
The Hague is not the first city you’d expect to reinvent what a museum looks like. But from May 22 to June 21, 2026, it might just be the most interesting one. BlowUp Jubilee, the fifth anniversary edition of BlowUp Art Den Haag, has filled the city’s historic Museum Quarter with 24 inflatable artworks from some of Europe’s most creative designers, and the result is one of the more quietly radical things happening in public art right now.
I want to start with the obvious, because the obvious is actually the point: these things are enormous. Steve Messam’s Crested rises above The Hague’s tree line as a vivid red spiked headdress. Studio Job sends an oversized cooking pot drifting across the Hofvijver. Marcel Wanders contributes a cluster of giant reflective Eggs that sit near centuries-old civic squares and somehow look completely at home. The sheer scale is part of the experience, but so is the material. Seeing something so large made of something so inherently light creates a kind of visual dissonance that’s hard to explain until you’re standing in front of it.
Designers: Various
Inflatable art has a reputation problem. For most people, that word conjures balloon animals or the kind of thrashing tube men outside car dealerships. What BlowUp Jubilee does is force a total rethinking of that association. When a floating cooking pot makes you stop mid-walk and laugh before you even think to analyze it, something worthwhile has happened. The best public art doesn’t ask you to be prepared. It just catches you off guard.
The whole exhibition started in 2022 as part of BinnenhofBuiten, an initiative by The Hague & Partners, commissioned by the municipality while the Binnenhof, the Netherlands’ historic political complex, undergoes major renovation. The closure could have left the area feeling hollow. Instead, curator Mary Hessing turned the absence into an opportunity, building a cultural walking route through the Museum Quarter that gave people a reason to keep moving through the neighborhood. What began with six artists has grown into a full five-year survey, with earlier works returning alongside new commissions.
The artist list for this jubilee edition is genuinely varied. Raw Color brings graphic precision with Compressed Cylinders, Studio Ossidiana’s Softshell settles into its surroundings like something halfway between a creature and a building, and Studio Mieke Meijer’s Airboretum reinvents the idea of a tree entirely. Larissa Ambachtsheer’s Keep Me in Balance and Adrianus Kundert’s My First Inflatable lean into a lighter register. One of the most compelling additions is 21-year-old Eugenie Boon, whose piece Koncha pa Dilanti draws from her Curaçao heritage, filling an inflatable with scenes from the island’s food, parties, and community life. It’s a reminder that this format, when used thoughtfully, carries real cultural weight.
The question of access runs through everything BlowUp Jubilee does, and I think it’s the most underrated part. A museum asks you to go to it. This exhibition is simply there, spread across parks, along Lange Voorhout’s tree-lined stretches, near canals and building facades, and even inside a train station. You don’t buy a ticket to see Studio Job’s cooking pot. You just happen to look up on your way somewhere else. For anyone who finds gallery spaces quietly intimidating, that changes the entire relationship between a person and public art.
It also says something useful about how cities can respond to disruption. The Binnenhof renovation is an inconvenience, spatially and symbolically. BlowUp Art was the response that asked: what if we made the disruption into something worth seeing? Five years in, that bet has clearly paid off. By June 21, all 24 installations will be packed up and deflated, the whole spectacle compressed back into storage. Inflatable art lives on borrowed time by design. But the case BlowUp Jubilee makes for public art that is joyful, free, and genuinely oversized has a staying power that the materials don’t. Sometimes a museum doesn’t need walls. Sometimes it just needs air.