ARoS Opens the Sky: James Turrell Completes His Most Expansive Work to Date

by OS Staff
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In a major moment for contemporary art and perception practiceJames Turrell has completed what is being called the largest-ever Skyspace installation of his career — a new work titled As Seen Below – The Dome at the ARoS Aarhus Art Museum in Aarhus, Denmark

Unlike a traditional artwork that hangs or stands before a viewer, this piece is architectural and immersive, designed as a massive domed chamber with an opening at its apex that frames the sky itself. Through this aperture, light and atmospheric shifts become part of the artwork’s material, inviting visitors to enter a space where light, space, and perception are inseparable

At approximately 16 metres tall and 40 metres in diameter, the installation stands as the most ambitious iteration of Turrell’s longstanding series of Skyspace works — environments he has developed across five decades that use subtle shifts in illumination and structure to alter how we see and sense our surroundings. 

The experience begins with a transition through a light-filled corridor, leading visitors from the everyday world into the vast interior. Inside, carefully calibrated artificial lighting works in tandem with changing daylight, making the sky seem at once intimate and infinite. The architecture doesn’t merely hold light — it sculpts it, producing a contemplative environment that focuses attention on the act of looking itself. 

Opening to the public on 19 June 2026, As Seen Below is positioned not just as a new exhibition but as a culmination of Turrell’s practice — a place where the phenomenon of light becomes a physical and sensory experience, brimming with quiet intensity and perceptual depth. 

Photos: ARoS

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