TRAFO KUNSTHALL WILL KUNSTHALL DIKEMARK
Last exhibition at Trafo Kunsthall
For eighteen years, Trafo Kunsthall housed in the old transformer station at Asker railway station. With the last viewing day on January 12, 2025, Olav Ringdal's solo exhibition ROTVELT marked the very last exhibition at Trafo Kunsthall The exhibitions are now closed to the public. See the list of previous exhibitions here.
Until February, there is still a lot of activity in the art hall with visits from Asker's sixth graders in connection with DKS programs directed by artists Regine Stensæth Josefsen and Mari Kjøll.
About Kunsthall Dikemark
From March 2025, we will move all exhibition activities and administration to Dikemark. The move marks the starting point for groundbreaking work to establish Kunsthall Dikemark with an ambition to build Norway's first hub for art and mental health.
Work on the new art hall is already well underway and we look forward to welcoming the public to the opening of the season's exhibition in May 2025. Read more about the background and plans for Kunsthall Dikemark here .
Premises for rent
It is still possible to rent premises, both on Trafo Kunsthall and Galleri Dikemark. Contact us at post@trafokunsthall.no for more information. If you have any other inquiries, please contact general manager Oda Broch, oda@trafokunsthall.no or Katja van Etten Jarem, katja@trafokunsthall.no
Follow us on social media @trafokunsthall and the website for updates on the moving process and more information about exhibitions and events.
Banner photo: "The laundry room" at Dikemark. Galleri Dikemark currently forms part of the premises. The Kunsthallen's ambition is to eventually use the entire first floor for Kunsthall Dikemark .
Photo: Jiri Havran.
Installation photo ROTVELT Olav Ringdal at Trafo Kunsthall
Photo: Tor S. Ulstein
From inside the laundry hall, the art gallery's new premises.
Photo: Jiri Havran
Installation photo HEINRICH NIKES at Galleri Dikemark
Photo: Tor S. Ulstein
From inside the laundry hall, the art gallery's new premises.
Photo: Jiri Havran