Education Lab: ‘Our Imaginary World,’ Hauser & Wirth Somerset, 2025. Photo: Clare Walsh
The Education Lab, ‘Our Imaginary World,’ invites reflection on art as a form of healing, self-reclamation and empowerment. It is inspired by Niki de Saint Phalle’s philosophy that creativity can serve as a therapeutic outlet and Jean Tinguely’s exploration of movement and transformation through kinetic art.
In partnership with the East Somerset Federation: Bruton Primary School, Ditcheat Primary School and Upton Noble C of E Primary School, our Learning team invited 130 young people aged 7 – 8 years from Tuesday 29 April – Friday 2 May 2025 to create a mural installation. Through making gestures of emotional release, spontaneity and imaginative production, the mural connects with the work of artists Niki de Saint Phalle (1930 – 2002) and Jean Tinguely (1925 – 1991).
On view from Saturday 17 May 2025 until Sunday 1 February 2026, ‘Our Imaginary World’ is an interactive space realized by the young people as an exploration of their emotions, experiences and stories. Visitors to the Education Lab are invited to rearrange the word plaques on display to create their own affirmations as part of a communal activity.
The Education Lab is part of the gallery’s commitment to inclusive learning programmes that instigate a dialogue between art, artists and diverse audiences. Located at our galleries in Downtown Los Angeles, Menorca and Somerset, as well as the Chillida Leku museum, each Education Lab is a collaboration with a local community group, school or university. The interactive spaces take their starting point from one of our international artists, facilitating a platform for discovery, discussion and additional resources.
Education Lab: ‘Our Imaginary World,’ Hauser & Wirth Somerset, 2025. Photo: Clare Walsh
Education Lab: ‘Our Imaginary World,’ Hauser & Wirth Somerset, 2025. Photo: Clare Walsh
Education Lab: ‘Our Imaginary World,’ Hauser & Wirth Somerset, 2025. Photo: Clare Walsh
Education Lab: ‘Our Imaginary World,’ Hauser & Wirth Somerset, 2025. Photo: Clare Walsh
About ‘Myths & Machines’
Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely are reunited in a major site-wide takeover at Hauser & Wirth Somerset. In collaboration with the Niki Charitable Art Foundation, it is the first exhibition dedicated to both artists in the UK and will illustrate Saint Phalle and Tinguely’s visionary artistic output and enduring creative collaboration over three decades.
Two emblematic figures of contemporary art, Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely defied conventional artmaking and were fuelled with rebellion, in both life and art. On view across all the galleries, the exhibition will feature unseen works on paper and art decor by Saint Phalle, alongside shooting paintings and monumental open-air sculptures. Iconic kinetic machines by Tinguely range from the 1950s to the final year of his life, in addition to multifaceted collaborative works made by the duo throughout the 1980s.
About Niki de Saint Phalle & Jean Tinguely
Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely met and started working together in Paris, France in the late 1950s and were married in 1971. The pair forged an extraordinary personal and artistic relationship that continued to renew itself across multiple projects until Tinguely’s death in 1991, when Saint Phalle took over stewardship of his works until she died a decade later.
The artists’ legacy and work are continued through the work of Niki Charitable Art Foundation and Museum Tinguely in Basel, Switzerland. The basis for the collection at the Museum Tinguely was provided by Niki de Saint Phalle’s donation of 52 sculptures from the Estate of Jean Tinguely, alongside many letters, graphics and archives. The exhibition takes place as part of the centenary celebrations of Tinguely’s birth. To mark this occasion, his innovative and playful oeuvre will be honored internationally with a range of exhibitions and events.
Education Lab: ‘Our Imaginary World,’ Hauser & Wirth Somerset, 2025. Photo: Clare Walsh
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