Josèf Farrugia’s Tabula Rasa Exhibition at Malta Society of Arts This April
Tabula Rasa, a series of art installations that places the exhibition visitor’s experience at the centre, is running between 23 and 26 April in Valletta.
Josèf Farrugia’s exhibition ‘Tabula Rasa’ has its roots in his interest in redefining and exploring the role of the audience. He observes how, despite his enthusiasm for the arts, he often feels traditional exhibition spaces to be “restrictive and almost anti-human”. Farrugia is therefore resolved to give more space to visitor interaction, ultimately developing this project as a way of “demonstrating that exhibition spaces do not have to follow the same repetitive, ocular-centric model.” Exhibiton spaces may be “challenged, reimagined, and reshaped,” and Farrugia’s goal is to ensure that visitors have the agency to do exactly that, recognising their role as participants in the process. This meant “carefully rethinking how the work is encountered. Rather than presenting something to be passively viewed, the installation subtly disrupts those expectations through its method of spatial arrangement.”
The exhibition consists of five installations, engaging the full sensory spectrum, to deliberately break away from the dominance of sight. Farrugia’s inspiration stems from “both personal experience and research into exhibition design, particularly the realisation that many spaces prioritise visual consumption over human experience.” By creating immersive environments that appeal to the senses, Farrugia aims to encourage visitors to become aware of how they “perceive, interpret, and construct meaning”. Farrugia’s background as a multidisciplinary artist is key to creating such holistically experiential environments using mixed media; however, he specifies that “this project makes use of the human nervous system as its primary medium. My installations are not the artwork here; the true artwork is only created once the nervous system of the visitor is stimulated through the use of my installations. That moment of contact, is the artwork.”
The idea for this exhibition emerged from research into the contexts of exhibition design, followed by interviews with industry professionals, including both artists and curators. This laid the basis for Farrugia’s practice-based research, which centres the visitor’s experience through a series of installations.
The exhibition becomes a space in which to experiment with the “relationship between perception, expectation, and interaction”, and this exhibition thus becomes an exploratory commentary on the form of the “exhibition” itself. As Farrugia puts it: “It questions the conventional ‘white cube’ model and the passive role often assigned to viewers, instead proposing a more active, embodied form of engagement.” As ‘Tabula Rasa’ seeks to explore different facets of the ‘exhibition experience’, Farrugia’s vision also involved approaching the installation design by uniting the perspectives of different roles. The artistic motivation and the curatorial organisation of the exhibition converge in the visitor’s encounter: “I curated from the perspective of a visitor. I curated with the expectations I have in mind as a visitor. I curated for people.” The exhibition journey is therefore not guided by a “fixed narrative”, but rather open to the visitor’s playful interaction: “the exhibition offers a series of encounters that unfold through movement, curiosity, and interaction.”
As a result, no two experiences are exactly the same: “Each visit becomes a personal negotiation between the individual and the space.” Rather than presenting something to be observed at a respectful distance, the exhibition creates a situation to be experienced, one that is “designed to quietly challenge expectations and linger beyond the visit itself.”
Dr Joe Borg, the President of the Malta Society of Arts, comments: “Josèf Farrugia’s exhibition ‘Tabula Rasa’ promises to be an intriguing and interesting interaction between the artist, his works and the audience. I look forward to enjoying the experience.”
Tabula Rasa, an Exhibition by Josèf Farrugia, is on from 23 – 26 April 2026 at the Art Galleries of the Malta Society of Arts, Palazzo de La Salle, 219 Republic Street, Valletta. The exhibition is open on Thursday from 7pm to 10pm, and Friday–Sunday from 10am to 1pm and from 7pm to 10pm. Admission is free.
For further information visit www.artsmalta.org or the Facebook page here.
