Bildmuseet: Belkis Ayón / Mythologies
Belkis Ayón (1967–1999) is one of Cuba’s most prominent artists. In the first Nordic presentation of the artist’s work, Bildmuseet presents creative highlights from her brief but intense career, from the mid-1980s to the late 1990s.
The exhibition will be previewed to the media by arrangement from Monday 19 May. Please contact us with your requests.
The figures, symbols and rituals that feature in Belkis Ayón’s monumental works are drawn from the Abakuá, a secretive Afro-Cuban brotherhood that she explored throughout her artistic career. Her interpretations of their myths speak of belonging, silence, power and resistance, introducing ideas about the amalgamation of religions and belief systems. Ayón’s iconic works create their own universe of traditions, hierarchies and worldviews.
In particular, she focused on the female character Sikán, who – despite her central role in Abakuá mythology – had been excluded from religious practice. By giving a voice to Sikán and other silenced figures, Ayón challenged both religious and societal power structures in Cuban society. Her work dates back to a period of economic crisis and profound uncertainty in Cuba, issues reflected by artists of her generation. As a woman and an atheist, her works proposed a radical new mythology through which to reinterpret history and influence the future.
By pushing the boundaries of collography – a graphic technique in which materials such as paper, cardboard, and sandpaper are glued onto cardboard to create the printing plates – she developed a deeply personal visual imagery. Working with great technical skill, a sensitivity to the expression of the material and a limited colour palette, she created a multi-layered pictorial world, in which myths and dreams come together in an existential search and politically charged symbolism.
Ayón never intended to reproduce and perpetuate the Abakuá myth exactly as it was. Instead, she created a new iconography to bring together its visual and poetic elements, adding her own interpretations and inviting the audience to add theirs. Belkis Ayón’s work is a timeless and universal contemplation on the human condition and spiritual yearning.
Belkis Ayón / Mythologies will be on display from 23 May until 23 November 2025. The exhibition has been produced by Bildmuseet, Sweden, in collaboration with The Gund at Kenyon College in Ohio, USA. Curators: Katarina Pierre, Brita Täljedal and Sandra García Herrera.
With thanks to the Belkis Ayón Estate, Havana, and to Modern Art Oxford.
MEDIA PREVIEWS FROM 19 MAY
Media previews will be available by arrangement from Monday, 19 May. Please send your requests to press.bildmuseet@umu.se. Press images.
OPENING: ART FRIDAY, 23 MAY, 17:00–00:00
The exhibition will be opened at 19:00 by museum director Katarina Pierre in the presence of representatives of the Belkis Ayón Estate. At 20:00, museum curator Brita Täljedal will give a curator’s tour. Umeå Academy of Fine Arts’ Master’s exhibition, Infinite Proposals, will also be unveiled during the evening. The evening will include performances, tours, an open workshop and DJs, and the bar and restaurant will also be open.
TALKS AND EVENTS
A programme in connection with Belkis Ayón / Mythologies will take place during the autumn. Daily guided tours will also be given throughout the exhibition period.
Contact
For any questions about media previews and interviews:
Helena Vejbrink, press contact
helena.vejbrink@bildmuseet.umu.se, +46 90 786 9073
For more information about the exhibition:
Brita Täljedal, museum curator
brita.taljedal@bildmuseet.umu.se, +46 90 786 7714
Contacts
General Press InquiriesPress Officer
Tel:+46 90 786 50 89press@umu.seAbout us
Umeå University is a comprehensive university and one of Sweden’s largest higher education institutions with around 38,000 students and 4,600 staff. We have a diverse range of high-quality educational programmes and research within all disciplinary domains and the arts. The University offers world-class educational and research environments and helps expand knowledge of global significance. This is where the groundbreaking discovery was made of the CRISPR-Cas9 gene-editing tool, which was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. At Umeå University, everything is just around the corner. Our tightly knit campus makes it easy to meet, collaborate and share knowledge, something that encourages a dynamic and open culture.
Subscribe to releases from Umeå University
Subscribe to all the latest releases from Umeå University by registering your e-mail address below. You can unsubscribe at any time.
Latest releases from Umeå University
Thyroid gland new possible target for prostate cancer treatment14.11.2025 10:01:20 CET | Press Release
A hormone produced in the thyroid gland can play a key role in the development of prostate cancer. This is shown in a new study by an international research group led by Umeå University, Sweden, and the Medical University of Vienna, Austria. By blocking a receptor for the hormone, the growth of tumour cells in the prostate was inhibited. In the long term, the discovery may open up a new way of attacking certain types of aggressive prostate cancer.
Bacterial “bubbles” hitchhike on cellular protrusions to reach the cell surface8.10.2025 13:05:00 CEST | Press Release
Researchers at Umeå University have discovered that the microscopic “bubbles” released by bacteria in our body do not just drift around randomly. Instead, they use the thin protrusions of cells as a transport route to quickly and efficiently reach their target with their contents.
Sara Granér / Derail Us from Evil4.10.2025 07:00:00 CEST | Press Release
Sara Granér is one of Sweden’s leading comic artists and satirists. This autumn, she presents three-dimensional works at Bildmuseet. The exhibition Sara Granér / Räls oss ifrån ondo [Derail Us from Evil] opens on Art Friday, 17 October.
Art and Truth-Telling at Bildmuseet4.10.2025 07:00:00 CEST | Press Release
What counts as truth? In what ways can art expand the language of truth and the process of truth-telling? Art and Truth-Telling marks the process of the Truth Commission for the Sámi people on the Swedish side of Sábmie. Through vuöllie [joik], duöjjie [Sámi crafts], drawing, installation, architecture and glasswork, the exhibition highlights the role of art in the expression of personal and collective truths.
Researchers uncover how immune cells use zinc to fight infections — challenging long-held beliefs5.9.2025 07:43:00 CEST | Press Release
A research team from Umeå University, Sweden, in collaboration with Ghent University, Belgium, has made a groundbreaking discovery about how the body's first immune defense, neutrophils, orchestrate the mobilization of zinc to fight microbes. The study is published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry.
In our pressroom you can read all our latest releases, find our press contacts, images, documents and other relevant information about us.
Visit our pressroom