Morgen is alles anders
1993 - 1996
Henk Visch
*Currently under restoration* Three blood-red droplets stand upright next to each other. Are they drops of water, tears … or do you see something else in them? Henk Visch created the sculpture in the aftermath of the AIDS crisis, which claimed many victims. For him, the work refers to that painful period.
Details
- Plan number: 1
- Zone: Human Nature
- Title: Morgen is alles anders (Tomorrow Everything Will Be Different)
- Creator: Henk Visch
- Date: 1993 - 1996
- Material: polyester
- Acquisition: donation
- Object number: MID.B.486
The poetic title “Tomorrow Everything Will Be Different” is both hopeful and threatening. That combination of beauty and melancholy is typical of Visch’s work.
According to Henk Visch, art seeks a relationship with reality in different ways: sometimes art shows reality, but most of the time, reality is concealed in a work of art. In this sculpture, the artist indirectly refers to human vulnerability.
Dutch contemporary draftsman, sculptor, and graphic artist Henk Visch has a remarkable sense of the interplay between image and language. His work is highly diverse: sometimes thin lines of metal, like drawings in the air, other times massive bronze volumes. As Visch himself says, “my work has no direction, but all directions.”
From the same artist

Henk Visch
The title of this sculpture is “Again.” What will this leg do again? It suggests movement, but at the same time is motionless. It is heavy and solid, but also wobbly. This field of tension intrigues Henk Visch. The sculpture looks simple, but the surprising title stimulates the viewer’s imagination without offering an unequivocal answer.

Henk Visch
Henk Visch made this sculpture especially for Middelheim Museum. He designed an ambiguous form that relates to other (bronze) sculptures and to the park. “My work looks like a stump, an old, rotting tree,” he said. “You can clearly see that the sculpture is made of building blocks, like the museum buildings around it.” The result is surprising and invites all kinds of associations: is it a pedestal, a chalice, a tree trunk, a fungus, or something else entirely?
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