Vibrations in the White Cube
The whitewashed rooms of the National Gallery of Iceland in Reykjavik are currently vibrating with a strange, organic intensity. Visitors entering the historic building do not encounter traditional static frames or cold stone sculptures. Instead, they step into a living, breathing sensory chamber. For the next few months, until September 20, 2026, the entire museum has been handed over to the country's most famous cultural disruptor, Björk, and the British self-taught artist James Merry. Two artists. Four floors. One singular, wild vision.
Inside the Mythological Workshop
The dual show serves as a deep dive into the decade-long alignment between Björk's sonic experiments and Merry's hyper-detailed, biological craftsmanship. While the singer’s installation, echolalia, fills the galleries with custom-engineered acoustic mirrors and raw, unreleased vocal domains, Merry’s first comprehensive museum retrospective, Metamorphlings, offers a tangible, physical counterweight. The exhibition breaks down the creative partnership into four distinct, thematic layers:
- Anatomical Prosthetics: Over eighty handmade pieces are on display, including the legendary silicone face-sculptures and headpieces worn by Björk during her global tours. These are not merely stage costumes; they are intricate extensions of the human bone structure, fusing skeletal patterns with floral embroidery.
- The Craft of Patience: Merry’s needlework is a masterclass in slow, deliberate art. He embroiders directly onto unexpected materials, weaving delicate moss, orchids, and kinetic metallic threads onto sportswear and technical gear.
- Cinematic Collaborations: The galleries showcase original masks and conceptual designs created not only for Björk but also for other cultural icons, including Tilda Swinton. Each piece is contextualized with sketches and raw material tests, highlighting the physical labor behind the avant-garde aesthetic.
- Acoustic Alignment: The physical art is constantly bathed in Björk's sweeping, multi-directional soundscapes. The audio and the visual do not simply sit next to each other; they actively feed off one another, creating a strange loop of sensory feedback.
A Tactile Rebellion Against Digital Flatland
This artistic takeover comes at a critical time for global culture. In an era dominated by flat touchscreens and AI-generated imagery, Merry and Björk’s work feels like a necessary, almost violent return to the physical world. No canvas. No oil paints. No traditional frames. Every mask is hand-stitched, every bead is placed with microscopic precision, and every sound is calibrated to the physical architecture of the museum. It is a glorification of biological friction, celebrating the sweat, the mistakes, and the obsessive patience of human hands. It is arguably the most ambitious exhibition the National Gallery has mounted in years.
The Legacy of the Metamorphlings
Ultimately, the exhibition is living proof of what happens when subversion meets flawless execution. The collaboration between Björk and Merry has spent ten years rewriting the rules of fashion, performance art, and music. By bringing their creations into a national museum, they have validated pop culture’s most extreme fringe as high art. The summer of 2026 will be remembered in Reykjavik as the season the museum became a biological laboratory. If you find yourself in the capital before autumn arrives, step inside. The air is warm, the masks are waiting, and the gallery is alive.