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Histoires simples
Léopold Mottet 1 students
107 Féronstrée
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Qu’est-ce-qui se trame ici ?
Centre André Baillon
1 Féronstrée
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Night Walk
Maria Chiara Ziosi
85 Rue de la Cathédrale
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Thy Cities Shall With Commerce Shine — Part II
Hattie Wade
35 Rue Souverain Pont
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La Maison Panure – Fève des rois
JJ von Panure
21 Pont d'Île
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MANTERO
Santiago Vélez
4 Rue de la Cathédrale
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Mobile Écriture Automatique
Philippe José Tonnard
109 rue de la Cathédrale
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ST END
Pablo Perez
10 Rue Nagelmackers
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ALREADYMADE n° 3 : Empty Cart or Cardboard Cybertruck
M.Eugène Pereira Tamayo
18 Rue de l'Etuve
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Centre de remise en forme (économie de guerre)
Werner Moron
7 Rue de l'Official (Îlot Saint-Michel)
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Sun(set)(Seed)
Matthieu Michaut
56 Rue Saint-Gilles
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precarity of non-human entities
Gérard Meurant
23 Rue Saint-Michel
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S’aligne, l’inconnue sans lecture
Julia Kremer
40 Rue Hors-Château
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Autumn Collages
Ívar Glói Gunnarsson Breiðfjörð
30 Rue de la Cathédrale
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Rōt Rot Rôt
Janina Fritz
28 Rue des Carmes
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Pierre ventilée
Daniel Dutrieux
14 Rue de la Populaire (Îlot Saint-Michel)
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Peephole
Jacques Di Piazza
31a Rue de la Cathédrale
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Room Eater
Jorge de la Cruz
5 Rue Saint-Michel (Îlot Saint-Michel)
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Behind the Curtain
Francesca Comune
31b Rue de la Cathédrale
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COMMENT
Kim Bradford
16 Rue du Palais
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Pedro Camejo (série Diaspora)
Omar Victor Diop
25 Rue Saint Paul
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L’impasse de la vignette, dans le temps et dans l’espace
Michel Bart and Mathias Vancoppenolle
75 Rue Hors-Château
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Opéra-savon, épisode 1 : L’ Aquarium-Museum
Clara Agnus
20 Rue de la Sirène
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Core Values
#3
Julie Kern Donck
Open call
549 Rue de la Madeleine
Abstracting observations from her everyday experience infused with a poetic spirit, Julie Kern Donck clairvoyantly strikes a tone of reconsideration. Her work explores codes in historicism and symbols. She utilises her in-depth knowledge of materials to create narratives that interplay with our understanding of the past in context with contemporary attitudes.
« We were looking around our house, thinking about what to do and where to start. And this feeling struck us. It posed the question : Where does art begin ? Where do we find inspiration and more importantly the legitimacy for making more trash in the world ? The home environment is an important starting point since we recognised the importance of familiarity that this space provides for us. We find interface of the world in our rooms or our archives and sources of codes that enable us to decode or interpret the world. In this domestic environment, what struck us initially was that of the gazing animals, animals that have become domesticated, images of lions which sit on our coffee table framed like in a zoo. Masks from a Halloween after party oddly manipulated, personified. »
Julie Kern Donck start to unravel ideas of our relationship to objects and their meaning.

