Marie Cloquet
TRAVELING LIGHT
08/09/2019 - 20/10/2019
Marc Rossignol
Synchrone
Opening Sunday 9 September 2018
Marc Rossignol
Synchrone
Opening Sunday 9 September 2018
Marc Rossignol
Synchrone
Opening Sunday 9 September 2018
Marc Rossignol
Synchrone
Opening Sunday 9 September 2018
Herman Van Ingelgem
Foreign Bodies & Protheses
06/09/2021 - 17/10/2021
ANNIE GENTILS GALLERY
Peter Benoitstraat 40, 2018 Antwerp, Belgium
Anniegentilsgallery.com
THE BEGINNING OF THE 21ST CENTURY
Matt Blackwell - Tim Breukers - Leo Copers - Marie Cloquet - Niels Donckers - Dodi Espinosa - Ludmila Danon - Marc De Blieck - Shuzo Azuchi Gulliver - Wesley Meuris - Rik Moens - Ria Pacquée - Marc Rossignol - Thomas Swinkels - Thom Puckey - Herman Van Ingelgem - Marc Vanderleenen - Anne Mie Van Kerckhoven - Andrew Webb
The real beginning of the 20th century was World War I. This war 1914 – 1918 was one of the deadliest conflicts in history with estimated 21 million deaths. In 1918 it was followed by the big 1918 influenza pandemic with over 100 million deaths.100 Years ago Paul Van Ostaijen (° Antwerp, 1896 - 1928) wrote his masterpiece “Bezette Stad” – “Occupied City”. The Covid – 19 pandemic seems to echo this catastrophe and will bring us to big shifts not in the least to the consequences of the climate crisis, the end of old capitalism and old politics. The real beginning of the 21st century Is now! We present work by artists of the gallery and some new and classic artists as they always have been the canaries in society’s coal mine.
About “Occupied City” and Paul Van Ostaijen: Today ‘Occupied City’ is regarded as an important contribution to Europe’s modernist literature. Embedded in a fragmentary atmospheric sketch of life in the port of Antwerp during World War I, ‘Occupied City’ is first and foremost a settling of accounts with the bourgeois culture and politics of Ostaijen’s period. The Dadaist influence from his time in Berlin can be found in its inventive rhythmical typography, its use of the collage technique, and the radicalism of its unparalleled cynical evocation of wartime suffering.
Exhibition on view until 23 August, by appointment: +32 (0)4777 567 21 or email us: mail@anniegentilsgallery.com
Please keep social distancing in mind and bring your face covering.