(Slow Shutter Speed, Long Exposures)

The group exhibition (Slow Shutter Speed, Long Exposures) is built around the first artistic encounters between Sarah Smolders and the artists Rabten Tenzin, Anna van Bommel, Rik Van Gorp, and Jiyoung Chu. In addition to the work from those initial encounters, they were invited to develop new creations for the spaces at Out of Sight.

The choice to facilitate new work was a natural one for Smolders. It will come as no surprise to some that the practices of the invited artists often seek out points of tension or touch upon liminal zones—such as time, scale, space, repetition, labour, or question limits of the body.

For this exhibition, Smolders also developed a new work, Notes on Places. For them, this series functions as a visual—non-verbal—exhibition text, complementing the exhibition and offering a literal point of reference to navigate through it.

Our first contact;

I remember my first encounter with the painting that moved against gravity without pretence. The subtly creaking sound of the thin plastic, tied up to trap air, announced the barely visible erosion of the mountainside—built up out of paint.

I think back to when the slightly musty air of the often too noisy gathering space became saturated with the scent of resin and mint, allowing me, in thought, together with the two still-unknown figures in the palm of her hand, to escape the space into a pine forest bordering the edge of a lake on an overly sultry summer evening in Lille.

Or when, as part of a circle of eyes, my gaze was directed at the ground, into a block of wood, where I thought I could read the dermatoglyphs of a folded index finger in the wood’s growth rings. Then, the palm of two hands—carefully touching each other in the depth of the massive block—revealed themselves. They held a generous, empty space, which shortly after was filled with rice from a nearby sack.

Finally, I remember a row of monochrome paintings that, leaning on seemingly casually chosen wooden blocks of different types and sizes, attempted to disappear into the seam between floor and wall. A tension—in a margin—that I later noticed again in the folds of a precisely folded cotton shirt that seemed to almost multiply into a stack.

(Slow Shutter Speed, Long Exposures) is an invitation to take the time to encounter the works for the first time—or once again—so that they may later resonate and be remembered in other spaces.

 

OUT OF SIGHT
A venue for contemporary art

Somersstraat 31, 2018 Antwerp, BE

Opening hours

During exhibitions:
Thursday-Friday, from 14:00-19:00
Saturday-Sunday, from 12:00-18:00
Entry to exhibitions is FREE

Office:
Thursday-Friday, from 10:00-16:30

During Antwerp Art Weekend
Thursday-Sunday, from 12:00-18:00

During Borger (if there is ongoing public programme)
Friday, from 14:00-21:00

The Woman Who Thought She Was A Planet

THE WOMAN WHO THOUGHT SHE WAS A PLANET

 


 

I wish that those who take me for granite 
would once in a while treat me like mud.
Ursula K. Le Guin

The Woman Who Thought She Was a Planet is the closing chapter of Border Buda, a three-year cultural project taking place in Buda, an industrial neighbourhood where the Northern outskirts of Brussels cross into Vilvoorde and Machelen in Flanders.

As a vast landscape of enclosed factories, large-scale infrastructures and bewildered in-betweens, with the Brussels canal and the Zenne river piercing through the area, and the ring road viaduct towering over it, Buda seems an eerie place — empty and unwelcoming.

But is Buda really as inhospitable as it pretends to be? Carefully hidden behind its factory facades, the area is buzzing with activity: car repair shops, caterers, wedding halls, storage spaces, security businesses, small factories, delivery services, plumbers, moving companies, recording studios, slaughterhouses, makeshift homes. A kind of Brussels backoffice, Buda is delivering all the services the city needs, including sheltering what —  and who —  it displaces.

As effective as Buda’s camouflaging might be for some, it also makes it a target for real estate development and speculation. Its extensive provision of land and space, its vicinity to the city and major transport axes, as well as the general awkwardness that is projected on these so-called leftover pieces of city, rush both private and public redevelopment and ‘optimisation’ schemes.

But what if the ‘friche’ — the urban jungle, the wild beyond 1 — is the ideal to strive for? A ‘nomansland’ that is everyone’s land, packed with ghosts from the past, the present and the future? All this talk of  ‘inclusive cities’, ‘mixed-use spaces’, ‘circular economy’, ‘wild green spaces’— what if this is already in front of us, and we’re just incapable of seeing it? What if the future of Buda is already there?

In The Woman Who Thought She Was a Planet artists, architects, writers, researchers, radio makers and activists speculate on possible futures for Buda through the many ghosts that inhabit it. In their presence, they experiment with alternative modes of viewing, valuing and being in Buda, to dislodge its ‘development’ agenda and broaden its imaginaries, models and typologies. Together they assemble around the question: who do we develop for and with, and why?

Land is a crucial vehicle through which cities and landscapes are increasingly financialised, but this often happens out of sight. Also in Buda, stretches of land are purchased as quiet commodities for speculation: just lying there, waiting until development drives land prices skywards. Also public lands offer a potential canvas for profit-driven real estate schemes, as authorities often need private investors to ‘develop’ their lands, or take over their models and modes of thinking.

The Woman Who Thought She Was a Planet takes this as a cue to imagine and rehearse another understanding of land, beyond property, towards something that is affective and relational, that departs from the different kinds of bodies it holds and grounds. An understanding of land that is a practice of being with land. 

Buda is built on a swamp. An unstable, wet and fluid swamp that is contained, stabilized and drained by large-scale factories, bridges and infrastructures. But the swamp has its ways. Cracks in the lands reveal the close presence of the water underneath — probably Buda’s largest ghost. A ghost that is very much alive. It is a landscape that is also a body. It is a Woman and She Thinks She is a Planet2.

*
The Woman Who Thought She Was a Planet is Agency, Kübra Avci, Fabiola Burgos Labra, Beverly Buchanan, Elia Castino, Lucile Desamory, TRANSPORT (Carola Caggiano & Lucile Desamory), Ermias Kifleyesus, Mourad Ben Amor & Fairuz Ghammam, Bouba Touré & Raphaël Grisey, Ola Hassanain, Tomoko Hojo, Liesbeth Henderickx, Katja Mater, Jota Mombaça, Laura Muyldermans & Bart Leo Decroos, Bosse Provoost & Ezra Veldhuis, Cauleen Smith & Sarah Smolders.

Radio Fantôme is Nick Aikens, Kübra Avci, Het Be(h)lang van Buda, Buda+ & guests, Carola Caggiano, Compagnie Radix & youngsters from Vilvoorde & Haren, Lionel Galand, Flavien Gillé, Ludo Jappers, Bruno Forment, Kitchen Broadcast & guests, RITCS, Radio Haren, Els Silvrants-Barclay, Annelore Van Gool & many more.

CREDITS 

The Woman Who Thought She Was a Planet is organised by Border Buda, a three-year-project of the cities of Vilvoorde, Machelen and Brussels. 

Border Buda was conceived by its coordinator Sarah Demoen. 

A working group of local policymakers and representatives of local cultural associations is following the project. Lara Claes is the Border Buda production collaborator, with the support of TheWorkshop.

Koi Persyn and Anna Laganoska curated the first exhibition in the 3-year trajectory, with commissions to make a work in public space to Katja Mater, Evita Vasiljeva, Haseeb Ahmed, Ilke Gers, Nico Neefs & Colas Fiszman, Amel Omar, Elias Cafmeyer, Ignace Wouters, Marine Kaiser, Pieter Chanterie, Nel Maertens, Zinaïda Tchelidze. This took place alongside research on Buda’s heritage under the guidance of a research group called Het Be(h)lang van Buda. This led to an audio walk made by Lionel Galand, an event to collect local stories, and a series of audio recordings by Rina Govers. 

Els Silvrants-Barclay is the leading curator for the final chapter of Border Buda The Woman Who Thought She Was a Planet, with Nick Aikens (for Radio Fantôme), and assisted by Anouk Roosen and Tijana Petrović. Paulien Follings, Gert Aertsen, Werner Musenbrock and Fabienne Girsberger are the build-up team. Victor Verhelst is in charge of all graphic design, while Anthony Barbarich (Studio Colibri) takes care of the website. Serenai & Nakami are our press team. Lionel Galand and Thomas Oyarbazal offer technical support for Radio Fantôme, apart from the radio studio at Fobrux also generously hosted for free by The Corner and Buda BXL.

The final chapter is made possible thanks to the Border Buda project funded by the Flemish Government and the city authorities of Vilvoorde, Machelen and Brussels that initiated it, with support of local partner Buda BXL as well as support from GC De Linde, RITCS, POM, Orpheus Institute, Province of Flemish Brabant, PSR / Jan De Nul, VGC and the individuals that carry and support the project. 

The Corner, Cantine, Karting First Kart’Inn & La Marina offer a place in Buda to grab a drink and a bite.

[1] Jack Halberstam, introduction to Fred Moten & Stefano Harney, The Undercommons (2013)
[2] The Woman Who Thinks She Was a Planet is also the title of a short story by Vandana Singh (2008)

 

Painting after Painting

painting after Painting

S.M.A.K Gent

Despite the many claims of its death, painting remains a thriving art form. This group exhibition featuring work by 74 artists outlines the medium's recent evolutions and trends in Belgium.

Painting After Painting showcases the work of over seventy contemporary painters. Without striving for completeness, S.M.A.K. attempts to outline the recent developments and trends in the medium. Artists today draw on the motifs and techniques of the past, but equally explore and push the boundaries of the discipline. Some create narrative works addressing their daily lives, political and social issues, or questions of identity, gender and representation. Others adopt a more abstract or formalist language and explore the relationship with other contemporary image-making forms.

Painting After Painting aims to celebrate the depth and complexity of the medium painting. The exhibition is complemented by a richly illustrated catalogue, featuring essays by Dominic van den Boogerd and Tanja Boon. Furthermore, S.M.A.K. will transform Room 1 into a painting studio throughout the exhibition period, offering visitors, including groups and schools, an opportunity to express their own artistic creativity.

With works by Charlotte Vandenbroucke, Libasse Ka, Hadassah Emmerich, Tatjana Gerhard, Lisa Vlaemminck, Charline Tyberghein, Lysandre Begijn, Marie Zolamian, Veerle Beckers, Matthieu Ronsse, Bart Stolle, Sarah Smolders, Shirley Villavicencio Pizango, Nelleke Cloosterman, Vedran Kopljar (& parents), Thom Trojanowski, Kati Heck, Anne Van Boxelaere, Antoine Goossens, Frederik Lizen, Bram Demunter, Stijn Cole, Nel Aerts, William Ludwig Lutgens, Carole Vanderlinden, Tina Gillen, Joëlle Dubois, Vincent Geyskens, Felix De Clercq, Dieter Durinck, Kristof Santy, Michaël Van den Abeele, Anastasia Bay, Karel Thienpont, Melissa Gordon, Emmanuelle Quertain, Carlotta Bailly-Borg, Jannis Marwitz, Michiel Ceulers, Victoria Palacios, Leen Voet, Monika Stricker, Anna Zacharoff, Gijs Milius, Che Go Eun, Hannah De Corte, Sanam Khatibi, Nokukhanya Langa, Henrik Olai Kaarstein, Natasja Mabesoone, Julien Meert, Aurélie Gravas, Pieter Vermeersch, Jonas Dehnen, Samuel Hindolo, Loïc Van Zeebroek, Helmut Stallaerts, Adam Leech, Louise Delanghe, Brieuc Dufour, Yann Freichels, Anthony Ngoya, Nina Gross, Jérôme Degive & Manuel Falcata, Koen van den Broek, Mae Dessauvage, Ben Sledsens, Julien Saudubray, Diego Herman, Pieter Jennes, Nelson Louis, Luís Lázaro Matos and Bendt Eyckermans.