Mollusk Citizens Guardian Angel
Artwork by Nhozagri
CUTE
Museumpark, Westzeedijk 341, 3015 AA Rotterdam, Kingdom of Netherlands
Why do we swoon over baby faces, stay glued to screens showing fluffy kitten videos, and collectively communicate through emojis? This summer, discover the seductive and sometimes confusing universe of CUTE at Kunsthal Rotterdam, an exhibition that shows how cuteness has both conquered and deregulated our world. In this time of fast online stimuli, being cute is not just attractive, but also a powerful tool to manipulate, comfort, or provoke. Dance to sugary beats in the Hello Kitty disco, transform into an anime character in the installation Glimmer, or dress up tiny digital monsters in the game arcade. Especially for CUTE, JimmyPaul designed a dress to celebrate Miffy’s seventieth birthday. From Japanese kawaii to funny memes and futuristic design: CUTE immerses you in an ultra-cute experience.
The many faces of cute
The exhibition is set up around five themes: Cry Baby, Play Together, Monstrous Other, Sugar-Coated Pill, and Hypersonic. Each section reveals that cuteness has many faces – from sweet, innocent, and comforting to critical, ambiguous, and occasionally even disturbing. The AI-generated cat portraits by Graphic Thought Facility, for instance, appear perfect and cuddly at first sight, but on closer inspection cause a sense of unease. In Ram Han’s shiny illustrations of tiny creatures, feminine identity collides with futuristic fantasies. And Aya Takano’s girl characters hover between childlike innocence and science fiction, while Mark Ryden’s Yuki the Young Yak evokes a sense of melancholy and alienation with its big doe eyes. All this makes CUTE a visually attractive experience that simultaneously invites you to look at what we consider to be cute from a different perspective.
From kawaii to cutism
Follow the rise and evolution of cuteness: from the first kawaii illustrations Yumeji Takehisa made in Japan at the beginning of the 20th century, to the worldwide popularity of Hello Kitty, manga, and anime. In the 1990s, kawaii culture rapidly conquered the Western world, partly thanks to the international business strategies of Japanese companies, a phenomenon also known as pink globalisation. As a result, cuteness obtained a permanent place in global pop culture. Since then, artists like Takashi Murakami and Mike Kelley have been using the visual language of kawaii to discuss serious themes in their work in a style that became known as cutism. In the 21st century, young makers who grew up with internet culture, TikTok, video games, and digital avatars started to interpret this aesthetic in their own way. They show that cuteness is more than just sweet. It is complex, occasionally rebellious, but always topical.
International collaboration
The exhibition is initiated by Somerset House, London, and organised in close collaboration with Kunsthal Rotterdam. It is curated by Claire Catterall at Somerset House, London and Charlotte Martens at Kunsthal Rotterdam.
Kunsthal Rotterdam
The Kunsthal Rotterdam is one of the leading cultural institutions in the Netherlands. With over twenty exhibitions a year, the Kunsthal offers a programme that is dynamic and always surprising.
The Kunsthal is continuously transforming, and with its regularly changing exhibitions able to offer crossovers between various art disciplines. From modern masters and contemporary art to forgotten cultures, photography, fashion and design. The Kunsthal’s exhibition programme gives it its national scope and international allure.
