In our busy lives, it is easy to overlook the beauty found in ordinary objects and moments that shape our daily existence. A simple meal, daily chores, and familiar household objects are often dismissed as mundane and given little aesthetic value.
This exhibition explores how artists capture the aesthetics of everyday life through depictions of common objects, quiet moments, and scenes of daily life. Some of the selected works are examples of the art historical traditions of still life and genre painting. Still life painting focuses on inanimate, everyday objects, often using them symbolically to reflect on themes of mortality, abundance, and the passage of time. Genre painting, meanwhile, celebrates scenes of domestic life and labour, revealing the significance of ordinary human experience. Both artistic traditions use the familiar to explore deeper truths about life and society. Contemporary artists continue this exploration, using everyday subjects to reflect the complexities and nuances of human experience.
Drawn from the Permanent Collection, the artworks in this exhibition invite viewers to reconsider what is worthy of notice and to reflect on how everyday matters shape our understanding of ourselves and the world around us.