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À la loupe
Werner Moron
7 Rue de l'Official
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Cloakroom
Charlotte Delval
37 Rue Souverain Pont
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Biospheric City
Xavier Mary
25 Rue Saint Paul
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This Is Not a Theory
Giuseppe Arnone
40 Rue Hors-Château
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Barbaro after the hunt
Andréa Le Guellec
56 Rue Saint-Gilles
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Nos lieux de bonheur
Benjamin Hollebeke
141 Féronstrée
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Between Two
Adrien Milon
31b Rue de la Cathédrale
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Your Parcel Is Coming
Aurelien Lacroix
5 Rue Saint-Michel
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Marcher, cueillir, jardiner, teindre
Benjamin Huynh
32 Rue de la Madeleine
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À nos jours heureux
DIAAAne (Diane Stordiau)
28 - 30 Boulevard d'Avroy
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One Loft Race — Pigeon Paradise
Lucas Castel
20 Rue de la Sirène
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Les envahisseurs
Dimitri Autin
85 Rue de la Cathédrale
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Vous êtes toustes flou·e·s
Marcelle Germaine
107 - 109 Rue de la Cathédrale
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Le jeu d’un destin
Mikaïl Koçak
52 En Neuvice
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Rue Monrose, 62 : La chambre L’enfant Le train
Paul Gérard
180 Rue Saint-Gilles
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Peek
Raphaël Meng WU
75 Rue Hors-Château
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Un buisson de clés (Sleutelbos)
Amber Roucourt
16 Rue du Palais
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Brownfields
Cesare Botti
108 Féronstrée
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Never Finished
Dirk Bours
84 Féronstrée
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Empty Reflections
Jason Slabbynck
21 Pont d'Île
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On « Sexy Magico »
Louis Gahide
7 Rue Lambert Lombard
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Opalima Kupina: Liège episode A Stop Pavilion: On the Soft Underbelly of Europe.
Nikolay Karabinovych
1 Féronstrée
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Untitled
Reza Kianpour
14 Rue de la Populaire
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Angle Mort
VIVONS CACHÉ·ES
31a Rue de la Cathédrale
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Haya al salat, haya ala falah*
Sarah Van Melick
4 Rue de la Cathédrale
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Rue Monrose, 62 : La chambre L’enfant Le train
#18
Paul Gérard
Curator : Sophie Delhasse
425180 Rue Saint-Gilles
Paul Gérard’s artistic practice tends toward a politicization of the intimate realm. Drawing on a series of testimonies and memories that are both autobiographical and deeply personal, the artist reveals the political impact on life stories. Halfway between reality and fiction, he draws inspiration from family narratives, which he deconstructs, transforms and sublimates.
After exploring grief, unsaid things and transgenerational legacies, Paul Gérard now turns toward childhood. He develops a narrative composed of sounds and images that questions how to put things into words differently. What precedes or exceeds language? Rue Monrose, 62: La chambre L’enfant Le train is inspired by his first place of residence. From an installation linked to the world of play, the artist explores the relationship between childhood and violence, and the ways children channel the images they receive: distance is created through play and the construction of an imaginary world. Using old toys once stored in a closet on rue Monrose (Kapla blocks, a train set, cars, figurines), he stages a miniature city crossed by a model train. The immersive, visual and sound installation invites visitors to enter the bedroom, a place of refuge, and to “board the moving train.” The model city, along with a soundtrack, resonates with emotions: to desolation responds a vital energy; destruction gives way to a hope of reconstruction. The bedroom, an isolated space, crystallizes the tension between refuge and confinement. Immersion offers both a return to childhood and a distancing through fiction.
Installation with sound piece (voice: Estelle Saignes)