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The human head is at once mirror, stage, and projection surface. It is the place where inner world and outer appearance meet.

Faces of mind (17 January to 11 April 2026) brings together over 200 works on the subject of the head from 50 years, including painting, sculpture, drawing, and photography. The focus is not on portraits, but on an experimental field exploring form, emotion, and identity. Reduction, fragmentation, and distortion open new perspectives on what it means to be human. Gazes are questioned, masks become symbols of vulnerability, role, and self-determination.

The exhibition illustrates how artists express their inner selves and how viewers respond to them. The show brings also together artistic expression and insights from neuroscience, asking how emotion, memory, and perception arise in the brain and why faces move us so immediately. Many artists transform inner processes into visible forms, making emotions tangible that devy verbal description. Art thus becomes a resonance space between inner reality and outward expression.