-
Around The Corner
Zena Van den Block
35 Rue Souverain Pont
-
VMC gargouilles
Thomas Sindicas
31b Rue de la Cathédrale
-
Kodomo No Kuni
Mey Semtati
18 Rue de l'Etuve
-
The Faces Collection
Anna Safiatou Touré
16 Rue du Palais
-
QuickSnap
Camille Poitevin
40 Rue Hors-Château
-
P.O.F
Ronan Marret
75 Rue Hors-Château
-
Belles récompenses
Mathilde Manka
159 Féronstrée
-
Quatre Mains / Zonder Handen
Stephanie Lamoline
107 Féronstrée
-
Anatomie du vivant / Life
Sophie Keraudren-Hartenberger
98 Rue de la Cathédrale
-
À mon seul désir
Gral
32 Rue de la Cathédrale
-
Rain Bow
Guillaume Gouerou
4 Rue de la Cathédrale
-
Knock me !
Garage de Recherches Graphiques
85 Rue de la Cathédrale
-
Double Bind
Jane Denizeau & Pauline Flajolet
1 Féronstrée
-
Pie in the sky
Justine Corrijn
20 Rue de la Sirène
-
Parking Cathédrale
Elias Cafmeyer
31a Rue de la Cathédrale
-
Dés-Affectations
Elie Bolard
84 Féronstrée
-
Kader / Cadre
Doris Boerman
29 Rue de l'Université
-
Fatigue
Camille Bleker & Luna Pittau
3 Place des Déportés
-
Si tu me vois
Aurélie Belair
56 Rue Saint-Gilles
-
Terres battantes
Camille Barbet
100 Rue de la Cathédrale
-
The end–promise on packaging
Pharaz Azimi
23 Rue Saint-Michel
-
J’ai déclaré ma flamme
Artik
25 Rue Saint Paul
-
my belongings
Celine Aernoudt
5 Rue Chéravoie
Warning: Undefined array key "current_expo" in /var/www/clients/client3/web4/web/wp-content/themes/artaucentre/loop/vitrine.php on line 25

Red House
#2
Thierry Grootaers
Curator : Mikail Koçak
3398 Rue de la Cathédrale
The house is usually a protected and protecting space. All our primitive needs lie down safely in our birdhouse, we scrutinize the world from our watchtower. We are ready to defend this place and its stories by all necessary means.
This private space, where the walls and the floor leak memories, is only an ephemeral construction of which only the story will remain.
Thierry Grootaers hereby presents us a model of the family bungalow that could also serve as a shelter for birds and insects or a doll house. His work is a combination of patterns of our daily life arising from rural architecture, interior decoration and his collection of images that he cut out of pop culture books and magazines. Warm colors dominate his pictorial compositions. This Red House is entirely covered with a bright red tint, which could refer to the movement Arts & Crafts (19th century, London), so called for the use of red bricks with organic structures, but also to Jimi Hendrix’s most played blues piece.