Thierry Grootaers & Tim Volckaert: Let's sing another song
The exhibition 鈥楲et's Sing Another Song鈥 brings together two very different artists in a painterly dialogue, both on the cutting edge between figuration and abstraction, and each with a certain dose of reflection and humour.
Throughout his oeuvre, Tim Volckaert (1979) explores a spectrum of disciplines. The relationship between man and landscape runs like a thread through his actions, drawings, sculptures, installations, photography and paintings. How does man relate to his environment? And how is that reflected in art history? In a recent series of paintings, he analysed typical portraits (in the Renaissance and later) in which wealthy citizens allow themselves to be portrayed with a certain self-righteousness, against a landscape setting, which should primarily serve to further display their opulence. He deconstructed and corrected this duality earlier in mysterious paintings, in which foreground and background, and man and landscape merge harmoniously. In his latest works, Volckaert further reflects on how power structures 鈥 of man versus the environment, but also of people among themselves 鈥 are visible in art history.
In his BBC-series 鈥榃ays of Seeing鈥, John Berger describes how female nudes have existed in art history solely for the pleasure of the heterosexual male viewer, who can even own the work. Only very rarely do nudes, gracefully but passively displaying their bodies, look back at the viewer. On the other hand, there is a tradition of portraits of male leaders and prominent figures, brimming with an almost revolting display of power and ostentatious virility.
The emergence of such portraits from the Renaissance onwards parallels a growing drive for expansion and the conquest, and consequently subjugation, of the world by wealthy European powers. Many symbolic references to the virility of those portrayed creep into those paintings (intentionally or unconsciously): an obelisk in the background, a rearing horse, an outstretched sword - all relatively clear phallic shapes. A good example is the well-known 鈥楤onaparte franchissant le Grand-Saint-Bernard鈥 by Jacques-Louis David (1801). Napoleon sits on a rearing horse and points upwards: he can conquer heaven, too. In 鈥楾he Back King鈥 Volckaert isolates this upward movement.
Moreover, in similar 鈥榦fficial鈥 portraits, the man鈥檚 genitals would often be very pronounced (although covered). Volckaert isolates such bulging, tight pants in 鈥楴apoleon鈥, which draws our attention to a bitter truth: (art) history, and by extension the whole world, is accommodatingly attuned to the heterosexual man. In that context he also evokes the theme of a female doll (is it a mannequin or a sex doll?) as the ultimate example of passivity and objectification.
Another, perhaps less obvious, witness of the urge to expand at that time is 鈥楽c猫ne d'un Naufrage鈥 (better known as 鈥楾he Raft of the Medusa鈥) by Th茅odore G茅ricault (1818-19). Here too, there is a clear upward movement in the composition. In the way a loose sail is twisted around the mast, Volckaert sees not only a phallic reference, but also an association with so-called "trouser painters": artists who, in the 16th century, were asked to cover the sex of previously painted nudes. He also studies this mast in several paintings as a sign of the 鈥榩hallic鈥 power relations that lie behind the work and its story.
In a new series of paintings, which are not without reason elongated and vertical, Volckaert reveals, among other things, this mechanism in art history. The lack of a background makes the abstract image more pronounced. In 鈥楳onte Mentum鈥 and 鈥楥utscape (the painting)鈥 a hint of a romantic landscape looms up like a phallic obelisk, the only shape left out against a black surface. Other works in the series echo the same form, but play with contemporary objects. A liberation can be felt in his letting go of all conventions of foreground, background, and perspective 鈥 the skills by which an artist could traditionally demonstrate his mastery.
Volckaert invites Thierry Grootaers (1974) to enter into a dialogue with his own work. Grootaers' paintings look very different: he works with bright, cheerful colours and a combination of figuration and abstract planes. He is interested in everyday scenes, such as interior views that radiate a homely atmosphere, but also allows human characters to enter the majority of his works. There is often a wittiness to them: they contain a wink, a joke, an unexpected element, or something that is not quite right.
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The exhibition 鈥楲et's Sing Another Song鈥 brings together two very different artists in a painterly dialogue, both on the cutting edge between figuration and abstraction, and each with a certain dose of reflection and humour.
Throughout his oeuvre, Tim Volckaert (1979) explores a spectrum of disciplines. The relationship between man and landscape runs like a thread through his actions, drawings, sculptures, installations, photography and paintings. How does man relate to his environment? And how is that reflected in art history? In a recent series of paintings, he analysed typical portraits (in the Renaissance and later) in which wealthy citizens allow themselves to be portrayed with a certain self-righteousness, against a landscape setting, which should primarily serve to further display their opulence. He deconstructed and corrected this duality earlier in mysterious paintings, in which foreground and background, and man and landscape merge harmoniously. In his latest works, Volckaert further reflects on how power structures 鈥 of man versus the environment, but also of people among themselves 鈥 are visible in art history.
In his BBC-series 鈥榃ays of Seeing鈥, John Berger describes how female nudes have existed in art history solely for the pleasure of the heterosexual male viewer, who can even own the work. Only very rarely do nudes, gracefully but passively displaying their bodies, look back at the viewer. On the other hand, there is a tradition of portraits of male leaders and prominent figures, brimming with an almost revolting display of power and ostentatious virility.
The emergence of such portraits from the Renaissance onwards parallels a growing drive for expansion and the conquest, and consequently subjugation, of the world by wealthy European powers. Many symbolic references to the virility of those portrayed creep into those paintings (intentionally or unconsciously): an obelisk in the background, a rearing horse, an outstretched sword - all relatively clear phallic shapes. A good example is the well-known 鈥楤onaparte franchissant le Grand-Saint-Bernard鈥 by Jacques-Louis David (1801). Napoleon sits on a rearing horse and points upwards: he can conquer heaven, too. In 鈥楾he Back King鈥 Volckaert isolates this upward movement.
Moreover, in similar 鈥榦fficial鈥 portraits, the man鈥檚 genitals would often be very pronounced (although covered). Volckaert isolates such bulging, tight pants in 鈥楴apoleon鈥, which draws our attention to a bitter truth: (art) history, and by extension the whole world, is accommodatingly attuned to the heterosexual man. In that context he also evokes the theme of a female doll (is it a mannequin or a sex doll?) as the ultimate example of passivity and objectification.
Another, perhaps less obvious, witness of the urge to expand at that time is 鈥楽c猫ne d'un Naufrage鈥 (better known as 鈥楾he Raft of the Medusa鈥) by Th茅odore G茅ricault (1818-19). Here too, there is a clear upward movement in the composition. In the way a loose sail is twisted around the mast, Volckaert sees not only a phallic reference, but also an association with so-called "trouser painters": artists who, in the 16th century, were asked to cover the sex of previously painted nudes. He also studies this mast in several paintings as a sign of the 鈥榩hallic鈥 power relations that lie behind the work and its story.
In a new series of paintings, which are not without reason elongated and vertical, Volckaert reveals, among other things, this mechanism in art history. The lack of a background makes the abstract image more pronounced. In 鈥楳onte Mentum鈥 and 鈥楥utscape (the painting)鈥 a hint of a romantic landscape looms up like a phallic obelisk, the only shape left out against a black surface. Other works in the series echo the same form, but play with contemporary objects. A liberation can be felt in his letting go of all conventions of foreground, background, and perspective 鈥 the skills by which an artist could traditionally demonstrate his mastery.
Volckaert invites Thierry Grootaers (1974) to enter into a dialogue with his own work. Grootaers' paintings look very different: he works with bright, cheerful colours and a combination of figuration and abstract planes. He is interested in everyday scenes, such as interior views that radiate a homely atmosphere, but also allows human characters to enter the majority of his works. There is often a wittiness to them: they contain a wink, a joke, an unexpected element, or something that is not quite right.