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Abstract painting with thick, textured brushstrokes in shades of blue, pink, and green.

Oscar Murillo, surge (social cataracts), 2025, oil, oil stick, and spray paint on canvas, in three parts, overall 250 × 750 cm, detail. Courtesy of the artist © Oscar Murillo. Photo: Tim Bowditch & Reinis Lismanis

Oscar Murillo: Collective Osmosis

In his new project at DAS MINSK (Germany), the Colombian artist Oscar Murillo creates a dialogue between his abstract paintings and Impressionist works by Claude Monet.

In Collective Osmosis, Murillo brings his work into exchange with visitors and Monet’s paintings, drawing on the french artist’s late-life experience with cataracts and shifting vision. This altered perception becomes both an allegory for societal neglected spots and a way to rethink Impressionism through the politics of seeing and not-seeing. The artist actives both the interior and exterior spaces of the Museum, transforming it into a place of exchange.

Oscar Murillo: Collective Osmosis is on show until August 9, 2026.


DAS MINSK Kunsthaus in Potsdam
Max-Planck-Straße 17
14473 Potsdam, Germany
Visiting hours: Wednesday to Monday, 10 am – 7 pm

www.dasminsk.de

An art gallery with dark blue walls, wood floors, a long bench, and three framed paintings, including a large colorful multi-panel artwork.

Installation view of Oscar Murillo: Collective Osmosis, DAS MINSK/Museum Barberini, 14th March-9th August 2026. Photo: Tim Bowditch

A large exhibition banner stands next to a graffiti-covered wall featuring a blue wolf and two theatrical masks, with a brick building in the background.

Installation view of Oscar Murillo: Collective Osmosis, DAS MINSK/Museum Barberini, 14th March-9th August 2026. Photo: Tim Bowditch

A group of people write on and photograph a wall covered in colorful, layered graffiti.

Oscar Murillo, A song to a tearful garden, part of the 36th São Paulo Biennial, Not All Travellers Walk Roads—Of Humanity as Practice, Ibirapuera Park, São Paulo, Brazil, September 6, 2025–January 11, 2026. Courtesy of the artist © Oscar Murillo. Photo: Reinis Lismanis

Two large, vibrant abstract paintings with colorful brushstrokes are displayed in a modern gallery setting, flanked by shelves of rolled textiles.

Installation view of Oscar Murillo: Collective Osmosis, DAS MINSK/Museum Barberini, 14th March-9th August 2026. Photo: Tim Bowditch

A multi-panel abstract painting with energetic blue, white, and purple marks, displayed in a modern gallery.

Installation view of Oscar Murillo: Collective Osmosis, DAS MINSK/Museum Barberini, 14th March-9th August 2026. Photo: Tim Bowditch

An abstract painting with energetic blue, white, black, and turquoise brushstrokes layered over a light, patterned background.

Oscar Murillo, disrupted frequencies (United States, Japan, Colombia), 2013–2025, oil, oil stick, ballpoint pen, fountain pen, graphite, felt tip pen, highlighter pen, permanent marker, paint, crayon, staples, natural pigments, debris, and other mixed media on canvas, 180 × 200 cm. Courtesy of the artist © Oscar Murillo. Photo: Tim Bowditch & Reinis Lismanis

Metal shelves packed with stacks of old, light-colored paper or fabric, in a room with a faint world map on the wall.

Installation view of Oscar Murillo: Collective Osmosis, DAS MINSK/Museum Barberini, 14th March-9th August 2026. Photo: Tim Bowditch

An exhibition space featuring an abstract painting with "tamales" written in pink, a colorful grid of squares, shelves of rolled textiles, and two paint-splattered utility carts.

Installation view of Oscar Murillo: Collective Osmosis, DAS MINSK/Museum Barberini, 14th March-9th August 2026. Photo: Tim Bowditch

An abstract painting with energetic red, blue, and black scribbles, a central horizontal band of thick yellow and orange impasto paint, and the word "Tamales" in bright pink text below.

Oscar Murillo (b. 1986 in La Paila, Colombia) works across painting, participatory projects, video, sound, and installation, examining ideas of collectivity and shared culture while foregrounding material presence and a critical perspective on contemporary society. His large-scale participatory commission The flooded garden, inspired by Claude Monet’s pond in Giverny, was presented in the Turbine Hall at Tate Modern in summer 2024; in 2023 he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Westminster, and in 2019 he was one of four recipients of the Turner Prize.

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