NO MOUNTAIN HIGH ENOUGH brings together the haunting beauty and fragile reality of the high-altitude landscape in a timely meditation on environmental change—but also on resilience and hope. Featuring works by Anne van As, Joris Veltman, and Simon Schrikker, the exhibition explores the tension between permanence and impermanence in the face of a warming world. Veltman's series On the Day the Last Snow Fell captures snow canons eerily staged against serene mountain backdrops at varying times of day—silent machines signaling a climate-altered future. Van As juxtaposes towering peaks with delicate mountain flora, whose blooming marks both the retreat of snow and the quiet promise of renewal. Schrikker’s large-scale aquarelles of glaciers, painted in fluid, almost dissolving strokes, evoke both loss and transformation. The exhibition’s title—NO MOUNTAIN HIGH ENOUGH—echoes not only the scale of the challenges we face, but also a belief in human ambition and our collective capacity to move forward.