Aleksandra Kasuba: Shelters for Senses 2 May - 4 October 2026

Aleksandra Kasuba Shell Dweller IV 1989 © Lithuanian National Museum of Art

This summer Tate St Ives presents the first UK museum exhibition of the work of Lithuanian American artist Aleksandra Kasuba (1923-2019). The show covers seven decades of Kasuba’s wide-ranging career, from her early paintings and mosaics to her later sculptures and public artworks, including her innovative spatial environments.

Kasuba was a visionary artist, often inspired by forms found in nature, such as shells, rocks, vegetation and marine life. Driven by a desire to forge a deeper connection between humanity and the natural world, Kasuba created art that imagined alternative ways of living. Kasuba’s work drew on different disciplines, and in the late 1960s, she collaborated with the Experiments in Art and Technology (EAT) group, made up of artists, engineers and scientists.

In 1944, because of successive occupations by the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany, Kasuba fled Lithuania. After living in a displaced persons camp in Germany, she emigrated to America in 1947, first settling in New York, before moving to New Mexico later in life. During her time in New York, she designed large-scale mosaics and murals in brick, marble and granite for the interiors and exteriors of public buildings. Among these were a pavement at the Old Post Office Plaza on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington DC, the mosaic at the Container Corp Headquarters in Chicago and the relief at Lexington Avenue in New York, and a 4,000 square feet wall in etched granite at the World Trade Centre, which was destroyed in the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

This exhibition at Tate St Ives will show a range of Kasuba’s sculptures, models, mosaics, paintings, drawings and collages from the collection of the Lithuanian National Museum of Art, where the artist donated her works, including her spatial environments. Made of tensile fabrics and without right angles, these immersive spaces imagined a more harmonious and peaceful way of living. The artist famously told The New Yorker in 1971 that she wanted to ‘kill the square. Conventional rooms with four walls dictate too much to the people in them. Relationships are different here. People who come here find themselves behaving differently.’

Spectrum: An Afterthought, 1975, one of Kasuba’s most significant spatial environments, will be displayed in its entirety. The work is a passageway comprising brightly lit, different coloured zones and is made of aluminium, neon, plastic, plywood, steel and tensile fabric. It is accompanied by the sounds of cosmic wind arranged by composer Paulius Kilbauskas, as well as a selection of scents created by perfumer Danutė Pajaujis Anonis, which mirror the different colours of the sculpture, reflecting Kasuba’s interest in synaesthesia.

Also on show will be Three-dimensional Rug, designed and made by Urban Jupena in 1971, originally installed in Kasuba’s Live-In Environment, part of which will be recreated at Tate St Ives as it was in her New York apartment. In making these ‘environments’, Kasuba created immersive, contemplative spaces, no longer connected to aspects of Western architecture, which she considered too rigid or dehumanising. Kasuba’s later projects included her own home, Rock Hill House, which she designed and built in the New Mexico desert in 2001.

This major exhibition at Tate St Ives will showcase Kasuba’s revolutionary ideas and experiments, highlighting her interest in utopian architecture for creating social harmony. The breath of work and ideas on display underpin Kasuba as a great force in art across her seven-decade career.

Aleksandra Kasuba: Shelters for Senses is supported by the Lithuanian Ministry of Culture, The Aleksandra Kasuba Exhibition Supporters Circle and Tate Members.

The exhibition is organised by Tate St Ives in collaboration with the Lithuanian National Museum of Art. It is curated by Anne Barlow, Director, Tate St Ives and Dr Elona Lubytė, Curator of the Sculpture Collection, Lithuanian National Museum of Art, Vilnius, with Dara McElligott, Assistant Curator, Tate St Ives and Ieva Mazūraitė-Novickienė, Project Coordinator, The Lithuanian National Museum of Art.

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Listings information

Aleksandra Kasuba: Shelters for Senses

2 May – 4 October 2026
Tate St Ives, Porthmeor Beach, St Ives TR26 1TG
Open daily 10.00–17.20

Tickets available at tate.org.uk and +44(0)20 7887 8888

Free for Members. Join at tate.org.uk/members

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About Aleksandra Kasuba

Aleksandra Kasuba (1923-2019) was a Lithuanian-born artist, best known for her innovative architectural environments, who lived in New York and New Mexico. She attended the Kaunas Art Institute and the Academy of Fine Arts in Vilnius, Lithuania from 1941 to 1943. She studied with the sculptor, Vytautus Kasuba, whom she married in 1944 and they emigrated to the United States in 1947.

During her early career, Kasuba received commissions to make ceramic tiles for use in furniture, and collaborated with architects in designing mosaic wall installations for public works. She also designed alternative living environments, which were made from tensile fabrics.

In 1970, the American Craft Museum featured Kasuba's tensile-fabric structure in an exhibition Contemplative Environments. Kasuba taught at the School of Visual Arts in New York City from 1971 to 1972. She was an artist-in-residence at Cranbrook Academy of Art in 1976 and at the Philadelphia College of Textiles & Science in 1977.

Kasuba received awards from the American Institute of Architects in 1971 and 1972; in 1983, she was granted a Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. Kasuba wrote several books, including a memoir published in 2001. From 2001, Kasuba lived in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where she purchased a tract of land in the desert to continue her work on experimental housing. As of May 2013, a part of Kasuba’s archival materials – mainly of works from 1942 to 2000 – are now in the Archives of American Art, the Smithsonian Institution. After the artist’s death, all her and her family documents from 1900 to 2019 were transferred to the Archives of American Art. The artist’s creative legacy from 1942 to 2018 is stored in the Lithuanian National Museum of Art.

https://www.kasubaworks.com

https://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/aleksandra-kasuba-papers-16126

About Tate St Ives

Opened in 1993 and expanded in 2017, Tate St Ives explores the area’s unique role in the story of modern art, provides a platform for cutting-edge contemporary artists from around the world, and runs a programme of events and projects developed for and with the town of St Ives. It also manages the Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden, and is the only Tate gallery to have a dedicated Artist Residency programme. Tate St Ives was awarded Art Fund Museum of the Year 2018, the UK’s most prestigious museum award. Find out more at tate.org.uk/visit/tate-st-ives

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