In collaboration with the game store Fanatic, the Roskilde Role-Playing Guild and numerous artists, GAMES invites players and museum guests to immerse themselves in the alternative universes of games and role-playing games, test themselves and maybe even emerge with new experiences that can be tr
Exhibitions
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Inspired by the idea of the bubble as a temporarily delimited world where the usual social norms dissolve and are redefined, the Museum of Contemporary Art has filled the city with bubbles of art. |
The exhibition "Quivery Heart – A film cabaret by Kirsten Astrup" tells the musically seductive story of a crumbling welfare society. |
Neo Classical Space-Disco by Adam Fenton
Dancefloor and sculptures meet in artist Adam Fenton's site-specific piece, created in a collaboration between the Museum of Contemporary Art, Aaben Dans and Roskilde Festival. |
One of the hottest names on the art scene, Esben Weile Kjær, focuses on fetishized youth, hedonist club culture and nostalgia in the exhibition Campaign. |
In the exhibition This Is Why We Cried, artist Samara Sallam (b. 1991, Palestine) reflects on themes such as language, body, violence and artificial intelligence. |
En lyd, en film eller en performance. Museet for Samtidskunst samler på kunst i flygtige medier, og det kan du se med egne øjne i udstillingen Handlinger, med udvalgte værker fra museets samling og arkiv. |
With The Anti-Terror Album, Peter Voss-Knude turns the language of terrorism inside out, offering new takes on what anti-terror measures ought to look like. |
Lea Porsager’s solo show [WEAK] FORCE plays unfettered, promiscuous games with the realms of the spiritual and quantum physics. Opening on 24 September at the Museum of Contemporary Art, the exhibition approaches quantum physics by way of tantric practices and Kundalini technology. |
Ramson picked by hand, invasive oysters and an apocalyptic food truck. Artist and chef Søren Aagaard tears into contemporary cuisine in a new exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art. |