‘What We Can(‘t) Hold’, curated by students of Culture Studies (UCP) under the Curatorial and Scientific Coordination by Prof. Luísa Santos opens on 29 April 2026 at 18:30 in Galería Fundação Amélia de Mello.
‘What We Can(‘t) Hold’ is an invitation to pause, to look closely and to hold things more lightly, while reflecting on the multiple dimensions of fragility.
When everything we hold firm seems to be collapsing under the weight of uncertainty and rapid transformation, ‘What We Can(‘t) Hold’ considers fragility not as something that breaks but as a force that shapes how we live, remember, and relate to one another. Bringing together nine artists and a selection of works from the CAM – Centro de Arte Moderna Gulbenkian Collection, this exhibition offers a reflection on multiple dimensions of fragility.
The works displayed are situated along a spectrum of intertwined notions of fragility: the personal, the structural and the frictional. Each dimension offers a different way of understanding how vulnerability cracks, bends and sometimes falls apart as soon as we touch it.
The structural dimension looks outward at the vast web that seems to hold our society together. It questions what happens when the systems we depend on begin to fracture, and injustices resurface as history repeats itself. Manuel Botelho (1950, Lisbon), through his ‘101.rç-cmb (from the series Confidential / Declassified: combat food)‘ (2007-2008), collects artefacts of moments that he didn’t witness and puts them on full display, while Miguel Palma (1964, Lisbon), in ‘Upa! Union of the People of Angola‘ (2006), seems to lock them away in plain sight. Here, fragility emerges not as a weakness, but as a signal that transformation is both unavoidable and necessary.

The personal dimension directs us inward into the delicate architecture of ourselves. It reflects identities that are always shifting, the collections of memories we archive within ourselves, and the persistent urge to hold on to what is fleeting. Yonamine (1975, Luanda), with ‘Eu não sou eu‘ (2004), and Maria Altina Martins (1953, Luanda) with ‘Time – Childhood, Adolescence, Maturity‘ (1997/2000), arrange fragments, textures of daily life, discarded materials, and scraps of memory to evoke this unstable construction, while Maria Antónia Siza (1940, Oporto – 1973, Oporto), in her series ‘Untitled‘ (60s) construct potential images leaving gaps to be filled in by the gaze of others. In ‘Falling On Stage‘ (2021), Fernão Cruz’s (1995, Lisbon) protagonist is in free fall, rendered vulnerable before the gaze of an audience.
The frictional dimension exists in a liminal space where the forces of the past and future, destruction and renewal, and the personal and collective converge. Margaret Benyon (1940, Birmingham – 2016, London) gives these dimensions holographic images that resist being grasped in her ‘Conjugal Series: Hands and Rice and Binding 2‘ (1983). In her ‘No trace of accelerator‘ (2017), Emily Wardill (1977, Rugby) transforms us into spectators of the qualities that never sit still. Finally, Gabriela Albergaria’s ‘To turn around 40‘ (2001) weaves elements of nature with artificiality.
Together, these perspectives invite us to reconsider fragility as a force of revelation of what we choose to preserve, allow us to die or rebuild. Ultimately, ‘What We Can(‘t) Hold’ is an invitation to pause, to look closely and to hold things more lightly as we navigate continuous change.
This exhibition, organised in the context of the partnership between The Lisbon Consortium of the Universidade Católica Portuguesa and CAM – Centro de Arte Moderna Gulbenkian, was curated by the MA students in Culture Studies (seminar of Curatorial Practices), for the Amélia de Mello Foundation Gallery, at the Universidade Católica Portuguesa, in Lisbon.
The exhibition leaflet is available here.
The exhibition guide written by the 3rd-grade students, Class B, Elementary School Sampaio Garrido is available here.
This exhibition also includes a Podcast with a series of interviews; all the episodes will be available in this playlist.
Organisation
Universidade Católica Portuguesa
Cultura @ Católica 2026
Artists Featured
Emily Wardill; Fernão Cruz; Gabriela Albergaria; Manuel Botelho; Margaret
Benyon; Maria Altina Martins; Maria Antónia Siza; Miguel Palma; Yonamine
(All works: Collection CAM – Centro de Arte Moderna Gulbenkian)
Curatorial and scientific coordination
Luísa Santos
Curated by
Editorial: Anika Borko; Sarah Zammit Munro; Melissa Liebertha; Direndra
Selvanayagam; Sarah Tober; Anna-Sohpie Löhr
Communication: Justin Stewart Ross; Natalia del Río; Leonor Marques dos Santos
Queiroz; Silvia Lomdardini; Léanne Charron; Iana Kardanova
Installation design: Amal Abu Nafisah; Imani D. Cooper; Margarida Dias; Margarida
da Fonseca; Giulia Benetti; Circé Poisson; Tatiana Fraisse
Paralell programme: Lucille Gerebtzoff; Yoosun Choi; Hajer Khader; Vitor Fonseca;
Margarida Martins Raimundo; Constança Mafra
(Students of the seminar in Curatorial Practices, The Lisbon Consortium – 2025/26)
Amélia de Mello Foundation Gallery – Universidade Católica Portuguesa
Director: Paulo Campos Pinto
Assistant: Benjamim Lucas Pires
Production: Creative Industries Programmes by SC – Sara Cavaco
Graphic Design: Íris Sousa
Installation: Feirexpo
CAM – Centro de Arte Moderna Gulbenkian
Head of Exhibitions: Rita Albergaria
Museography: Laurindo Marta
Collection (registrar): Isabel Vicente
Collection (museography): Rui Nunes; Jennifer Coito
Amélia de Mello Foundation Gallery – Universidade Católica Portuguesa. João Paulo II University Library Building, Palma de Cima
Opening hours: Monday – Friday from 2 pm. – 5 pm.
