13.05.2017 – 26.11.2017
glass and bone from the
1977 to 2017 period, now brought together for the first time.
Jan Fabre is fascinated by
the alchemy and the memory of materials. With this body of work, the artist
refers to both the Flemish masters who used pulverized bone in paint pigment
and the craftsmanship of the Venetian glassblowers. Fabre deliberately chooses
two hard materials that are strong though at the same time delicate and
fragile. Protective and functional.
“My philosophical and
poetical reason for bringing glass, and human and animal bones together stems
from the memory of my sister as a child playing with a small glass object. This
made me think of flexibility inherent in human bone and glass. Some animals,
and all human beings come out of the womb like molten glass out of a melting
oven. Everyone can be moulded, bent and shaped with an amazing degree of
freedom.” Jan Fabre, 2017.
Jan Fabre chooses
see-through glass for its metaphorical and factual transparency, employing it
in a variety of ways: as a transparent wall surface marked with the incision or
the sculptural rendition of an ear, for instance, therefore adding reference to
the hearing organ besides that of sight. Bones instead are a homage to Flemish
masters – a constant feature in Fabre’s work: these artists of the past in fact
would commonly use crushed bones as a painting material. Fabre’s glass and bone
works therefore bind the artist’s artistic childhood to the history and
tradition of antique and modern art, in an on-going reinterpretation of the interlacing
past, present and future.
http://www.angelos.be/eng/exhibitions/jan-fabre-glass-and-bone-sculptures-1977-2017
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