2017-02-21

6634 - 20170319 - Galerie Lieve Lambrecht - Merendree - Groepstentoonstelling - 25.02.2017-19.03.2017

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NICO DE GUCHTENAERE - BRUNO GERARD - LEO - JACOBS
 
ANTONIA LAMBELE - TJOK DESSAUVAGE
 
Cineaste Griet Teck maakte zeer recent een videoportret van kunstschilder Leo Jacobs. Tijdens de tentoonstelling kan u -in première- deze film doorlopend bekijken.
Een unieke gelegenheid om de kunstenaar in zijn atelier aan het werk te zien.
Tijdens de openingsuren van de galerie kan u ook de WinterTuin bezoeken waar van diverse kunstenaars een wisselende collectie sculpturen  te zien is.
 
 
Galerie Lieve Lambrecht
 
Address
Oostergemstraat  18
9850 Merendree
 
Opening hours
Friday up until Sunday  14h - 18h
 
 
 
 
 

2017-02-20

6633 - 20170402 - Galerie Verhaeren - Watermaal-Bosvoorde - Palestine 50 ans - 01.03.2017-02.04.2017

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PALESTINE 50 ANS


« Palestine 10 #»... de Isabelle Lebon (France), « Negev Coexistence Forum »... photos d'enfants
palestiniens et « Allenby Bridge 1967 »... de Vincent Verhaeren

"Que peut-on encore dire ou écrire après 50 ans d'injustices?
Le premier reportage à l'étranger (et mon premier voyage en avion) auquel j'ai participé en 1967, c'était la « Guerre des Six jours » en Egypte, en Jordanie, en Syrie et au Liban.
Sous nos yeux, des milliers de Palestiniens fuyaient la guerre, entre autres vers Amman en Jordanie en passant le Jourdain par Allenby Bridge où ils étaient directement parqués et nourris par les Nations Unies. Aujourd'hui ces Palestiniens, leurs enfants et petits-enfants sont toujours dans les mêmes camps.
Mais qu'ont-ils fait ces Palestiniens pour souffrir autant? Comment est-ce possible quand on pense à tout ce que les Juifs ont souffert et subi en Europe durant la dernière guerre mondiale? Les Palestiniens seront-ils ou sont-ils les Sioux de la Palestine?" (Vincent Verhaeren)


PALESTINE #
"Me regarderas-tu à travers ton regard d'homme libre qui connait la logique des droits et des devoirs ? Probablement.
Que sais-tu de moi hormis les conflits que j'endure avec ma communauté depuis… Regarde...regarde moi bien...je m'offre à ton regard sans ciller.
Moi qui suis nu...je peux encore donner.
Que capteras-tu dans ce clair obscur ?
Observe ma posture, mon abandon, mon insolence, ma fierté, mon obstination.... Quand je prends la pose, que vois-tu ?
Est-ce ma part d'ombre ou ma part de lumière ?
Mais pour tout dire, je m'en remets entièrement à elle : la photographie.
Car c'est bien elle qui est maitre de cérémonie...
C’est elle qui voit au delà de ce que je crois donner à voir.
Que vois tu de nous deux l'étranger dans cette pénombre ?
Prends...prends tout avec tes yeux, ton cœur, ta peau...
Et si je te fais frissonner…rire...pleurer ou même tousser,
Je saurai alors que je suis bien vivant et que j’existe." (Isabelle Lebon)

 
Galerie Verhaeren
 
Address
Gratèsstraat 7
1170 Watermaal-Bosvoorde
 
Opening hours
Wednesday up until Saturday  14h - 18h
Sunday  10h - 13h
 
 
 
 
 

6632 - 20170723 - Anna 4 Art Gallery - Brussel - Anna Agtma - 16.02.2017-23.07.2017

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Of course, it’s not always easy to see things from another  point of view. Another person’s ideas and values might conflict with yours and make you question-or even change-what you believe. Some people choose to take the easy route and ignore other people’s perspectives. However, when people fail even to attempt to understand others, personal relationships suffer, prejudice festers in our society, and nations become pitted against each other with deadly results. The world would be a better place if everyone made the effort to see things from other points of view.
ANNA AGTMA’s satirical sculptures and dark humour set her artworks above the simple pleasures of visual one-liners. They extend the boundaries of the imagination and blur the lines between reality and myth.

 
Anna 4 Art Gallery
 
Address
Rollebeekstraat  32
1000 Brussel
 
Opening hours
Thursday up until Saterday  14h - 18h
Sunday  12h - 16h
 
 
 
 
 

6631 - 20170315 - Maruani Mercier - Brussel - Men Alive - 12.01.2017-15.03.2017

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MEN ALIVE
 
Maruani Mercier is pleased to present the group exhibition Man Alive, curated by gallery artist Wendy White. The exhibition includes works by Nina Chanel Abney, Judith Bernstein, Jordan Casteel, Rosson Crow, Rochelle Feinstein, Keltie Ferris, Joanne Greenbaum, Liz Markus, Marilyn Minter, Nathlie Provosty, Ruth Root, Pat Steir, Kaari Upson, Mickalene Thomas, Julia Wachtel, Wendy White, Sue Williams, and Brenna Youngblood.
 
All of the artists in Man Alive shatter rules that are meant to be broken but seldom are. Judith Bernstein’s paintings of male and female genitalia are, in her words, feminist with a capital “F.” Pat Steir has pushed the definition of gesture in abstract painting to new levels for nearly five decades. Rosson Crow and Liz Markus merge art and fashion seamlessly in paintings that seem to disembowel canonized painting with raw, expressive candor. 
 
Abstract painters Keltie Ferris, Joanne Greenbaum, and Ruth Root aren’t looking to embellish the foyer or match the sofa, but rather to consistently redefine the boundaries of taste and propriety. Brenna Youngblood tackles identity by way of the everyday object, pushing tactile surfaces against familiar collaged images. And not every important moment comes at high volume, as evidenced by the eerie cast silicon works of Kaari Upson and the subtle oil paintings of Nathlie Provosty.
 
The figurative painters in Man Alive are leading the charge of redefining canonized subject matter. Jordan Casteel, a keen observer, tells a story of black men’s lives that is not often told in portraiture.
Marilyn Minter, once shunned by the art world for being too explicit, deals out a warrior’s critique of representation and consumption. In Mickalene Thomas’ works, black women take the place historically reserved for Western art history’s leading men. 
 
In the crisp, cinematic, photo-based works of Julia Wachtel, appropriation is near weaponized. The bold, raucous paintings of Nina Chanel Abney approach subjects such as police brutality head-on, turning white, male-dominated art historical tropes inside out and upside down. Wendy White’s painting celebrates First Lady Michelle Obama. Rochelle Feinstein highlights the paradox between the viewer’s cognitive and visual responses, while Sue Williams uses high-key perversion to fearlessly distill the decorative and the hardcore.
 
The exhibition takes its title from a phrase originating in the 1800s as an expression of shock or surprise, perhaps indicating that men at sea had found a shipwreck survivor. The artists in Man Alive are drawn together not only by the politics inherent in their work, or activism in their personal life, but also by the stand-alone impact of what they choose to make. They refuse to settle, refuse to be quiet, refuse to make nice. 
 
 
Maruani Mercier
 
Address
Louizalaan 430
1050 Brussel
 
Opening hours
Monday up until Saturday  11h - 18h
 
 
 
 

6630 - 20170401 - Bernier/Eliades Gallery - Brussel - Mineral Group Show - 15.01.2017-01.04.2017

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MINERAL GROUP SHOW

The exhibit “Mineral - Vegetal”, hosted by the Bernier/Eliades Gallery gathers together a diverse body of works comprised and expressive of these elemental components of our world. These works open through our experiences of rocks, metals, branches, flowers, and roots toward a composite awareness of ourselves as bodies in a world of bodies of different kinds and materials. Sensations of weight and lightness, stillness and motion, silence and sound stir up from the bringing together of these forms.
 
We begin by considering how the mineral speaks to us of the weight of bodies and things. In Verde Argento, the immense weight of the block of stone suspended by a simple knot dramatizes Giovanni Anselmo’s play with the earthly, severe presence of material and the slim, strategic tether by which it may be made to appear buoyant. As an act of balance and gravity, this piece perpetually defers an imminent crash. Magic, determination, and a resourceful wit come together in this pithy, enigmatic composition. It instrumentalizes, as aphorisms or parables do, summations of human effort matched and joined to the indifferent, magnificent world of stone.
 
Another group of works foregrounds the presence of the mineral in its historical and social manifestations. An untitled work of a military blanket and iron, arranged by Jannis Kounellis in 2012, engages with the influence of metal explicitly through the practice of Arte Povera, by choosing materials with little economic significance that nonetheless hold immense historical, political, and affective values. This selection models the vital regard artists and appreciators of art may possess for narratives that contrast to arbitrary consumerism. The draped and fastened cloth of the blanket on this metal structure evokes violence, oppression, and despair. The layering of these textures—the relative softness of the blanket against the metal as it falls, powerless and exhausted as a body—draws us by corporeal similitude into a concentrated awareness of the dark iron frame. We may encounter here the shudder then dead stillness of force, the absence of any breathing sensation of warmth, and the nearly petrified doom initiated by those denied choice under the auspices of poverty and war. There is no promise for redemption here, no claim to the bought glories of power; there is, in fact, a material cry to the contrary. We are left to reflect on the vehement structures imposed on us, as well as on the natural resources with which we found our living.
 
The works in the exhibit comprised and demonstrative of the vegetal guide us to a different consideration—that of the lightness of bodies and things. Michael Buthe’s Four Seasons, 1990, blends and arranges petals, twigs, and other natural ephemerae—applied and painted when fresh—now brittle, thinned, papery. White feathers animate the circular motion of the piece. Each compositional gesture rising from the pairing of pigment and natural artefact serves as a talisman for the passage of a delicate but relentless strain of time: the time of all that lives. The colors of the four seasons rotate and blur at their borders. Without losing their own characters, these fragments give depth to the suggested movement through seasons in a landscape.
 
 
Bernier/Eliades Gallery
 
Address
Rue du Châtelin 46
1050 Brussel
 
Opening hours
Thursday up until Saturday  12h - 18h
 
 
 
 

6629 - 20170415 - Mazel Galerie - Brussel - Etienne Cail & Noir - 10.02.2017-15.04.20178

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ETIENNE CAIL - ORIENTS
 
 
NOIR - FRAGMENTS
 
 
Mazel Galerie
 
Address
Kapitein Crespelstraat  22
1050 Brussel
 
Opening hours
Tuesday up until Saturday  11h - 18h30
and by appointment
 
 
 

6628 - 20170304 - Irène Laub Gallery - Brussel - Jessica Lajard - 13.01.2017-04.03.2017

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JESSICA LAJARD

The works of Jessica Lajard engage with the moment, with the immediacy of perception.

Hers are images that strike the retina and seize the distracted eye; they seduce, and then retain.

What first draws the attention in the ceramics and mixed installations of Jessica Lajard, is the taste for materials and colors. A manifest pleasure of working the material and playing with textures is evident in her work. The reading is further completed with references to the domestic world or anecdotes from her own daily life. She subverts them with a destabilizing, sometimes biting, sense of humor. These hybrid images evoke the pop creations of Tom Wesselmann, such as for instance The Seven Smokers, a set of porcelain vases from Jingdezhen, topped by mouths holding burning cigarettes, whose motifs combine Chinese tradition and tobacco swirls. Her practice functions like a rebus in the sense that the understanding of the whole is based on each separate element and each separate element can alter the reading of the whole. Combinations with evocative powers such as the ones in Eye Candy offer a decidedly erotic vision of whipped cream and the interlocking of positive and negative forms. Hangover, on the other hand, is a rather visual and literal translation, with its remains of the night before ‘hanging over’ a lounge chair.

The ambivalence of senses, through a clever distortion of materials and textures, and the ambivalence of meaning, evident in both the personal and collective report, partake in the creation of a confusing but familiar universe.

As points out Jean de Loisy*, Jessica Lajard «always cleverly organizes the discomfort of our perceptions by using a language that seems so everyday that we cannot immediately grasp that it is a protest against the whole idea of aesthetics.»

*Director of Palais de Tolyo, Paris (FR)



Irène Laub Gallery
 
Address
rue de l'Abbaye 8b
1050 Brussel
 
Opening hours
Tuesday up until Thursday  11h - 13h & 14h - 18h30
Friday  14h - 18h30
Saturday 11h - 13h & 14h - 18h30
and by appointment
 
 
 

2017-02-18

6626 - 20170325 - Bastien Art Gallery - Brussel - Kranklin & Rassenfosse - 08.02.2017-25.03.2017

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A THING OF BEAUTY IS A JOY FOREVER
 
FRANKLIN - ARMAND RASSEBFOSSE
 
Franklin - 1965
My work draws heavily on Literature, spirituality ( 'déja vu' perceptions and intuitions ) hallucinative illusion which I try to translate in different forms with intricate detail, jewel like and textile-like patterns and shadow shaped dreamy like figures. Other sources of inspiration are , old lore, fairy tales, poetry, novels, fever conditions, unconsciousness, and clinical coma.
I experience long hours of solitude to accomplish each one of these drawings which can take up between 2 months to one year to complete.But this is one of my technics, of course I got others. Some other technics permits me to take up between, only, 2 days to two weeks to complete , depending if Im illustrating a book with a dead line or if Im working on completely different project for 2 years or more.
 
 
Armand Rassenfosse - 1862-1934
Born in Liège (Eastern Belgium) Armand Rassenfosse a mostly self-made man succeeded early in the XXth century as a young artist to earn a prominent position in the artistic circles of Paris during the period of the “Belle Epoque”. His technical virtuosity became greatly appreciated, especially by a at that time very sympathetic public. His personal perception of the woman , so much different from that of his master and friend, Félicien Rops, also contributed much to his success.
The Parisians and more in particular the editors in the French capital were in this respect the greatest supporters of his talent.. He is not seen as a figure caught in the midst of the artistic conflicts  of the nineteenth century, but he is mainly regarded as an original artist, the illustration of the birth of the Art Déco. He has his own place right next to Marcel Wolfers.  His paintings, his pastels, drawings and engravings bear witness to his taste for a form as severe and as varied as his special attention for mankind which marks him out in an age when doctrinarian  and cold formalism very often prevails.


Een eeuw scheidt hen, maar het is een soortgelijke poëzie die hun werk beïnvloedt.
Armand Rassenfosse, subtiele Luikse schilder van het begin van de vorige eeuw, werkte zijn hele leven aan een evocatie met eerbied voor de vrouw en de samenleving van zijn tijd.
Franklin, gevoelig en vertederend kunstenaar, neemt ons mee in zijn dichte en complexe wereld door nauwgezette composities in inkt.

Door aan Franklin voor te stellen om zich in de wereld van Rassenfosse te storten, hadden we er geen idee van hoe hun twee werelden zich perfect met elkaar zouden vermengen. Zijn herhaling van de typische thema‘s van Rassenfosse (elegant, hiercheuses, doordacht...) werpt een nieuw licht op de modernitiet van deze "pijler“ van onze collecties.

Bastien Art nodigt u uit om deze zachte alchemie te ontdekken, uw zintuigen te laten ontwaken en uw hart te verwarmen voor het einde van de winter !


Bastien Art Gallery

Address
Rue de la Madeleine 61
1000 Brussel

Opening hours
Tuesday up until Saturday 11h - 18h30
Sunday 11h - 13h
 
 
 



6625 - 20170401 - Casteelken - Oostkamp - Werner Watty - 18.02.2017-01.04.2017

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“pereboomtakje” - olieverf op linnen – 53cm x 44cm (© Werner Watty)
 
WERNER WATTY
 

Een selectie van meer dan 140 olieverfschilderijen, tekeningen en wandtegels
werden weerhouden om in symbiose te gaan met de meest exclusieve hedendaagse internationale designontwerpen van o.a. Cassina, HAY, Vitra, Molteni & C, enz.
 
 
Casteelken
 
Address
Gastun Roelandtsstraat  1
8020 Oostkamp
 
Opening hours
Monday up until Wednesday 10h - 18h30
Friday & Saturday  10h - 18h30
Sunday  14h30 - 18h30
 
 
 

6624 - 20160422 - Galerie Het Vijfde Huis - Antwerpen - Els Vos & Maarten Stuer - 05.03.2017-22.04.2017

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HEMELSTORM
 
MAARTEN STUER - keramische structuren  - ELS VOS - werken op papier
 
Wolkenluchten,
    formaties in licht en donker.
    Wolken als verwijzing
    naar de huidige tijdsgeest,
    maar evenzo als teken van hoop.
    Zoekend naar evenwicht waar er geen is.
    Zwevend in evenwicht, hemels en onvatbaar.
    __
    Eeuwenoude etstechnieken, omgezet naar het nu,
    op papier gedrukt, soms uitgesneden tot ajour
    om zo licht door te laten en vrij te ademen.
    Els Vos 2017
 
 Dans van dertien
   hemellichamen, schijven,
   oerelementen die
   aantrekken en afstoten.
   Wie zijn wij, geworpen
   tussen krachten die
   blind elkaar zoeken?
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   Gres, natte klei, geboetseerd,
   wordt steen door vuur.
   De vorm ligt vast, in tijd gevat:
   duurzame materie - verdicht,
   voleindig, vol lucht en licht.
Maarten Stuer 2017 
 
 
Galerie Het Vijfde Huis
 
Address
Reyndersstraat  5
2000 Antwerpen
 
Opening hours
Thursday upuntil Saturday  15h - 18
and by appointment
 
 
 
 


2017-02-17

6623 - 20170423 - Galerie Van Campen & Rochtus - Antwerpen - Eddy Stevens - 10.03.2017-23.04.2017

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EDDY STEVENS - PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
 
 
Galerie Van Campen & Rochtus
 
Address
Leopold de Waelplaats 24a
2000 Antwerpen
 
Opening hours
Thursday & Friday  12h-18h
Friday & Saturday 14h - 18h
 
 
 
 

6622 - 20170328 - Stephane Simoens Contemporary Fine Arts - Knokke - Luc Vandervelde - 25.02.2017-28.03.2017

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LUC VANDERVELDE LUX
 
FOR EVERYTHING THAT HAPPENS AND BOTHING ELSE
 
 
Stephane Simoens Contemporary Fine Arts
 
Address
Golvenstraat 7
8300 Knokke
 
Opening hours
by appointment
 
 
 
 
 
 

6621 - 20170506 - Galerie Greta Meert - Brussel - Ian Wallace - 10.03.2017-06.05.2017

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IAN WALLACE
 
Wallace has exhibited painting and photography nationally and internationally since 1965. He is known for juxtaposing monochrome painting and photography in a way that problematizes the differences between the two mediums, referencing aesthetic and social issues through themes of the studio, the museum and the street.

Ian Wallace is represented by Catriona Jeffries Gallery, Vancouver; Yvon Lambert, Paris; Greta Meert, Brussels; and Hauser & Wirth, New York, London and Zurich
 
 
Galerie Greta Meert
 
Address
rue du Canal 13
1000 Brussel
 
Opening hours
Tuesday up until Saturday  14h - 18h
 
 
 

6620 - 20170311 - Gladstone Gallery - Brussel - Andrew Lord - 03.02.2017-11.03.2017

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ANDREW LORD: SORROW, A SCULPTURE OF THIRTY PIECES AND RELATED WORK

Gladstone Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of historical work by Andrew Lord. Long known for his sculpture in ceramic, Lord’s work continually challenges the expectations of the medium as he seeks to mold in clay works that trace the haptic experience of his own senses and experiences. In 1978, Lord created a body of work whose shapes and surfaces were based on the fall of light onto different shaped maquettes. As if drawing from life, or painting a landscape en plein air, this process recorded his observations in three dimensions. By 1979, he began to think of these groups of maquettes as works in themselves and showed them in an exhibition with Art & Project in Amsterdam. With these pieces Lord found ceramics’ ability to take on the commanding dimensions of painting.

merging out of this practice, Thirty Pieces. Sorrow. (for T), (1996) incorporated various vessel-like sculptures, and two ceramic maps (one of Manhattan and another of the United States) across which he wrote the title from one side to the other, as if stretching the expanse from east to west. During the AIDS epidemic in New York City, Lord made several works that had their source in death and illness; with this work he applied emotion to the vocabulary of shapes, making them affectively, as well as formally, resonant. While the color of the thirty composing pieces may evoke mourning and funeral pomp, black is also a color that absorbs all light—everything—giving him a place for the variety and complexity of his feelings. From Sorrow came a series of related sculptures: biting, in which Lord bit into the surface of the clay, breathing, which he molded against his chest, smelling, an impression made by his nose and nostrils, tasting, made by his tongue, listening, his ear, swallowing, pressed against his neck. These vessels became a compendium of his senses and embodiment. After his practice of tracing light on maquettes, these works manifest his experiences directly: “I discovered in making a work with sorrow, the work becomes sorrow and stands for that emotion, just as a work about breathing, made by pressing clay against my chest, can become breathing.” For Lord, “Sorrow marked a turning point because it was the moment emotions, the body, objects, places and memory became central, and I discovered anything could be subject matter. My work became about things identifiably personal, corporeal and autobiographical.”

The exhibition is organized in collaboration with the Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo to mark the occasion of Andrew Lord’s gift in honor of Adriaan van Ravesteijn and Geert van Beijeren, founders of Art & Project (1968-2001) in Amsterdam and Slootdorp.

Andrew Lord was born in 1950 in Rochdale, England, is based in New York City and also works in Europe. His work has been the subject of numerous solo exhibitions at international institutions including The Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh; Camden Arts Center, London; Rijksmuseum Twenthe, Enschede; Milton Keynes Gallery, England; and Santa Monica Museum of Art, Santa Monica. He has also been included in group exhibitions including: “Atelier 15,” Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; “Westkunst. Heute,” Museen der Stadt, Köln; “Anderer Leute Kunst,” Museum Haus Lange, Krefeld; the 1995 Whitney Biennial; “Site and Insight,” MoMA PS1, New York; “The Third Mind,” Palais de Tokyo; and “Artists and Poets,” Secession, Vienna. In 2014 Andrew Lord was resident of the Cité International des Arts Paris; in 2015 he participated in the Royal Academy of Arts Summer Exhibition. In the Fall of 2017 an exhibition of bronze sculptures will be presented on the Bluhm Family Terrace of The Art Institute of Chicago.


Gladstone Gallery
 
Address
Rue du Grand Cerf  12
1000 Brussel
 
Opening hours
Tuesday up until Friday  10h - 18h
Saturday  12h - 18h
 
 
 
 

6619 - 20170402 - Light Cube Art Gallery - Ronse - Vika Begalska & Alexander Vilkin - 26.02.2017-02.04.2017

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The Peafowl, 2016, acrylic and pencil on canvas, 90 x 120 cm
 
Vika Begalska & Alexander Vilkin

Light Cube presents the first solo exhibition of the Russian artistic duo in Belgium.

The Moscow-based Vika Begalska (°1975) was born in Dnipropetrovsk, Ukraine. After graduating from the prestigious State Academy for Design and Art in Kharkov she has continued her artistic career in Kharkov in the circle of artists working with photography, such as Boris Mihaylov and Sergei Bratkov. In 2001 she moved to Moscow, and has been associated with the Russian art scene since.Vika Begalska became well-known to the public by her provocative video works which are referred to the performance tradition of the 70s and 80s and which the artist interpreted in her own way in the post-soviet atmosphere of the 2000s. In 2004 Vika Begalska turned to a new medium - painting. However, unlike her socially oriented videos and performances, her pictorial art is utterly sensuous and emotional. It reflects the abundance of personal motives and reveals a profound knowledge of the avant-garde’s psychohistory and painting which appear to be the areas of her inspiration. Her group and individual expositions took place at the sites of the National Centre for Contemporary Arts, the Moscow Museum of Modern Art, the Latvian National Museum of Art, the Kunsthalle Wien, the Lyublyana Museum of Contemporary Art, the Central House of Artists and others.

 Alexander Vilkin (°1982) was born in Snezhinsk, Russia. After graduating from Chelyabinsk Art College he continued his studies at Northwestern Institute of Printing Arts, St. Petersburg and at ‘Base’ Institute, Moscow. Since 2005 has been living and working in St-Petersburg, RU. In 2006 founded an art-group ‘Prosthetics’ in cooperation with Mezheritskiy and Ushenko and participated in the creative alliance ‘Parasite’, St. Petersburg.
In 2014 he founded a creative art group of artists and sex-workers ‘Teresa’ in cooperation with Vika Begalska and has been cooperating with Vika Begalska since, experimenting with different media, but mostly in the technique of painting.

The video “Aphrodite’s Girdle” by the art group ‘Teresa’ has been included in the collection of MUKHA after the debut in Ostend last year.


Light Cube Art Gallery
 
Address
St. Martensstraat 12
9600 Ronse
 
Opening hours
Wednesday up until Sunday  14h - 18h
and by appointment
 
 
 
 

6618 - 20170421 - Art Point Gallery & Elke Van den Langenbergh - Mol - Gaiska - 18.03.2017-21.04.2017

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Gaiska °1973, Londen

De Hongaars-Venezolaanse kunstenaar Gaiska brengt schilderijen die vaak nostalgische herinneringen oproepen. Het zijn magisch realistische werken die radeloze kinderen, zoekende jonge mensen, hopende mannen en vrouwen voorstellen.

Inhoudelijk zijn de creaties van Gaiska vaak beïnvloed door zijn eigen verleden dat hem en zijn familie nog steeds achtervolgt. Zijn grootouders vluchtten uit Hongarije weg om in Venezuela een nieuwe toekomst op te bouwen.

De migratieproblematiek blijft Gaiska nauw aan het hart liggen. Op basis van het historisch beeldmateriaal van de Red Star Line heeft Gaiska een reeks werken gecreëerd rond het thema. Deze schilderijen werden in 2014 in de Loods van het Red Star Line Museum tentoongesteld.

De bijna fotografische weergave van zijn realistisch lijkende personages hebben evenwel een mysterieuze uitstraling. Gaiska vertekent opzettelijk zijn figuren op een bizarre manier tot bevreemdende personages. Hun ongewone, vaak te grote kledij, hun houding en blik brengen verwarring bij de toeschouwer. Vanuit de achtergrond duikt dan weer een onverwacht gezicht of meerdere figuren op waardoor de spanning van het kunstwerk verder toeneemt en de grens van de werkelijkheid overschreden wordt.

Zijn recente schilderijen zijn ontstaan tijdens een periode zoekend naar rust. Hier staat ‘de boom’ centraal: Een boom met een kind, een vrouw of een man. Een alleenstaande boom op een vlakte opgedeeld met lijnen… De afgebeelde boom refereert naar de Levensboom of de Tree of Life. Het thema rond bomen ontrolt zich verder in een reeks afbeeldingen van vrouwen waarvan armen en benen uitmonden in bebladerde takken van bomen of uit hun buik groeien.

Gaiska’ s  zeer beweeglijke en korte penseelstreken herinneren vaak aan de Japanse kalligrafie.

Het overvloedig  goudkleurgebruik in  Gaiska’ s schilderijen, typisch voor iconen, geven een sacrale, kostbare inhoud aan de voorstelling.

Gaiska wil de kijker geen nauwgezette verklaring geven voor wat de inhoud van zijn schilderijen betreft. Hij leidt de toeschouwer via zijn bizarre vertekeningen, lichteffecten en onverwachte extreme kleursegmenten naar de irreële, intimistische sferen van een droomwereld, zijn wereld vol hoop. Gaiska suggereert op een magisch realistische manier. De interpretatie is aan de kijker.

Mia Goossens
 
 
Art Point Gallery

 
Address
Rondplein 9 b1
2400 Mol
 
Opening hours
Open daily by appointment
 
 
 
 

2017-02-15

6617 - 20170513 - Axel Vervoordt Gallery - Wijnegem - Kazuo Shiraga - 08.03.2017-13.05.2017

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Chiyusei Seibokukan (one of the Shuihuzhuan series, or Warriors), 1961, oil on canvas, 130 x 195 cm
 
For the inaugural exhibition of the new space at Kanaal, Axel Vervoordt Gallery will open with a retrospective exhibition of Kazuo Shiraga’s paintings from the 1960s to the end of the 1990s.

In recent years, Axel Vervoordt’s attention has brought Kazuo Shiraga and his work greater acclaim, and taken both to a more profound place. According to Vervoordt, while Shiraga’s work conveys the essence of Japanese culture, it centers on bold expressions unlike anything in Japanese art until that point. And though the artist used Western materials, he made work that was inconceivable to Western people, giving rise to a unique spirituality and expressivity.

Making a painting requires material (paint), a support medium, method (tool), and technique. In art school, Kazuo Shiraga studied nihon-ga, a traditional style of Japanese painting that makes use of pulverised mineral pigments and glue. After graduation, however, Shiraga came to dislike the rough texture of these materials and opted instead for the slippery texture of oil paint. He began expressing this texture with his fingertips before adopting increasingly wild actions and eventually using his feet to paint.

This action (physical experience) seemed to create a link between Shiraga’s body and spirit. He adopted this approach in about 1954, prior to joining the Gutai Art Association. At the time (and perhaps even today), this type of painting struck people as very strange. Yet, Jiro Yoshihara, Michel Tapié, and the Informel artists praised Shiraga’s paintings for their fresh vitality. Shiraga’s paintings seemed to express what they had been searching for: the fusion of a spiritual act with the physical body. In the pamphlet for Shiraga’s 1962 solo exhibition at the Gutai Pinacotheca, Yoshihara wrote, “In all of history, there is no match” for Shiraga’s paintings. He also heralded the artist’s use of his feet to create deep, organic lines and professed total confidence in Shiraga, “And I can only imagine myself continuing to bet on him.”

Shiraga’s paintings constantly wander back and forth between the conscious and unconscious. Rather than a system or logical explanation, they are primarily based on the artist’s intuitive state of mind. Perhaps the experience of spiritual enlightenment allowed him to consciously control the unconscious. Shiraga developed an interest in Esoteric Buddhism (the Tendai sect) as a means of coming to terms with this and took vows as a priest at Enryaku-ji Temple on Mt. Hiei.

In an interview (published in Futokoro sanpo, Mainichi Shimbun Hanshin Branch Office, 1994), he said, “When you reach a state of selflessness, you don’t sense time pass as you’re painting. Before you even know it, the painting is done. I have the sense that the mental state you attain in Esoteric Buddhist training is identical to the one you attain when you paint a picture.”

Shiraga would begin working by chanting a sutra to the deity Fudo Myo-o, and then move his feet freely across the canvas, seemingly severing all connections to the rope and his conscious mind. Based solely on this process, we’re left with the strong impression that Shiraga was aiming for a state of nothingness, but this is merely an arbitrary conclusion inspired by his works. I always believed that he was actually thinking about some sort of change in consciousness. Even when I looked at his work, I detected his indescribable will. When I spoke with Shiraga about this in the year 2000, he said, “I’m more and more attracted and interested in the real world.” In other words, Shiraga had an image in mind before he started to make a painting and immersed himself in the process as if he was praying. This explains why Shiraga himself was a bit bewildered by the deeply satisfying results. He said that the images he called up when he worked, akin to summoning up evil thoughts, were erased through the act of painting, leaving him with a deep sense of relief. We cannot help but sense Shiraga’s humanity in this conscious state, far removed from the unconscious.

Shiraga’s work underwent a change from the time he began painting with his feet in the 1950s to the end of his career. The shift from trying to paint unconsciously in the 1960s to embracing an image in the 1990s is particularly intriguing. In considering Shiraga’s paintings and physicality, his actions and life provide us with various hints that help us understand his work.


This text is written by Koichi Kawasaki, independent curator and Gutai scholar, on the occasion of this solo exhibition.

This exhibitition is organised in collaboration with Lévy Gorvy Gallery at the same time of their Kazuo Shiraga exhibition in London. In 2015, Lévy Gorvy and Axel Vervoordt Gallery co-published the monograph KAZUO SHIRAGA. 
 
 
Axel Vervoordt Gallery 
 
Address
Kanaal - Stokerijstraat 19
2110 Wijnegem
 
Opening hours
by appointment
 
 
 
 

2017-02-13

6616 - 20170319 - Galerie Evasion - Waremme - Jo Rome - 18.02.2017-19.03.2017

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N°2 « Sur le chemin » - 105 x 125 cm
 
JO ROME
 
Galerie Evasion
 
Address
Av. Guillauùe Joachim  42
4300 Waremme
 
Opening hours
Thursday & Friday  14h - 18h
Saturday & Sunday  10h30 - 12h & 14h - 18h
and by appointment
 
 

 
 
 
 

6615 - 20170401 - Rodolphe Janssen - Brussel - Douglas Eynon - 16.02.2017-01.04.2017

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DOUGLAS EYNON
 
Once I had to organize an exhibition in which I showed a book of drawings belonging to Doug. The book was something of an oversized notebook in which all his ideas for sculptures and paintings, anecdotes, souvenirs, weather forecasts and questionings were all drawn together in mysterious fictional landscapes. The book was a sort of fantasy world Doug had created where all kinds of different thoughts were given a place to exchange and interact with each other, like juvenile chromosomes in spinal marrow. His installations are in part realizations of certain scenes or combinations appearing out of the drawings and paintings. The large paintings are views of the fictional landscape and sometimes allow themselves to work as backdrops for the sculptures in the foreground. The combinations of subjects and motifs alternate in ever-changing formations, with an importance on looping and repeating one’s self like the reels of a fruit machine, the same popular images spinning different combinations.

Imagine you’re at a small train station somewhere in the middle of Germany. Inside there is a glass corridor with a small convenience store on one side and on the other side there is a windowless fruit machine hall that looks like a smoking room full of fruit machines. With another two hours to go you decide to try your luck on one of the machines. There are about 20 of them. There’s also someone else, a Chinese man playing on one of the machines. When you are about to put a coin in the slot, he suddenly comes over to tell you that he was already playing this machine. You then notice that indeed it still has credits. The man is playing two fruit machines at the same time. You pick another and are about to put some money in it when the man comes back to you – he is playing this machine too. He is playing three machines! It turns out he is simultaneously playing ALL of the twenty fruit machines in the train station. You go away to maybe see about the store.
Gijs Milius


Rodolphe Janssen
 
Address
Livornostraat 32
1050 Brussel
 
Opening hours
Tuesday up until Friday  10h - 18h
Saturday  14h - 18h
 
 
 

6614 - 20170408 - Galerie S&H De Buck - Gent - Christina Mignolet & Christine Marchand - 10.03.2017-08.04.2017

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CHRISTINA MIGNOLET - CHRISTINE MARCHAND
 
'La tendresse du regard'


Christina Mignolet
 
Facing the subject in portraiture
A portrait brings with it at least two referents. The first is the one portrayed as a body, as an material form. The second one is the essence of the face, the unique authenticity of the portrayed other. But, perhaps, there’s a third one: the portrait as an inward self-portrait showing through the portraits of the portrayed others. It seems as if in the art work of Christina Mignolet these three layers of portraying come to an integrated synthesis. Of course, it is none of my business to analyse the psychology of the artist. But facing the pain, the distress, the loneliness, the human sacrifice, the compassion and the sometimes rough innocence of her figurations, we – as an audience – have a perception of what’s going on inside people, although one will not generally notice it.   Mignolet succeeds in giving a particular sense to expressions.  It makes us wonder what’s going on inside. There’s some subtle meaning not expressed, not explicit, but always there, hiding. This is precisely the idiom of her art work: an alienating and idiosyncratic characterizing of the human being.  It’s made obvious by all her different ways of showing people: wounded children,  loving lesbians, anonymous loners, desperate young people,  women in “jouissance”, secret moments, innocent girls, fearfully eyes, girls as siameses twins, etc. It makes for a surprising “non existing” unity between the model and the painted result. Through this Mignolet makes it possible to make the human subject appear as a simulacrum rather than as an origin. The painted face seems to be a lie that tells the truth.  Everything happening inside the gap between the origin and the painted  portrait, between the artists private experiences and the way she puts all of it in frame, is of course left clouded in mystery, in an unconscious process. Mignolets portraits are not at all refering to mass-media-produced stereotypes. There’s someone made of flesh and blood outside the portrait. But this particular person relives simultaneously  inside the portrait.  Although the face is so fundamentally linked to our identity, we can use this same face to hide our deepest feelings.  Instinctively – but improperly as we know - we associate the outward appearance with the soul of the person. Mignolets paintings  dig into the delicate ambiguity the mask and the subjectivity behind it represent. The personality she sketches looks as an undivided subject, but at the same time as someone who lives the lives of people threatened by the miseries, the hopes, the ups and downs of humankind. More than anything, there’s room for an affectionate compassion in all her portraiture.

Joannes Késenne (Phd, lecturer Theory of Art at the MAD-Faculty, Belgium)
 
 
Christine Marchand
 

The main source of inspiration for me is while being along the way, the confrontation with the surrounding.The passing countryside stimulates my imagination, often impregnated with memories. Besides images and pictures classical music also motivates my life. Music waives my emotions and makes me watch at and observe my environment differently.Inspiration I find in the spatial structure by Cézanne, the expressiveness of Munch, the spirituality in the work of Antoni Tàpies. I love the playfulness and sensuality in the work of Ronald Noorman and the intelligent universe of Jürgen Partenheimer; both artists who achieve a great expressiveness with limited resources.

 
 
Galerie S&H De Buck
 
Address
Zuidstationstraat 25
9000 Gent
 
Opening hours
Wednesday up until Saturday  15h - 18h
and by appointment