
Bruno Gallery Singapore is set to host Beyond the Visible, a landmark exhibition from 5 to 30 March 2026 that traces the evolution of kinetic art through the work of two visionary artists, Yaacov Agam and Patrick Rubinstein. The show features fifty paintings and sculptures, with works ranging from SGD 5,000 to over SGD 1 million and explores how movement reshapes both art and the viewer’s engagement with it.

Yaacov Agam
Agam, a pioneer of the Kinetic Art movement, has spent decades transforming the way audiences experience visual art. His pieces exist in perpetual motion, shifting with the viewer’s perspective and the passage of time. Drawing on geometry, colour, and spiritual themes, Agam creates “visual music” that invites audiences to interact with the work. His pieces are held in major institutions worldwide, including the Museum of Modern Art, Centre Pompidou, and the Guggenheim Museum.

Patrick Rubinstein
Patrick Rubinstein carries this legacy forward in a contemporary context. His signature three-view works merge pop culture, optical illusion, and dynamic colour, creating compositions that require active engagement and a viewer’s movement to complete the piece. Rubinstein’s work demonstrates how kinetic art continues to evolve in the twenty-first century while maintaining the spirit of Agam’s experiments in perception.

For Bruno Art Group’s CEO Motti Abramovitz, the exhibition is deeply personal. He credits Agam’s vision and mentorship with shaping his own sensibilities and guiding his mission to champion kinetic and contemporary art on a global scale. “Kinetic art transformed the very act of seeing,” Abramovitz says. “Presenting Agam alongside Patrick Rubinstein underscores how movement and transformation remain at the heart of kinetic art—timeless, yet ever in motion.”
Beyond the Visible invites audiences to experience a dialogue between generations, where motion, colour, and perception converge, offering a transformative encounter with modern art. The exhibition opens 5 March 2026 at Bruno Gallery, Tanglin Place, Singapore, and admission is free.
(Images: Bruno Gallery Singapore)

