A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
enjoy the silence

Enjoy the s i l e n c e

Amsterdam reveals itself through rhythm — canals that mirror the light, bicycles that hum through narrow streets, and people moving at a steady, unhurried pace. Every corner seems to hold a small narrative: a passing gesture, the geometry of architecture against clouded skies.
Visiting the Stedelijk Museum felt like a deliberate pause within that movement — a shift from the spontaneous to the constructed, where observation takes on a different texture.

At the Stedelijk Museum, Sandra Mujinga’s Skin to Skin transforms space into a landscape of towering presences. Fifty-five elongated figures, draped in dark fabric, stand across the gallery like sentinels. The lighting, softly green and cyclic, moves slowly overhead, turning time itself into part of the installation. Mirrors fragment and extend the view, creating endless repetitions of these faceless beings.

Mujinga’s work explores themes of visibility, concealment, and identity — how bodies occupy space and how they withdraw from it. The figures seem alive in their stillness, caught between human and post-human, natural and artificial. It’s an environment that blurs perception: you are both inside and outside the work, both observer and subject.

Taking photographs inside this installation felt closer to fieldwork than documentation. The sculptures dictated movement — tall enough to dominate, still enough to silence you. Every step had to respond to the arrangement of space and light. In this sense, photographing inside a museum is not so different from photographing on the street: both demand patience, timing, and awareness.

In street photography, the world unfolds unpredictably — reflections on a shop window, a pedestrian’s pause, a brief look exchanged. In Mujinga’s installation, those same dynamics exist but within a controlled frame. The difference is that here, the unpredictability comes from the viewers themselves. They wander, they hesitate, they lift their phones or cameras; they become part of the scene.

The photograph I took captures this duality — the act of looking and being looked at, the interplay between body and sculpture, light and reflection. It documents how art and audience mirror each other, how presence itself becomes a subject.

The atmosphere was dense yet calm — soft steps, a subtle soundscape in the air, suspended time. Light shifted with each movement of the viewer, reshaping the space into something quietly alive. The figures loomed but didn’t intimidate; they invited you to slow down and recalibrate your sense of scale. The subdued palette, the folds of fabric, and the recurring silhouettes all contributed to a meditative rhythm.

That rhythm echoed what I look for in Amsterdam’s streets: moments when movement pauses just long enough to become form. Whether in a museum or an alleyway, observation becomes the thread — the quiet practice of noticing how light wraps around shape, how stillness can feel alive, and how the act of seeing connects us to the world, and to ourselves, a little more clearly.

A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
A quiet visual essay from the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, exploring Sandra Mujinga’s “Skin to Skin” installation through the lens of observation, stillness, and street-photography awareness. A study of presence — between viewer, artwork, and light.
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H e a d in the clouds, feet in the w a t e r

H e a d in the clouds, feet in the w a t e r

Air and water walk with me.

First loooong mindfull walk of this fall. North Sea I missed you!

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All for the i n f i n i t y

All for the i n f i n i t y

*24s to the infinity

It become quite an inner joke, that the most people who are visiting the Voorlinden Museum, visiting it only for one selfie. Or… how many pictures u can take in 24sec?

I took few, played around with the space. Most of the pictures which u see here are taken at this exhibition are my visual expression, maybe even hidden story about it. And finally I’ve a chance to see works of Louise Bourgeois [one of my favourite artists].

On the way to Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
On the way to Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
On the way to Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Louise Bourgeois Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Yayoi Kumasama “Pumpkin” & Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
The infinity room Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Maurizio Cattelan Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Anselm Kiefer Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
[the most intriguing part of the whole exhibition for me; almost no one adored beautiful outside created by the famous artist – the nature ;)]
Louise Bourgeois Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Anselm Kiefer & Louis Bourgeois Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
LB Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Ai Weiwei Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Michel Francois, Alicja Kwade Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Alicja Kwade, Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Pascale Marthine Tayou, Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Alicja Kwade, Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Richard Serra, Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
CJJ, Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
CJJ, Richard Serra, Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Leandro Erlich, Richard Serra, Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Leandro Erlich, CJJ, Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Leandro Erlich, CJJ, Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
James Turrell, Voorlinden Museum © Olga Tokarczyk
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