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Jo Crepain Awards 2025

Play and Seriousness: Artist Conrad Willems Designs Jo Crepain Awards

Using natural stone and European oak wood, Conrad Willems created five sculptures that embody modularity and movement. “I wanted to capture both playfulness and seriousness in one architectural image.”

How did the concept for the Jo Crepain Awards come about?

“My work as a sculptor stems from a love for constructions that contain modularity and movement. Many of my sculptures may seem formally calculated and planned, but they are usually the result of play and intuition. For the Jo Crepain Awards, I wanted to apply those principles as well, with the playful element being emphasized, but also evoking associations with traditional awards. The four elements in each award, stacked in different ways, contain the fundamental principles of architecture. I wanted to capture both playfulness and seriousness in one architectural image.”

What materials did you work with?

“For the awards, I chose natural stone. Together with Potier Stone, we selected leftover pieces that we could work with. The awards are framed with European oak. Working with natural materials like stone and wood is an honor: they are rich materials found in nature. They not only bring aesthetic value but also carry the raw power of their creation. With natural stone, the origin, geology, and use throughout architectural history add an extra layer of meaning to each piece.”

Are you familiar with the work of Jo Crepain?

“In 2011, the University of Leuven organized an art competition for several integrated artworks in a new building for the Gasthuisberg campus. Three artists were selected, including myself, with the proposal to create a twenty-meter-long by two-meter-high drawing. Armed with a box of colorfast markers, I spent seven long days on a scaffold. I slept in the same building on a couch in the student association room. And that building was designed by... Jo Crepain!”

How do you, as an artist, view the balancing act of creating and entrepreneurship?

“When I introduce myself as a sculptor, people often imagine a studio filled to the brim with works to be finished, accompanied by the constant sound of a chisel against marble. The reality, however, is that I am not only responsible for the production of my works, but also for the entire business surrounding it. This means that communication and administrative tasks, such as sales, are also part of my responsibilities. But these tasks are part of running a business. What seems most important to me is maintaining a consistent quality, both in my creative process and in how I present my work to the outside world.”

Do you have any message for architects?

“I have learned from experience that raw materials—whether they are bricks, blue stone pavers, or leftover pieces of natural stone—can dictate how they are used through their form and materiality. But that can only happen if you take them in your hands and work with them. There's much to be gained by occasionally getting physically involved and letting the material speak by playing with it.”

BRAFA 2025

The beginning of 2025 has been nothing short of exhilarating. Last year, I was approached by the esteemed Ghent gallery Francis Maere Fine Arts with an invitation to exhibit at the upcoming BRAFA Art Fair in Brussels.

This wasn’t our first collaboration; Francis, the gallery owner, has also been organizing OAF, an eclectic art festival held at a historic farmstead on the outskirts of Ghent. I have had the honor of being invited to showcase my work at OAF on two occasions. Given our established relationship and mutual understanding, we carefully selected 15 pieces to present at BRAFA.

As described by BRAFA, the fair is defined by Excellence, Elegance, and Conviviality—values that have elevated it to one of the world’s most prestigious art events. The 70th edition of BRAFA, which concluded on Sunday, February 2nd, set a new record with 72,000 visitors from across Europe, spanning all generations.

At BRAFA, I was able to share more than just static works; I also performed during the fair’s busiest days. Over the first four days, during the Thursday evening nocturne, and throughout the final weekend, I created and deconstructed Construction IV in a continuous loop, engaging directly with visitors.

In conclusion, BRAFA 2025 has been a fantastic—albeit exhausting—experience. I’ve had the privilege of connecting with both new and familiar faces, and it has been rewarding to see such a positive response to my work. From an economic perspective, both Francis and I were pleased with the results, as 87% of the pieces I exhibited were sold.

You can view the works I showcased in Brussels through the following links:

Aggregation I (Circular)

In our own unique ways, we construct spatial structures, shaped by the locations they inhabit and the stories they convey. Park Ter Beuken boasts a remarkable geological history: it lies at a boundary where clay and sandy soil converge, and is partially built upon an old landfill. In this exceptional setting, we aimed to create a project that engages with this troubled ground and employs locally sourced materials.

Throughout the preparatory phase, it became evident that the perfect building elements for our project could be found at the local cemetery in Lokeren: 300 grave monuments nearing the end of their concession were destined for destruction. We chose to give this beautiful material a second life, thereby salvaging 10 tons of natural stone and relocating it to the park.

The grave monuments from the cemetery vary widely in form and style, ranging from simple headstones to richly decorated crosses and sculptures. Despite their solid appearance, these monuments are constructed from discrete elements. Upon disassembly, both abstract and recognizable forms emerge. Some components retain their funerary symbolism, while others shed this in favor of an abstract language of shapes.

These elements are assembled into a single installation: Aggregation, a circular object formed from the fragmented individual grave monuments, brought together as a cohesive whole. This circle, a central point of convergence, departs from the cemetery where the components typically belong, placing them in a new form and context—embodying circularity in every sense of the word.

The location for Aggregation in the park, along the meandering pond shore, has been meticulously chosen. It appears as though the park embraces the work, or the work bends towards the park. Positioned centrally, between the Academy and the entrance to the green path, the installation presents a modest presence for visitors. It will require initiative from the observer to engage closely with the work and traverse the park.

By its inclined position, Aggregation symbolically reaches towards both heaven and earth. This massive disc, with one side sunken and the other elevated, offers itself as a functional object. Its accessibility invites interaction, serving as a potential arena for playful children, an atrium for musicians, or a resting place for wandering visitors.

Video made by Dave Bruel

To see the pictures by Cedric Verhelst of this installation. Click here

Brussels Architecture Prize Awards / making of video

The making of the Brussels Architecture Awards video. Each award is a unique modular sculpture consisting of 11 building blocks in a dedicated natural stone, presented in a hand-crafted box in oak. Have a look to get to know the process and thought behind these 7 unique boxes.

The Brussels Architecture Prize is an initiative of the Brussels-Capital Region that is implemented by Urban in co-production with A+ Architecture in Belgium. Every two years, the Brussels Architecture Prize rewards outstanding architectural projects that contribute to the spatial quality of the Brussels-Capital Region. The prize was awarded for the first time in 2021.

Short Movie - Cubicles IX

 This movie was made for the ‘History of the future’ exhibition at Nest, Damme (2022). Cubicles IX is (as the title suggest) the ninth iteration of this performance Conrad started in 2007.

The work consists of a set of large blocks, constructed in particle board following the same dimensions and variations as wooden toy building blocks. With each performance the set is enlarged with new blocks, making it an ever expanding piece.

The blocks are used to make live constructions before an audience, or in this case a camera. Conrad lifts and stacks these oversized building blocks without any help or attributes: he climbs the structure itself to build it up. The resulting construction serving as a temporary modular sculpture.

This short movie perfectly captures the performance in a tactile and abstract manner.

Shot and made by Basile Rabaey.

Construction VII video

This video was shot during Construction VII’s first assembly. It is the culmination of months of work cutting, grinding and sanding the 977 marble blocks it consists of. These blocks are stacked one on top of the other without the use of any binder or adhesive, just like their wooden toy predecessors.

As with all Constructions and Variations the drawings (three in this case) are an inseparable part of the artwork.

Every Construction goes together with a diagram. Yet, contrary to what the viewer might think, the Constructions are not created according to a plan. The arrangement of the building blocks into an architectural whole is the end result of an experimental approach, of trial and error, of assembling and disassembling and reassembling – or in the words of the artist of ‘play’.

Dr.Martine Lejeune in ‘Construction, Deconstruction, Reconstruction.’

Due to the Construction’s size and weight, building it in one day required some extra hands. Thanks to the generosity of Potier Stone we got to use their workplace over the weekend to construct and de-construct this piece.

Construction VII is on view together with the Cubicles IX performance piece at the “History of the future” exhibition in Damme till 11.12.2022.

Video by Dave Bruel.

Photoshoot by Alexander Popelier / ABSoluut Magazine

Conrad has been Photographed in his studio by Alexander Populier for ABSoluut Magazine.

Included in an article on 'Building and Art' Conrad was featured with two other artist in this magazine on Architecture, design and Art.

You expect building materials on a construction site rather than in a gallery or indoors on a wall. But if you put basic components from the construction sector in the hands of an artist, you get a completely different vocabulary and appearance. These three versatile artists give a soul to natural stone, metal and plaster with craftsmanship and creativity. With a certain playfulness they add a layer of wonder, which gradually reveals itself. What you experience is pure happiness, affection for the production process and love for materials.

Check tho whole article here

Check out ABSoluut Magazine here

Presenting the Brussels Architecture Prize Awards

I’m proud to present the seven awards for the Brussels Architecture Prize 2021. Each award is a unique modular sculpture consisting of 11 building blocks in a dedicated natural stone, presented in a hand-crafted box in black walnut.

The natural stone was sourced out of leftover material at the stone company Potier Stone. Each of the sets has been carefully cut to size and finished to the highest standard.

The dedicated boxes have been carefully handmade out of a single walnut beam and assembled using traditional finger joints. As a reference to the toy boxes that contain the original wooden toys, the award boxes can be opened through sliding tops. The boxes have been treated with boiled linseed oil for a natural and rich finish.

Check this footage for more information on the awards.

The seven winners in their respective categories are:

Award photography by Cedric Verhelst.

Find out more about the prize, its winners, the organizers and the sponsors.

Scenography Bolero / L'heure Espgnole

Friday December 3rd was a day to never forget. After a long and rocky road that took us more than two years, we could finally celebrate the premiere of Bolero / L’heure Espagnole at the Ghent Opera. 

For this production I was asked to create a scenography for an opera that would combine two pieces by Ravel. (Originally, the idea was to present Sheherazade instead of the Bolero, but that plan was cancelled due to the Covid pandemic and production difficulties.) Rehearsals started approximately 4 weeks before the premiere, and together with the other members of the artistic team, I took part in the whole creation and rehearsal process – just like I did for the my first production for Opera Ballet Flanders in 2019, BANKET!. 

With this scenography, I wanted to create a presence on stage that could both function as an additional character and as a practical means to help those on stage tell the story. As we were approaching the 3d of December, the current COVID wave was entering Europe. Luckily, two out of three planned shows could take place as planned (full capacity) and the last show was for a reduced audience of 200 people. 

The opera started off with Bolero. During this monumental piece, the Opera Technicians constructed the set for L’heure Espagnole live. In a tightly rehearsed pattern/choreography, all pieces were slowly but steadily either carried, rolled or hoisted on stage and safely secured to each other. As the music gradually reaches a crescendo, so did the build-up. On the very last note, the last piece was mounted and as the music finished, the stage was ready for L’heure Espagnole. As L’heure Espagnole drew to an end, the audience went wild. Not only the technicians who played an important role came to bow but so did the entire Youth Orchestra Flanders. The last to come to the stage was the full artistic team, including director Tom Goossens, Costume designer Marij De Brabandere, Dramaturgue Lalina Goddard, Light designer Glenn Dhaenens and myself. I am so thankful that I could be a part of this inspiring collaboration!

 

To see all the pictures click here

A great review on Radio Klara (Dutch).

Find out more on this piece on Opera Ballet Flanders website

Integrated artwork in a homeless Shelter

Click here to discover all the photos.

In December 2020 I was awarded the commission to integrate a permanent artwork in the Homeless shelter t’Eilandje in Ghent. An independent jury selected my concept out of multiple proposals. 

 During a workshop in June 2021, both residents and employees of t’Eilandje got the opportunity to make their own composition in wooden blocks. All these designs were integrated in the final concrete compositions. The workshop also served to introduce the architectural qualities of the blocks. Referring to hieroglyphs, runes and even emoticons, participants were encouraged to create a specific composition that symbolizes themselves. Following this creative process, the artwork was completed and installed in October 2021.

The work consists of 100 concrete bas-reliefs in 5 different colours that were placed throughout the building. They consist of two categories: 40 elements that show a composition of toy blocks and 60 solid elements. Both types subtly show the wood grain of the wood that was used to cast the concrete reliefs. All elements (the toy block compositions and the solid elements) have an identical L-shape, so they can be combined endlessly. 

I chose to install the reliefs either alone or combined to form small to large murals. These murals can be found throughout the whole building, on the walls of the meeting rooms, stairwells, the shared kitchens and hallways – each in their own, unique configuration. Some compositions are displayed in plain sight, while others are hidden in more subtle places – to accidentally be discovered as one explores the building. 

The basic block set that is used has 15 different types of blocks: from a cube to cylinders of different heights, two types of bridges and a prism. During the workshop I introduced the participants into the architectural qualities of the blocks and led them through varied examples in which the forms are reflected – from Middle Eastern architecture, Gothic and Romanesque buildings to modernist buildings and contemporary design. But more importantly we mainly talked about our lives, its problems and our aspirations.

The different parts of the work were installed throughout the entire building, like a tree is grounded by a network of roots. The work connects the different functions and spaces of the shelter and the people within it, with a connected fabric of shapes and colours. By choosing this spread out distribution I tried to consciously avoid the compelling character of a singular monumental artwork. It is only by wandering through the different spaces that the inhabitants evolve from casual passers-by to spectators bringing together the totality of the integrated artwork. 

This integrated artwork can be experienced in different ways. For example, because of its geometric arrangement, the repetition of recognizable shapes and the soft colour palette, it can create tranquillity and atmosphere in a space – consciously or unconsciously. One doesn’t have to actively look and interpret to give the work meaning. However, those who want to enter into a dialogue with the work are given the space for different interactions with the varied, separate 'satellites' throughout the building. Each composition can evoke individual questions and experiences in the viewer and stimulates him or her to explore further. The different compositions thus function as landmarks within the building, both functionally and psychologically.

The bas-reliefs made with toy blocks are universally recognizable. However, they are clearly not parts that actually have been used in a stack of a playing child. They reflect the potential of the game rather than the actual game. Just like the wooden blocks used to come in a cart with a slide, the concrete version captures just that moment when the slide is pulled open and neatly stacked blocks appear. A moment of anticipation arises, when all possibilities are revealed.

The recognizability of the basic toy block shapes appeals and evokes memories, but at the same time points to the possibilities of the future. The blocks refer to the building blocks of our civilization and everyone's personal story. Only by building, or by rebuilding, we can develop ourselves. Only by getting started, we can continue to build and grow. The compositions expose the basis and highlight the possibilities that are at hand. They make us reflect on our childhood, but at the same time also highlight the foundations of our adult life and the opportunities that exist.

The work invites to reflect on what was, but above all on what can be.

 

Click here to discover all the photos.

 

Short film / I.XI.XIV / A day at play

On the 28th of February, a long-awaited event finally took place. On a chilly Sunday morning, 6 people gathered around three crates comprising the red marble elements of my sculpture I.XI.XIV. The plan was to ‘play’ with these the entire day. Meanwhile, Cedric Verhelst, my photographer would document each composition and Bruce Stevens has been filming the technically challenging aspects of the whole process.

In February 2020, I produced the large Marble sculpture I.XI.XIV for the international group exhibition Hortus Conclusus at the Museum Villa Dei Cedri in Bellinzona, Switzerland. As the three elements comprising the whole installation are not attached to each other, each time the work is displayed it’s intended to be done so in a different composition.

Because there was little time between the production and transport to Switzerland, I never had the opportunity to organise a day to explore diverse possible compositions. After its return to Belgium in February, the occasion arose to finally do it! Potier Stone was so kind to empty their workspace for the weekend so I could use the space and their large crane to move and lift the blocks.

I had 20 compositions prepared on paper beforehand but I knew - due to the complex nature of manipulating these large and heavy blocks - we wouldn’t be able to set them all up in one day. In the end, we managed to do 7 of those 20 proposed compositions.

I would like to give a special note of thanks to Daniel Bullinckx for his Art Handling expertise and for helping us out. Moreover, my special thanks go to Bart Wouters for helping us out on that sunny Sunday. Lastly, I want to conclude by saying that without the support of Potier Stone, this photoshoot wouldn’t have taken place.

You can find the definitive photos by Cedric here.

Solo exhibition In Various Parts - Switzerland

On the 20th of September 2020, in between two Covid pandemic waves, I was able to travel to Switzerland to install my solo exhibition In Various Parts at Espace dAM in Romainmotier.

I’m very honoured to be able to show Construction V and VI and a new series ‘Layered photos’ of drawings on photography. These photographs were taken with my analog Nikkormat camera from a series of small constructions I made with wooden toy blocks. The photos have been printed on Barriet paper and drawn upon with brush and black ink.

During my residence at ARC in Romainmotier, I got to know the galleries of the artist Alberto de Andrés. Alberto wrote a text on my work. Check the whole text on his website. (FR)

As for the Indian ink drawings on photographic prints, they both invoke and challenge one of the foundations of modern Western thought: representation based on the system of linear perspective developed in the Renaissance by drawing inspiration from geometric and mathematical models dating back to Antiquity. They remind us of the invention and use of the camera obscura - a machine for seeing, conceiving and drawing the world in linear perspective. This device, already referred to by Aristotle, but rediscovered, developed and theorised by, among others, two architects, Leon Battista Alberti and Filippo Brunelleschi during the Renaissance, to “plan” (i.e. to linearly plot) their buildings. 

The exhibition is on view till May 16th 2021.

Art contests, a reflection

Every now then, mostly within the timeframe of a year or two, I think to myself, I should participate more actively in art competitions - as now, I’m not participating at all. As you might know, winning such competitions could mean an agreeable financial reward or even everlasting fame. 

So, last December (2020) was such a moment and I started vigorously looking for qualitative competitions. These could be dedicated art competitions or open calls for artists to present their work at a specific site - which could be a public city square, a hospital or even a bank, for instance.

A very important rule of thumb I use selecting a competition is that it has to be of high quality and that it doesn’t require an entry fee! These fees are very common and the majority of calls worldwide have this paywall installed - at least, that’s my impression. It’s usually presented as a way to cover the administrative costs of organizing the competition. However, some of them hardly conceal their objective to wheedle the money out of aspiring artists, while others have superbly designed professional websites where one will only discover there’s a payment needed after almost completing the whole registration process. The amounts charged can range from €10 to more than €100 and differ depending on the country of the contest or the number of artworks you wish to participate with. Some contests even offer early bird formulas and others charge less per artwork if you enter with more than one.

As I use this rule of thumb, the list of eligible competitions and prizes dwindles to a mere handful. And to be fully honest, I have participated in competitions where I had to pay a fee, but regard those decisions as those of a conned individual.

In a matter of 2 months I’ve participated in these 6 competitions:

  • CAW Oost Vlaanderen: Integration of an artwork for a new homeless shelter in Ghent.

  • BNP Paribas Fortis: Proposal for a new artwork for the newly built headquarters in Brussels

  • Intercommunale Leiedal: Modernism for the future, an artistic research project

  • Daycare centre De Speurneus: A new artwork for a new daycare centre

  • City Roeselare: A new artwork for the village inspired by the Covid Pandemic

  • Art contest Ernest Albert Mechelen: Sculpture contest (every four years)

I’m very happy to announce that I have won the CAW contest. I’ll be making my first large scale art integration project for Ghent later this year. I’ll give more information regarding this project in a different post. Of those 6 proposals, I’ve received 3 negative answers. The BNP Paribas and the Roeselare competition will be decided upon in the midst of April but I don’t hold high hopes on the outcome of both. 

Although I count myself lucky to have won the CAW competition I’ve also taken some time to reflect upon the invested time in these competitions and the psychological impact the negative answers induced. Each of the applications made comprises multiple documents that are needed. Often it takes days to make these applications. They regularly comprise a portfolio, sketches, mockups, artist statement, a project proposal and a financial report. Some documents are easily recuperated and don’t need to be re-written each time you enter a competition. But the main volume of the application has to be done from the ground up every time. It’s the only way I feel it to be possible to make a quality proposal up to the high professional standards. 

Moreover, every negative response I received from the contests stated above has been a standardized one. Names and addresses are changed for each non-selected candidate and send out. No explication on the reason why it’s been rejected. No effort whatsoever is done to explain to those who invested time, energy and money to participate why their proposal failed to convince them. They don’t just feel like a mere project failure, in a way, they also feel much like a personal failure. 

It’s honestly hard to receive these negative answers and, even though I’m very happy I won one of them, it still leaves a bittersweet taste to know I’ve spent weeks behind my computer instead of working on projects in my studio. The psychological impact, for me, is not only one that makes you feel incapable but also makes you question every artistic decision you’ve made to comprise the proposal. And these artistic decisions come from your daily practice as an artist you’ve been developing over many years. 

The organizers probably don’t realize the amount of effort those who participate put into their proposals. Nor do they realize the impact of these standardized rejections they send out.

So I conclude my thoughts with this. It’s time to forget about these competitions. But who knows, maybe in a couple of years - when I’ve forgotten enough of the arduous process - I’ll go at it again?

A project in the French Alps

At the beginning of March, I received a phone call from curator Jean François De Clercq to ask me if I’d be willing to drive 1800km back and forth to Megéve, France. More specifically he wanted me to bring an 800kg work, to mount it, exhibit it for 2 days and take it back home again afterwards.

My collaboration with Jean-François Declerq started several years ago with my Solo Exhibition at his gallery Atelier Jepers in Brussels. I’ve also exhibited work at his booth at the art fair Miart in Milano and at two editions of the COLLECTIBLE art and design fair in Brussels. Other collaborations entail a performance at BOZAR and a trip to Art Elysee, Paris.

The project in Megéve would be for the French interior architect Fabrice Ausset who organized a photoshoot in a secluded Chalet perched against the Mont-Blanc. There, he would present his own creations together with artwork from his collection and a selection of invited artists.

As I had been working together with Jean François successfully in the past I happily agreed to take part. One week later I arranged a pickup truck and loaded up all 667 Belgian Fossil blocks of my sculpture Column (Materials) together with two Compositions and set off to the French Alps.

Once I arrived another challenging situation arose at the chalet in Megéve. Everything had to be mounted on the first floor and it would be positioned on an uneven flooring made of wood and stone. I managed to mount the whole column and it fit precisely between its floor and ceiling. The large Composition III (1/5) was hung in the same space as the column. The smaller Composition V (1/5) was on display in the Master Bedroom’s ensuite bathroom.

Due to restrictions, we can’t share photo’s of the whole setting as the artwork will be shown in dedicated architecture magazines later this year. For now, I’m gratified to share some photos of the amazing scenery and some details of my sculpture.

Tryout individual parts L'heure Espagnole

For my second scenography for the opera L’heure Espagnole I’ve been searching to intensify my physical bond with the scenography I designed. In my first experience with an opera production, Banquet, the revenge on the Macbeths, I realized my position as an artist scenographer lays within the extensive physical bond I have towards the items I work with. As I have been dancing myself as a kid for many years, and as I’ve been developing my Cubicles performances since 2007, I understand very well how these geometric shapes relate to the human body.

Rather than just forwarding my sketches to the opera and having the director and singers figure out their relationship towards the scenography themselves, I’ve proposed to tackle this assignment differently. We agreed that I will be present during rehearsals to assist the director in exploring the scenography to its fullest potential.

In preparation for our upcoming rehearsals after the summer of 2021, I’ve been exploring the geometric shapes that will be used on stage. I’ve played and danced and moved with them.

L’Heure Espagnole is scheduled at the Ghent opera in December 2021

Photography by Cedric Verhelst

See you next time, Switzerland!

We’re not only nearing the end of a tumultuous year, we’ve also come to the end of a truly wonderful exhibition I participated in. I’m talking about Hortus Conclusus, curated by Marco Constantini at the Villa Dei Cedri Museum in Bellinzona, Switzerland. 

It’s amazing to think that I first was contacted by Marco at the beginning of 2019 about this exhibition, with the question if I would be interested in participating. Seeing the international list of participating artists and the previous exhibitions at Villa Dei Cedri, I quickly agreed. 

In September 2019 we decided to show Construction IV, and I proposed to create a new piece that could be mounted in the luscious garden surrounding the Museum: I.XI.XIV. This new sculpture turned out to be the most challenging project of my professional career up until now. Both this interesting production process and the truly excellent exhibition led to several previous posts on my website:

My visit to the last red Marble quarry in Belgium

Read all about the production of I.XI.XIV

Read all about the installation of I.XI.XIV  

Read all about the restoration of the vandalised sculpture

Last week I was finally able to travel to Bellinzona to dismantle both works and prepare them for transport. I didn’t have to travel by myself though. My father came along to assist and my grandmother also joined us for an unforgettable trip to a Switzerland covered in snow. On Wednesday it took us the whole day to disassemble Construction IV and get it ready for transport. The day after we prepared I.XI.XIV to be hoisted into its crates. 

I added some detailed pictures on the hoisting mechanism in the largest of the three Marble elements: two nifty marble seals are taken out on the top surface to reveal their secrets. 

We were very lucky with the weather, the snow partially melted away after we arrived. Everything went super smoothly. Thanks a million to the wonderful museum staff and Ongaro Graniti for their great support!

Scenography L'heure Espagnole try-out

Today was an exciting day at the Opera of Flanders workshop: I saw the scenography for ‘L’heure Espagnol’ come to life for the first time!

Under the watchful eye of the creative and technical team, we assembled and tested the set. This was supervised by the safety coordinator of the opera, who assessed if the opera as we envisaged it can be performed with the highest safety standards.  

The opera ‘L’heure Espagnol’, described as a comédie musicale, tells the story of a clockmaker’s unfaithful wife who attempts to make love to several men while her husband is away, leading the men to hide in, and eventually get stuck in, her husband's clocks. One character, a strong but kind man, is instructed by the clockmaker’s wife to carry standing clocks up and down to her bedroom as a means of discreet transportation for her lovers. 

I designed a modular set, built up out of several basic geometrical shapes, that represents the face of a large clock when the shapes are placed together. The elements are made out of lightweight aluminum covered with a thin layer in wood. Each of them is color stained to represent the rich array of wood used in an artisanal’s clockmaker workshop. 

Freestanding elements will be used throughout the Opera and two elements representing the ‘grandfather clock’ will be carried around on set.

This production had been scheduled to premier in the Ghent Opera last July. Due to the pandemic it was postponed to December 2021. 

Composer: Maurice Ravel

Libretto: Franc-Nohain

Direction: Tom Goossens

Scenography: Conrad Willems

Dramaturgy: Lalina Goddard

Costumes: Marij De Brabandere

Covid impact / open studio 20-09

DSC04238 copy.jpg

Almost half a year ago, in February 2020, I was In Switzerland installing artworks for a museum show that was scheduled to open on the 20th of March. There were reports of a virus reaching Europe, but we didn’t worry too much about that at the time. 

The impact was felt just one week later as the museum had to cancel the planned opening. Another solo show at Espace dAM at Romainmotier, did also not happen. Rehearsals in June for the upcoming Opera production for Opera Flanders for which I designed the scenography were postponed and later cancelled.  The premiere for an opera at the Ghent Opera House was also postponed to December 2021. 

A lot of planned projects I was looking forward to had been cancelled or postponed. One can’t measure the true long term impact of these missed opportunities.

Of course I don’t want to dwell on what didn’t happen, focussing rather on the unexpected opportunities this crisis did bring forward. I was able to work hard at the atelier at new constructions, new drawings, a covid-inspired work that was sold into parts, a webshop, several online auctions, a summer exhibition in Ghent and rekindled online relations with many artists and gallerists.

As we are all getting adjusted to new rules and interactions, I’m happy to announce the annual open ateliers at Lindenlei 38 will take place 20th of September. My studio and those of 29 other artists will be open, with a covid-proof schedule.

You will need to reserve your visit by sending a mail to lindenlei38@gmail.com
(your name, number of visitors and your preferred time between 11 and 7pm)
I’m very excited to welcome you soon in my studio! (be sure to bring your mask!)

Restoring my vandalized sculpture in Switzerland

At the beginning of July I received an email from the museum in Bellinzona where I have two works exhibited at Museum Villa Dei Cedri. The piece I.XI.XIV in the museum gardens had been vandalized overnight; all three red marble pieces damaged by unknown perpetrators resulting in scratches on every visible surface. 

The museum garden is open to the public from early in the morning till 8pm when the concierge closes the three entrance gates. During the day there is no museum staff in the garden nor are there other means of security. The vandals were not caught in the act nor were they found afterwards leaving us wondering who has done this. 

Arrangements were made for me to come to Switzerland and restore the piece mid-July. As we were able to travel freely between countries at the time I decided to connect pleasure with business and ask my grandmother and father to join me. 

I spent three full days restoring the marble. I removed the protective synthetic coating by machine. Then I sanded the surface to the level where no scratches were visible. In the end a new protective layer was applied resulting in a renewed smooth surface.

Studio Visit from a great photographer

At the start of the summer, I got a visit from talented photographer Yuri Andries. Known for his amazing travel and portrait photography, Yuri’s photos have been featured in National Geographic, Vice, GUP magazine, Fubiz magazine and many others. 

We’ve spent a couple of hours in my studio accompanied by my dog Takoda. He captured me building Variation VI, climbing my large cubicle installation and even managed to photograph Takoda too.

Go see more of his amazing work at www.yuriandries.be