Søgelys marks Eva Helene Pade’s first solo exhibition in the UK. Following the Danish-born, Paris-based artist’s institutional debut at ARKEN Museum of Contemporary Art in Denmark (2025), the exhibition brings together a significant new group of paintings in which Pade continues to explore the violent and seductive forces that exist between bodies in space. Her monumental and small-scale canvases are suspended on floor-to-ceiling metal posts, set away from the walls to create dynamic spatial configurations. Much like choreography, ‘it forces people to move within them,’ she says, ‘but also to connect the paintings together. I create them together, like an ensemble; they talk together.’ The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue, including an essay by Hendrik Folkerts, Curator of International Contemporary Art and Head of Exhibitions at Moderna Museet, Stockholm.
Pade is drawn to the commotion of the ensemble – how, within a crowd, a single figure might begin to lose distinction, morph into another, or distort as it surges and contracts. In her paintings, casts of jewel-toned bodies gather in thrumming, indeterminate spaces that recall nightclubs or theatres.
Oil on canvas
300 x 300 cm (118.11 x 118.11 in)
Oil on canvas
300.4 x 390 cm (118.26 x 153.54 in)
Opløst (Dissolved), 2025
Oil on canvas
40.2 x 30.1 cm (15.83 x 11.85 in)
Increasingly, smoke weaves through Pade’s compositions, threatening to obfuscate narratives into hazy recollections and bringing with it a sense of lingering danger. ‘I’ve become fascinated by smoke and shadows as poetic objects which aren’t objects,’ she says, ‘they aren’t tangible and they became a vessel to abstract the characters in these paintings’.
Pade’s work draws on a tradition of history painting – with its sweeping war scenes and portrayals of religious and mythological events – as well as the murals of Mexican painter Diego Rivera. Collapsed dancers become modern-day Pietàs, and elsewhere, Pade conjures ancient tales of metamorphosis – of Persephone, dragged into the depths of the underworld, Jupiter and Io, or Daphne as she flees Apollo, limbs contorting into the branches of a laurel tree. Intimating cycles of temptation and redemption, expulsion and resurrection, Pade casts her figures in states of suspension, where beginnings and ends become brinks and edges. She explains, ‘I want it to stay in the collapsing part all the time. I wanted to keep the tension.’
Vågen (Awake), 2025
Oil on canvas
40.2 x 30.1 cm (15.83 x 11.85 in)
The smaller paintings in the exhibition become apertures in Pade’s storytelling, capturing glances, touches and other fleeting exchanges. Like the history painters who enlivened their scenes through complex configurations of poses, Pade, too, twists narratives into dance. And yet, her stories exist beyond place, time or subjectivity. ‘I became increasingly interested in the aesthetic of violence, not only in the act itself but in how it’s remembered, retold and interpreted,’ she says.
Knækkede stråler (Broken rays), 2025
Oil on canvas
300.2 x 200.2 cm (118.18 x 78.82 in)
— Hettie Judah
Neon, 2025
Oil on canvas
80 x 75 cm (31.49 x 29.52 in)
Rød nat (Red night), 2025
Oil on canvas
240 x 209.7 cm (94.48 x 82.56 in)
Oil on canvas
240 x 210 cm (94.48 x 82.67 in)

På række (In line), 2025
Oil on canvas
215.2 x 400.5 cm (84.72 x 157.67 in)
Overgivet (Surrendered), 2025
Oil on canvas
40.2 x 30.1 cm (15.83 x 11.85 in)
Eva Helene Pade received her BFA and MFA from The Danish Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen in 2024. Early recognition for her work includes the prestigious Young Talent Prize from the Carlsberg Foundation in 2017. Since then, she has exhibited her work both in solo and group shows across Europe and the United States, and has participated in significant curatorial projects including Uno, Nessuno, Centomila at Palazzo Capris, Turin (2021) and Forårsudstillingen at Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen (2021). In April 2025 ARKEN Museum of Contemporary Art, Ishøj, Denmark, staged the artist’s first institutional solo exhibition, curated by Rasmus Stenbakken.