The Stedelijk presents the first major solo exhibition of Karel Martens (1939) in Amsterdam. Unbound shows decades of work: autonomous print works, iconic books, posters and recent experimental research in color and form. Martens' handwriting - rhythm, repetitive structures, minimal interventions - remains recognizable even when he couples traditional printing techniques with new media.

The exhibition is set up as a continuous score. You can see how Martens reuses materials, stacks pressure layers and lets color speak for itself. Instead of isolating "beautiful end products," let Unbound precisely breathe the process: proofs, iterations, combinations. The work invites you to come closer and feel the logic behind the image. A publication with the same title accompanies the expo, balancing between artist's book and catalog.
Unbound connects content to design debates of today: sustainability (working with residual materials), accessibility (typography as a space of use) and education (the transfer through teaching and workshops). The Stedelijk is also programming public events, including a talk with Martens and curator/designer Thomas Castro - an opportunity to connect the work to today's design practice.
"Martens shows that design does not close - it remains open, breathing, in motion."
For visitors, the presentation feels like a reset of looking: graphic design not as clean form, but as research, time and rhythm. That fits the museum, where art and design intersect. And practical: Unbound runs through Oct. 26, with daily opening hours and tickets available through the site. Combine the expo with a tour of the permanent collection or a walk around Museum Square.
Location
Municipal Museum
Discover Amsterdam
After years of renovation with its share of setbacks and delays, the Stedelijk Museum is finally open to the general public again. The historic building has had a complete makeover inside and out, with the museum getting a new main entrance at the back, on Museumplein, in the form of a large, white wing. A ...
Read more