YOUNG BELGIAN ART PRIZE 2015 - Visitor's guide

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Centre FOR Fine Arts BRUSSELS

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YOUNG BELGIAN ART PRIZE 2015 24 june — 13 SEPT ’15 Since 1950 the Young Belgian Art Prize is the most important award for up-and-coming artistic talent in Belgium. The contest supports young artists and offers them a platform. The jury has selected 10 promising projects from the numerous applications. The artists present their most recent works at the Centre for Fine Arts.

Jury

—— Lorenzo Benedetti, Director De Appel, Amsterdam —— Gaël Charbau, Independent Curator, Les Editions Particules, Paris —— Brigitte Franzen, Director Ludwig Forum für Internationale Kunst, Aachen —— Christoph Tannert, Artistic Director Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin —— Catherine Wood, Curator Tate Modern, London

1 Katrin Kamrau

Katrin Kamrau doesn’t just collect objects, prints and photos; she arranges them in the space so that you as a spectator are challenged to dwell on the use of these images in the media and society of the past and present. In the work SPEKTRUM*objekt18(portrait) II (2014) you can see 43 portraits which each contain too small or too large a percentage of yellow (Y) or magenta (M). These prints are based on the schematic representation of a colour diagram from the book The Joy of Photography (Eastman Kodak Company, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1979). In analogue times the photographer used a similar technique in order to make photos that are as neutral as possible at a high speed. For Kamrau this is an expression of a typical Western way of thinking. She brings this thinking pattern to light in SPEKTRUM*shelf (2013). Six shelves of photography each focus on a different parameter of photography: time, the observer’s gaze, the observation, the light, the composition, the subject-object relationship etc. If you take a look at the whole you can see that the photographer exercises a certain amount of power over the person who is standing in front of the camera. Just like in the SPEKTRUM* series themes

Katrin Kamrau (° 1981, Lübben) lives and works in Antwerp. Up until 2010 she studied photography and media at the Bielefeld University of Applied Sciences in Germany. In 2012-2013 she followed a post-academic course at the Higher Institute of Fine Arts (HISK) in Ghent. She has participated in national and international group exhibitions, amongst others in the M HKA (Antwerp), the ikob (Eupen), W139 (Amsterdam), Künstlerhaus (Bremen) and the Haus der Photographie, Deichtorhallen (Hamburg). In 2010 she was awarded the ‘Gute Aussichten - Junge Deutsche Fotografie’ Prize and in 2014 the GWK Art Prize.

2 G. Küng

G. Küng makes installations with sculptures, wall works and photographic and text-based prints. She identifies a mode of working and then a category of objects to render within this mode. The results contain hyperboles of various gradations. They vary from literal to abstract. By instigating a response from the audience, sometimes one of agreement, sometimes one causing offense, Küng tries to investigate the emotional underside of the world as she experiences it. For the Young Belgian Art Prize, Küng’s installation reimagines a children’s playroom. Her reinterpreted toy-objects have been scaled up to adult size and more, and infused with adult themes and anxieties. For the artist, these objects subtly reveal the hierarchies and power structures around us, in this case, an institution organising a contest for young artists. She questions who is being educated, stimulated, entertained, supported and patronised, and why? G. Küng (°1982, New York) lives and works in Brussels since her 2013 residence in WIELS in Brussels. She obtained a BA at The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in New York in 2004 and graduated from the Glasgow School of Art in 2012. G. Küng is represented by the Galerie Antoine Levi in Paris, where she had a solo exhibition this spring.

3 Lola Lasurt

The Spanish artist Lola Lasurt is interested in the recent past. She looks for ways to productively engage with the idea of ‘nostalgia’ through a critical and open approach to the past. At BOZAR she is exhibiting three works which are spread out throughout the whole exhibition. In the Bertouille Rotunda The Match (2014) recreates the football match in which married women played against single ones at the Spanish communist party’s annual celebration in 1976, a year before it was recognised as a legal political party. Typically for Lasurt the work is at the crossroads between her personal interest (here emancipation) and common interests. Quite a way further on in the exhibition you come across the comic book A Visit to the CP Nel Museum with Mo (2015). Mo is the South African cartoonist Mogorosi Motshumi (°1955), one of the main exponents of South African comic strip in the last years of Apartheid. Lasurt and Motshumi got to know each other during an art residency at Greatmore Art Studios in

Cape Town. They stayed in touch by sending each other letters. In his correspondence Motshumi teaches Lasurt how to deal with the specific language of comic strips. Some of the texts in the comic book she edited for the Young Belgian Art Prize are fragments of their written exchanges. In the exhibition Lasurt also presents a series of lithographs which were printed at the Frans Masereel Centre in Kasterlee where Lasurt also worked as artist in residence. These lithographies are enlarged fragments of lithographs which she made for the book. The video installation Double Authorization (2014) arises from the intersection of two stories linked to commemoration in public spaces. The first story refers to the moves and copies made of a monument dedicated to the anarchist and pedagogue Francesc Ferrer i Guàrdia. In 1911 the monument was built on Place Sainte-Catherine in Brussels and in 1990 a copy appeared in Barcelona. The central video projection shows the simultaneous flower commemoration in the two cities and daily life around the monument. The other story is about the name change of a square in Mont-roig del Camp. In 1979 the Plaça del Generalísimo Franco was renamed Plaça de Joan Miró. Lola Lasurt (°1983, Barcelona) lives and works in Ghent. As of 2004 she followed academic training and artistic courses in Spain. In 2014 she completed a post-academic course at the Higher Institute of Fine Arts (HISK) in Ghent. She has put on solo exhibitions in Galeria Joan Prats, Barcelona (2015); Fundació Miró, Barcelona (2014) and Espai Dos, Arts Visuals, Terrassa (2012).

4 Emmanuel Van der Auwera

Emmanuel Van der Auwera makes videos, photos and installations with which he unravels notions such as making the invisible visible, the void, loss or emptiness. A cryptic perception of reality emerges from the political, historical or scientific context and references which he includes in his work. The things he interacts with are on the verge of change. Engaged in metamorphosis they are phenomena which question the multiple dimensions of reality. They produce situations in which the logic is deconstructed and laid bare as they invite us to reflect on our relationship with the world. Perception undoubtedly undergoes a paradigm shift at the hand of virtual worlds and new communication technologies, thus producing a new strangeness in many aspects of our interaction with the world and with others. Here Van der Auwera presents the 2013 film A Certain Amount of Clarity (30 min.). The film consists of video messages which are posted on the internet. Each video shows a teenager and his/her emotional reactions while watching a film of an authentic murder on YouTube. The emotions vary from morbid passion to horror, doubt and curiosity. As spectators we do not have access to any images of the original crime scene, but just the reactions it elicited. In the editing Van der Auwera alternated facial expressions full of horror with reenactments and accounts delivered with the emotion of a testimony in court, provoking an increasingly oppressive tension. Van der Auwera has created a publication for the exhibition. It has the format of a newspaper in which the story of the film, A Certain Amount of Clarity, is laid out like a rage comic. These small, grimy strip cartoons found on the internet are intentionally provocative and extremely popular with young people. In a rage comic, beauty is reduced to a minimum.

Emmanuel Van der Auwera (°1982, Brussels) lives and works in Brussels. He studied in France at the École supérieure d’Art in Clermont-Ferrand (2005-2008); at Le Fresnoy – Studio national des arts contemporains (2008-2010) and is following a post-academic course at the Higher Institute of Fine Arts (HISK) in Ghent (2014-2015). In 2015 he was present at Art Brussels on the stand representing the Fédération Wallonie-Bruxelles and in previous years he has put on solo shows at ESA, Tourcoing (2013); La Mediatine, Brussels (2013); Iselp, Brussels (2013); Wiels, Brussels (2013); Fondation Roche, Basel (2012); Palais de Tokyo, Paris (2011).

5 Hana Miletić

Hana Miletić uses street photography as a catalyst to create publications, performances and installations. In her work she takes a critical look at social and political issues in European cities. She mainly concentrates on a careful (re)presentation of immigrant stories. Miletić is constantly looking for new ways to introduce exchanges and collaborations in her artistic process.

Miletić has collaborated with La Frénétick - a collective of young Brussels rappers - for four years now. During this collaboration she explored the experimental potential of poetry and hip-hop. In the Centre for Fine Arts she organises daily live readings from the poetry book Tenir Paroles. This collection is based on song lyrics by La Frénétick. Every day the verses are read aloud by a different individual who consciously deals with language. She has set up a reading and listening space where the visitor can listen to the poetry readings or read the poetry book in between the readings. At BOZAR Miletić is seeking a way to share the space and time resources of an art institution. She is also making an audiorecording of La Frénétick performing in one of the concert halls. This recording will be released as a single and presented to the public with a live performance at the awards ceremony during the closing event of the exhibition. There is a reading at 2 pm every day or at 7 pm during the Thursday late night openings.* Hana Miletić (°1982, Zagreb) lives and works in Brussels. She studied Gender Studies and obtained a Master’s in Art History and Archaeology at the VUB in 2005. She studied Photography in Amsterdam and obtained a Master’s in Visual Arts from the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp. She lectures at the LUCA School of Arts, SintLukas campus, Brussels. In 2014-15 she was artist in residence in Van Eyck, Maastricht. Recent solo exhibitions are Poppositions Off-Fair, Brussels (2015); Rosa Brux, Brussels (2015); Lokaal 01, Antwerp (2014).

6 Hamza Halloubi

In his video creations Hamza Halloubi works on the idea of travelling images. How difficult is it to create something? What is the dividing line between fiction and documentary? Halloubi is fascinated by the space between these two genres. In his work he creates a story that is somewhere between the personal and collective memory. It is a personal view of an event, with a subjective approach which questions the official view. Halloubi is also interested in the grammar and semiotics of film and language. In his films he develops an aesthetic in which he attempts to combine the internal poetry of human encounters with a conceptual approach. Here Halloubi is presenting three new projects. Ivre à Tunis is a book that the artist put together for the exhibition. It is made

EXPO

This year, the international jury will award the CROWET YOUNG BELGIAN ART PRIZE, the BOZAR PRIZE and the LANGUI PRIZE at the closing event on Thursday 10 September. The ING PUBLIC PRIZE will be awarded to the artist who obtained the most votes from the visitors via www.youngbelgianartprize.com.

such as social relations, balances of power, networks and role models are interwoven with the printed images of her most recent work Testreihe I - VI (2015). In this series Kamrau stages various compositions of proof images as an interactive setting of a photo studio in the exhibition space. You can go and stand in the same place as the model in the original photograph. So Kamrau doesn’t just involve you in the artwork, she also lets you be a part of it.


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