With natural materials uncommon to art, such as beeswax, milk, pollen and rice, Wolfgang Laib produces work that has an almost sacred aura. His oeuvre is cyclical in character: each type of work is…
The artistic quest of Patrick and Anne Poirier began nearly fifty years ago in Rome. During an artist-in-residence period at Villa Medici, the French Academy there, they became fascinated with the…
De Pont presents the first, major Gesamtkunstwerk of visual artist Marc Mulders (1958) and designer/artist Claudy Jongstra (1963). Marc Mulders has been known for years for his expressionist oil…
Catherine’s Room is a private view into the room of a solitary woman who goes about a series of daily rituals from morning until night. The woman’s actions are simple and purposeful, and appear…
In many presentations of Michel François the relationship between the work and the space, between the sculpture and the architecture, plays an emphatic role. The link that he establishes between the…
Lothar Baumgarten has become known through his subtle culture critique. His work widely reflects a great concern on ethnographic stratum and local historic circumstance. The extensive body of the…
Light, color and space are the fundamental materials used by Ann Veronica Janssens (Folkestone, 1956). With these intangible phenomena she creates 'sculptures' that make the invisible visible.…
John Riddy’s photos are distinguished by a combination of poetic delicacy and formal precision which has been evident since his earliest pictures made in London in the late 1980s. Working consistently…
In Japan Charlotte Dumas has photographed Hokkaido, Yonaguni, Miyako and Misaki horses that roam freely in their natural environment. They derive their right to exist from their use as working…
In this large installation, Horn has meticulously created ‘placing’ potential for the viewer, not by means of a natural landscape but rather through formalization. The work consists of eighteen…