthetics of explosive devices—are embedded directly into Weile Kjær’s scenario in the Grand Hall. Positioned inside mirrored display boxes, the Breast Bombs are refracted into a kaleidoscopic field of shifting perspectives, underscoring themes of multiplicity, fragmentation, and the impossibility of a single point of view. The insertion of Shawa’s work produces a kind of multi-exposure—a layered image where histories bleed into one another, and where aesthetic seduction masks deeper undercurrents of violence and control. It is a deliberate collision—or perhaps better: a choreography of a thousand small explosions happening all at once.
Both artists operate on the terrain of bodies as surfaces under pressure: trained, adorned, fragmented, repurposed. And yet, their temporal and political coordinates differ radically. Shawa’s sculptures carry the weight of Palestine’s political history, her stance against religious fundamentalism, and the female body’s role in nationalist conflicts. Weile Kjær confronts the neoliberal present, where the commodified self is endlessly optimized, spectacularized, and staged for consumption.
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SHELL, Amant, Brooklyn, NY, USA, May 31 - September 28 2025
Amant presents the large-scale sculptural installation SHELL by Esben Weile Kjær. SHELL’s centerpiece is a 37-by-20-foot castle that will occupy Amant’s outdoor lot at 316 Ten Eyck Street throughout the summer. Resembling a children’s toy, the faux-concrete structure playfully scales up the fantasy of a miniature castle back to its source dimensions. While retaining the benign appeal of a toy, the shift in scale conceals a structure associated with aggression and violence and transforms it into an object of play.
Reprising an architectural motif from several of Kjær’s recent exhibitions, this castle also draws on the defensive bunkers built along Denmark’s coastline as part of the so-called “Atlantic Wall” during World War II. Many of these abandoned bunkers were later repurposed as gathering spaces for youth sub- and countercultures, including the underground parties where Kjær was active as a DJ in his early career. Outfitted with a new series of lightbox sculptures and LED blink lights evoking a network of signal towers, the installation simultaneously recalls a medieval stronghold, an oil rig, and a post-apocalyptic billboard. The installation fuses Kjær’s characteristically wry, irreverent, and playful take on contemporary culture with the urban landscape of East Williamsburg, connecting the exigencies of the present to recent history and a speculative future.
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Rainbow Tornado, Tegners Museum, Dronningmølle, Denmark, 12 April - 19 October 2025
Esben Weile Kjær enters the museum's brutalist universe with a humorous, pop cultural and queer-inspired response. The exhibition Rainbow Tornado offers a maximalist intervention, where large amounts of glitter and imagination challenge the monumental and masculine in Tegner's universe, rainbow colors and magic wands.
The heart of the exhibition is a 10-meter-high spiral sculpture, covered in glittering rainbow colors located in the museum's iconic octagonal main hall. With the spiral, Esben Weile Kjær draws on childhood fairy tales and the spectacle of pop culture. The main idea of the exhibitionIn addition to the spiral sculpture, the exhibition contains four works – sculptures in polished steel depicting devils and magic wands. "I want to create a humorous clash between Tegner's serious, brutal universe and a naive, pop fantasy. A pop-cultural queer tornado that makes us see Tegner's works in a new light – less gendered, less serious," says Esben Weile Kjær. For Weile Kjær, glitter represents both transformation, celebration and the vain. The material has played a central role in parades, where it is used as a strong visual device to convey serious messages in a more positively charged form – like a Trojan horse.
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Lions, Asiat Park, Vilvoorde, Belgium, 2025
With two monumental golden rats, Esben Weile Kjær brings an unexpected sense of wonder to Asiat Park, transforming the space into a place where symbolism and identity are turned upside down. The work explores hierarchy and materiality. Unlike traditional monuments made of marble or silver, these sculptures are created from gold fabric and filled with air. They are glamorous and temporary, like a party, like makeup, like power itself.
Lions have historically stood for power and authority, appearing on imperial emblems and statues in front of wealthy homes and on coins. Here, two rats take center stage as a queer symbol, stepping into the role of lions. Like queer communities, rats have existed on the fringes of society yet remain adaptable and resilient. Their association with transformation and fluidity reflects how queer identities challenge and reshape traditional norms.Asiat Park, a former military site that stood vacant for ten years (2008–2018), is now a place where people gather for culture, connection, and leisure. In a park where once-abandoned buildings are now largely reinhabited and rented out, Weile Kjær elevates this often unwanted byproduct of urban vitality to the status of monument, an homage to the unplanned consequences of social revival. Esben Weile Kjær plays with the idea of a creature often regarded as undesirable, hidden in the shadows of human presence, but here brought into the spotlight. The rats are monumental figures, not pushed aside, but elevated and made visible.
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SOLAR SYSTEM, Kunsten Museum of Modern Art, Aalborg, Denmark, 10 October 2024 - 16 March 2025
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MILKY WAY, Trauma bar und kino, Berlin, Germany, 14 September - 12 October 2024
Kjær’s multidisciplinary work across sculpture and performance clashes the visual vocabularies of entertainment, fashion, and contemporary art in a critical investigation of youth-cultural rituals past and present. For MILKY WAY, Kjær has erected a large, navigable concrete structure that recalls two iconic, if melancholic, architectural typologies from the recent past: Soviet playgrounds and the quintessential WW2 bunkers along the West European coastline (known officially as the Atlantic Wall).
The severe brutalist design of the artist’s construction is contrasted by a child-like playfulness, inviting audiences to climb the structure via its stairs or to try its built-in slide. The bunker’s exterior is embellished by several neon works on the building’s exterior and several stained-glass windows. While the neon works display fluorescent plants with diamond-crusted flowers crawling up the building’s exterior, the windows’ illuminated motifs are inspired by NASA imagery of new galaxies forming in the Milky Way. In this clash of spatial and visual iconographies, Kjær explores the status of bygone utopian visions under the sign of the perpetual new: how dreams are made material as aesthetics, how they inevitably fade, and how they might reawaken and remind us (of something) anew. The exhibition was presented as part of the Featured Section of Berlin Art Week 2024.
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Press
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After the Song of the Summer
SpikeGreta Rainbow , August 28, 2025 -
Rats Have Invaded Copenhagen Fashion Week by Laird Borrelli-Persson
VogueAugust 5, 2025 -
Esben Weile Kjær / Laila Shawa at Salzburger Kunstverein
e-fluxJuly 16, 2025 -
Meet Esben Weile Kjær, the Danish Artist Who Constructed a Castle in a Parking Lot in Williamsburg
VogueLaird Borrelli-Persson, June 2, 2025 -
An interview of Esben Weile Kjær: Hardcore Freedom
Autre MagazineJune 1, 2024 -
Esben Weile Kjær: In a society that’s hyper digital, the analog becomes a fetish
A Rabbit's FootLucca Hue-Williams, April 11, 2024 -
LAST CHANCE: ESBEN WEILE KJÆR – I WANT TO BELIEVE
FAD MagazineMark Westall, November 20, 2023 -
New gallery Albion Jeune joins London’s contemporary art scene
WallpaperTianna Williams, November 5, 2023 -
The Exchange: Sylvie Fleury and Esben Weile Kjær
Plaster MagazineHolly Black, October 23, 2023 -
London Gallery Albion Jeune opens its first show, an Interview
Lux MagazineOctober 10, 2023 -
‘Behind the Glossy Image, Tragedy Lurks’: How Rising Star Esben Weile Kjaer Has Ensnared Our Attention With His Macabre Pop Sensibility
ArtnetJo Lawson-Tancred , October 10, 2023 -
Why the world is watching Esben Weile Kjær
SHOWstudioChristina Donoghue, October 6, 2023 -
Esben Weile Kjær, Interview with Anna Frost
The Travel Almanac, Issue 22, Spring/Summer 2023August 1, 2023 -
Spring Défilé
KunstkritikkPernille Albrethsen, January 23, 2023 -
The artist bringing the club to the art museum
i-DMahoro Seward, April 2, 2020
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