Works
Bonnie Hvillum, Tale of the Gatherer
Rafi Ajl, Pressure Crack Vessels
June 24 – August 08 2026
Portrait of Bonnie by Johannes Berger
Portrait of Rafi by Erik Benjamins
Opening
Wednesday, June 24
from 6–9PM
On View
June 24 – August 08 2026
Wednesday – Saturday
Noon – 5PM
Marta
3021 Rowena Ave.
Los Angeles, CA 90039
Object Aura
Marta is pleased to announce a dual exhibition of new work by Copenhagen-based artist Bonnie Hvillum of Natural Material Studio and Berkeley-based artist Rafi Ajl. Co-existing in the gallery’s main exhibition space, these dialoguing bodies of work from Hvillum and Ajl—entitled Tale of the Gatherer and Pressure Crack Vessels, respectively—extend from mutual practices defined by acts of process, development, and investigation... of the layers that extend over one another into a collaboration between Artist and Material.
Working across various planes and functions, Hvillum constructs a spatial narrative that derives from the container—the form-giver to both internal and external experience. Conceived as stages of a journey, visitors pass in and out of these areas as a gatherer would; a figure guided by the principles of earth-bound collation and navigation. It is an intuitive role: one that supports the agency of materials by collecting them rather than subjugating them through traditional methods of harvest. The vessel, which allows for the conveyance of materials from their site of origin, is the repository for such collaboration; the primordial “tool,” as Ursula K. Le Guin proposes in her essay (The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction, 1989), “that brings energy home.”
Hvillum, who visited Los Angeles in the winter of 2025 on a research trip to gather native and and naturalized materials from the city and its environs, derives form from this dialogue, building shapes through the layering of bio-resins and -textiles that suspend bark, clay, soil, and eucalyptus from L.A. County in their semi-transparent compositions. Each vessel, light, seat, and suspended work is an extension of the land and the spaces where gathering occurs—the center point of the artist’s source material and attendant modes of creation. Rectilinear sections of fabric reference the format of paintings while expressing the totality of sculpture, existing in all angles and perspectives. Light works descend into the exhibition space, the meeting point between the instinctive and the industrial; the embodied and the scientific, illuminating the vessels positioned on the floor: open containers prepared to hold what we ask them to carry.
Working within a kindred framework to Hvillum’s, each of Ajl’s vessels emerges from an elemental gesture—the quick roll of a slab of molten glass; or thick wax, then cast in aluminum and plated. The materials push and pull, resist and acquiesce to the act of form-making, allowing process to operate as a sculptural force. They exist, as Félix Guattari and Gilles Deleuze write (A Thousand Plateaus, 1980), as “a single, uninterrupted sentence [...] a flow of walking with pauses, straggling, and forward rushes.” Their physicality is a continuous state of becoming—a spectrum that holds both generative idea and outermost completion and positions the object as event, seen from its living middle.
Displayed in a classical format—discrete works on tall plinths á la stone busts—each of the Ajl’s vessels becomes an icon of itself. The nickel-plated aluminum, more metal than metal, declares its material form as a Platonic ideal; archetypal and fundamentally unknowable. A poetry extends from the artist’s forms, their fissures, folds, and vitric distortions engendering a curiosity about the nature of objects and the energy they gather over time. This state of existence, what German philosopher and cultural critic Walter Benjamin termed the concept of “object aura,” trains our attention to time as a dimension through which we experience art objects, an essence that absorbs and dispenses as our relationship to these works evolve.
In both Hvillum and Ajl’s hands, a system of interaction and response plays out: materials succumb to influence but maintain their integrity, preserving the will that allows them to transform and arrange as their nature allows and as the artists, in their terrestrial explorations, facilitate.
Marta is a Los Angeles-based, globally-engaged art gallery. Founded in 2019, the gallery makes space for artists to experiment with the utility of design, and for designers to explore the abandonment of function. Marta’s curatorial, publication, and podcast programs take interest in the process of a work’s creation as well the narrative of its creator(s). Marta embraces the intersection of and the transition between disciplines, advocates for diversity in design, and promotes broad access to the arts.