Sabina Maria van der Linden, curated by Tenko Nakajima
Sabina Maria van der Linden
June 5 – August 23, 2025

EN
Josey proudly presents a survey of works by Dutch artist Sabina Maria van der Linden,
dating from the 1990’s to the present.
The exhibition features Perfectly You, an extraordinary filmic anthology comprising fifty
vignettes that meditate on dysmorphic desire and narcissistic compulsion; an extravagant
dream-work on the synthetic self-image of contemporary culture, the commerce of beauty and the drive for perfection.
Elsewhere, meticulously choreographed films, elaborate costume designs, photoshopped
forgeries and calligraphic slogans chart symmetries between conceptual and formal artifice and the regulatory apparatus of feminine beauty.
‘Das Letzte II’ is an extension of Sabina Maria van der Linden’s preceding exhibition curated by Tenko Nakajima at Gandt, NY. The exhibition includes additional works as well as those shown at Gandt, visitors will also be able to access the artists website: www.no1girl.net
DE
Josey freut sich, eine Übersichtsausstellung der niederländischen Künstlerin Sabina
Maria van der Linden mit Arbeiten aus den 1990er Jahren bis heute zu präsentieren.
Im Zentrum der Ausstellung steht die außergewöhnliche Filmanthologie Perfectly You,
die aus fünfzig Vignetten besteht. In diesem extravaganten Traumwerk meditiert van der
Linden über dysmorphe Begierden und narzisstische Zwänge. Sie setzt sich mit dem
synthetischen Selbstbild der zeitgenössischen Kultur, der Kommerzialisierung von
Schönheit sowie un se rem Streben nach Perfektion auseinander.
In akribisch choreografierten Filmen, aufwendigen Kostümdesigns, mit Photoshop erstellten Fälschungen sowie kalligrafischen Slogans stellt sie darüber hinaus Analogien zwischen konzeptueller und formaler Kunstfertigkeit sowie dem Normierungsapparat weiblicher Schönheit her.
Das Letzte II ist eine Erweiterung ihrer vorherigen Ausstellung bei Gandt in New York,
die von Tenko Nakajima wurde. Neben den bereits dort gezeigten Arbeiten umfasst die Ausstellung zusätzliche Werke. Darüber hinaus haben die Besucher*innen die Möglichkeit, die Website der Künstlerin zu besuchen: www.no1girl.net
Backdrops of sedative blues and Prozac pinks permeate the screens, calligraphic forms, prints, and costumes illustrated in the diverse series of works by Sabina Maria van der Linden, ranging from the late ‘90s to the present, created during her time in Berlin. Although always a formative and impactful figure since my childhood, I had not seen Sabina’s works until five years ago when I visited her house on Kottbusserdamm. There, she revealed from beneath her bed many boxes containing calligraphic drawings, silkscreen prints, photoshopped versions of herself with Naomi Campbell, and in bed with a prominent male artist. A cacophony of fetishism, idol cult, advertising, fashion, superficiality, and vintage porn.
Through choreographed, staged, performed, and photoshopped characters, she addresses the extreme poles: the desire for flawless beauty, youth, total control, and perfection. The narcissistically charged, perfection seeking characters are contrasted in her video works such as “Perfectly You,” a series of fifty videos. They are based on a compositional process that explores the mechanisms of individual and collective control on different levels. The figures, decorative sets, costumes, and objects in van der Linden’s films also present language as a modular form, speaking in ever-new constellations of emptiness, isolation, and superficiality.
The videos and calligraphies are very choreographed and artificial—exuding stiff elegance, meticulous self-control, discipline, and perfectionism, akin to a middle-class homemaker tarted up. Both the women and men narcissistically show off body parts, gesturing as if in a 1950s striptease, admiring themselves as if they were expensive cars or a new refrigerator in an old commercial.
Almost always, her films are collaborative projects involving actors, other artists, and directors, reminiscent of a generous and giving era of Berlin that has ceased to exist. While improvisations form the starting point, they follow not thematic but formal rules: the setting and costumes dictate the movement of the actors, improvised dialogues and monologues are not developed spontaneously but with a significant time gap, numerous interruptions, and repetitions.
—She’d like to be in all things no more than the idea that people have of her—
Tenko Nakajima

















Untitled
Date unknown
Graphite on paper
42 × 29.7 cm, 51.1 × 40.3 cm (framed)

Untitled
2003
Ballpoint pen on paper, aluminium frame
29.7 × 21 cm, 42.5 × 34.9 cm (framed)

’Ehre sei mir wie groß ist meine Herrlichkeit’
(Honor to me, as great is my glory)
Date unknown
Ballpoint pen on paper, aluminium frame
21 × 29.7 cm, 34.9 × 42.5 cm (framed)

’Astounding! There it is, the first word that comes to mind when
I see you. How beautiful you are. It breaks my heart. I would give
anything for moments like these. Moments of such beauty that I
can’t help but cry. Fairy-like. The simplicity is touching. Brilliant
simplicity. Business style.’
Date unknown, Unique
Lacquer and ink on paper
59.3 × 41.91 cm

Untitled
Date unknown
C-type photographic print
29.7 × 21 cm, 38.5 × 29.6 cm (framed)

’Left Hand’
Date unknown
Graphite on paper
42 × 29.7 cm, 51.7 × 39.6 cm (framed)

’Candyman’
2002
Ballpoint pen on paper, aluminium frame
21 × 29.7 cm, 34.9 × 42.5 cm (framed)

’Bluebell’
2000
Ballpoint pen on paper, aluminium frame
21 × 29.7 cm, 34.9 × 42.5 cm (framed)

’unproductive wasted meaningless excluded from
historical narrative endangered by the prospect
of complete erasure’
Date unknown, Unique
Lacquer and ink on paper
59.3 × 41.91 cm

Untitled
Date unknown
Ballpoint pen on paper, aluminium frame
21 × 29.7 cm, 34.9 × 42.5 cm (framed)

’D&G = music’
Date unknown
Ballpoint pen on paper, aluminium frame
21 × 29.7 cm, 34.9 × 42.5 cm (framed)

Untitled
2001
Collage on cellophane
81 × 91.4 cm

Untitled
Date unknown
C-type photographic prints
12.7 × 17.5 cm each, 41.6 × 71.7 cm (framed)

Untitled
Date unknown
C-type photographic print
20 × 25.8 cm, 26.2 × 35.1 cm (framed)

Untitled
Date unknown
Crayon on paper, aluminium frame
29.7 × 42 cm, 34.9 × 42.5 cm (framed)

’Cosmos’
Date unknown
Lacquer and ink on paper
59.3 × 41.91 cm

’Left Hand 2’
Date unknown
Graphite on paper
42 × 29.7 cm, 51.7 × 39.6 cm (framed)

Untitled
Date unknown
Graphite on paper
41.9 × 29.6, 51.1 × 40.3 cm (framed)
