30.11.13
29.11.13
spill milk
Szpilman Award 2013 winner: Luuk Schröder, 'Untitled', 2013
"Luuk Schröder posed in front of the officially required neutral white background for his new passport photograph. He changed just one thing: His picture is taken in front of a pool of milk. So whenever he has to identify himself, he shows a beautifully sublime work of art to the authorities."
28.11.13
26.11.13
25.11.13
Afrikamuseum
Visited the Royal Museum for Central Africa in Brussels last weekend. The museum will close its doors for restoration after December 1st 2013 and will never look the same again afterwards. More photos soon from my 10 pound catch at the museum shop (total liquidation sale!)
24.11.13
23.11.13
catalogue
Claude Viallat, 'Peinture', 1973 |
Claude Rutault; 'Gamma van 26 kleuren', 1978 |
Daniël Dezeuze, 'Colombage', 1977 |
Niele Toroni, 'Travail/peinture' |
Philippe van Snick, 'Eclips II', 1978 |
Royden Rabinowitch, 'Barrel construction double curvature at right angles 16', 1964 & '7 left limits added to a developed seven manifold', 1983 |
from 'Museum voor Schone Kunsten Gent. Catalogus van de Collectie'
22.11.13
20.11.13
19.11.13
18.11.13
17.11.13
16.11.13
Patterns for (re)cognition
Djilatendo, 'Untitled', 1929, Collection Pierre Loos, Brussels |
Tshyela Ntendu, 'Abstractie', ca 1928-1933, Collection Pierre Loos, Brussels |
I was very happy with the duo show 'Patterns for (re)cognition' we had on show in KIOSK the past two months!
During his current research on colonial psychology, Belgian artist Vincent Meessen was intrigued by the relation between the formal abstraction of certain cognitive tests and Western geometrical abstract art. By displaying a curated section of abstract paintings from the late 1920s by one of the two so-called first modern Congolese artists, the pioneer Tshyela Ntendu (aka Djilatendo), Meessen proposed a ‘constructivist scenario’ that problematizes the Western narrative of abstraction in regard to so-called primitive ornament.
During his current research on colonial psychology, Belgian artist Vincent Meessen was intrigued by the relation between the formal abstraction of certain cognitive tests and Western geometrical abstract art. By displaying a curated section of abstract paintings from the late 1920s by one of the two so-called first modern Congolese artists, the pioneer Tshyela Ntendu (aka Djilatendo), Meessen proposed a ‘constructivist scenario’ that problematizes the Western narrative of abstraction in regard to so-called primitive ornament.
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