×

Subscribe to our newsletter

Highlights From the Previous Week, Partnered Events and Haikus. View our Newsletter archive

Kœnraad Dedobbeleer: Kunststoff, Gallery of Material Culture

Mar 11, 2021

Koenraad Dedobbeleer’s 2019 show “Kunststoff, Gallery of Material Culture” at Wiels brought together 40 ‘living’ artworks to reflect upon Western culture, art history, and mythology. TLmag spoke with the Brussels-based artist about the exhibition and his practice.

Scroll right to read more ›
Text by

The plaster cast of the goddess Diana, titled “Nominal Representation” invites you to enter into Dedobbeleer’s sphere of reflection around our Western Culture. Is our culture foundational, permanent, unchanging? He plays around the idea of the faces that were often changed on the statues in Ancient Rome in public space and decided at the end to portray here the face of his wife, Valerie Mannaerts. Art history, art mythology and how to frame and display the objects are central to his installations which have been first exhibited at Wiels Contemporary Art Centre in Brussels, before moving to the Kunst Museum Winterthur (through April 22, 2019), and then onto the Kunstverein in Hanover (July-September 2019).

Supported by Henry Moore Foundation, CLEARING, Brussels/New York and other institutional partners, in his recent publication and this retrospective publication, Brussels-based artist, Koenraad Dedobbeleer, has brought together around 40 ‘living’ artworks, interplaying with the man-made manipulations of nature and artefacts. Beyond the still-lifes or the readymades, they are all appealing to our collective values and underlying material culture. TLmag spoke to Dedobbeleer at the opening of his exhibition at Wiels, or as curator Zoë Gray calls it, an “indoor sculpture park or architectural promenade… which evokes the classical museum display and furniture, as well as our more domestic environment,” with a collection of books and a stove.

TLmag: You are fascinated by art history and mythology. How would you draw a portrait of your artistic identity and research in our contemporary times?

Koenraad Dedobbeleer (KD): We cannot forget history. The present is actually based on a conception of what preceded. I have no special fascination for history as such: I’m not an historian nor do I see myself as nostalgic. It simply strikes me as unavoidable. Time, on the other hand, is what they are and we all try to deal with them, I guess.

TLmag: How do you connect your artworks to each other knowing that you include in your artistic process various media such as sculptures, photographs, a slide projection, a collection of books, works on paper and even the creation of a real functional stove?

KD: I assume that they connect themselves, or it is rather you, the viewer, that makes the connections.

TLmag: Would you talk about your practice that blends fine arts, design, architecture and scenography? How is your work being presented in Wiels in Brussels? What are the next steps to this exhibition “Kunststoff – Gallery of Material Culture”?

KD: It is a mashup of many elements and disciplines. Many things surround us and seem interesting. It appears that I am unable to make a choice. Displaying the work makes them finally meaningful in the sense that they only really can exist when they are shown or are being public. The exhibition is the essence of the work and the core of my praxis.

TLmag: You have a huge sense of humour and play with the ambivalence and dichotomy of mass produced objects and unique pieces. What is your primary mission as an artist?

KD: Just having a good time. These dances are ancient. We’re just having a good time.

TLmag: Have you ever worked or co-created art pieces in connection with archæologists? Would you be keen to get involved in this kind of collaboration?

KD. I don’t know. Depends on the person. Why not?

TLmag: How would you define yourself if speaking about being an ‘artistarchæologist’ today?

KD: I don’t feel like one.

www.wiels.org

@wiels

#koenraaddedobbeleer

Koenraad Dedobbeleer Installation view “Kunststoff - Gallery of Material Culture”, 2018 Photo: Tobias Hübel. Copyright: WIELS

Koenraad Dedobbeleer Installation view “Kunststoff - Gallery of Material Culture”, 2018 Photo: Tobias Hübel. Copyright: WIELS
Koenraad Dedobbeleer Installation view “Kunststoff - Gallery of Material Culture”, 2018 Photo: Tobias Hübel. Copyright: WIELS
Koenraad Dedobbeleer Installation view “Kunststoff - Gallery of Material Culture”, 2018. 'Things are Stubbornly Thinglike I', 2018. Photo: Tobias Hübel. Copyright: WIELS
Koenraad Dedobbeleer Installation view “Kunststoff - Gallery of Material Culture”, 2018. 'Transforming them into Analogies', 2015.
'Transgression Has its Entire Space in the Line it Crosses', 2018. Photo: Tobias Hübel. Copyright: WIELS
Koenraad Dedobbeleer Installation view “Kunststoff - Gallery of Material Culture”, 2018. 'Grandeur of the Old Theater', 2013. '
Gig Economy Depends Upon State Willingness', 2018. Photo: Tobias Hübel. Copyright: WIELS
Koenraad Dedobbeleer Installation view “Kunststoff - Gallery of Material Culture”, 2018 'Nominal Representation', 2018. Photo: Tobias Hübel. Copyright: WIELS
Koenraad Dedobbeleer Installation view “Kunststoff - Gallery of Material Culture”, 2018 Photo: Tobias Hübel. Copyright: WIELS
Back

Articles you also might like

La Patinoire Royale Bach, a contemporary gallery founded by Valérie Bach nearly 10-years ago, opens its 2024 season with an important exhibition of early works by seminal California Light & Space Artist, Lita Albuquerque. The exhibition, installed in the nave of the large gallery space, is on view through April 13th.

Spazio Nobile presents Good Luck! New Experiments, a group show of nine designers, at the 7th edition of COLLECTIBLE, at the Vanderborght Building in Brussels between March 7- March 10, 2024.

La Verrière – Fondation d’entreprise Hermès, presents “Emi e dames messeur”, a solo exhibition of work by Belgian artist Koenraad Dedobbeleer, that includes a mix of previous and new works as well as art from his own personal collection. The exhibition is on view through April 27, 2024.