There are places that stay with us long after we’ve left them—not for their monumentality, but for what remains unresolved. The past lingers, intertwining with the present, asking to be revisited and, perhaps, reimagined. This is where The Non-Museum Project begins.

As a co-founder of The Non-Museum Project, I work alongside Fiona Morrison, Cristine Balarine, Jamie Zimchek, Shannon Cleere, and Michelle Wilson—six artists across different geographies connected by a shared urgency to question how and where art can exist.

The Non-Museum is conceived as a guerrilla movement: a series of temporary, site-specific interventions in overlooked or less traditional spaces. By activating these sites, we aim to bridge narratives and nationalities, allowing each context to shape the work rather than simply contain it.

Our approach is collaborative and rooted in shared authorship. What emerges is a layering of perspectives—personal, cultural, and political—where individual practices remain distinct yet in constant dialogue. Many of the spaces we engage with carry traces of what came before; working within them becomes a way of turning memory into an active, evolving process.

At its core, the project reflects on and challenges the structures that define visibility in art, particularly in relation to the role of women in society and within the art world. It is both a practice and a position—one that seeks to move beyond institutional boundaries while remaining critically engaged with them.

The Non-Museum Project is ongoing by nature. Each intervention opens onto the next, leaving something unresolved, something in motion.

In this sense, what we are building is not only a series of works, but a way of working together.

https://www.thenonmuseumproject.com/

IG: thenonmuseum.project