Sea Of Tranquility. His latest works show a move towards miniaturization and diversity. While the artist sets out from traditional techniques, his new works also present digital animation.
curated by Heinz Peter Schwerfel
The Belgian artist Hans Op De Beeck constructs a cinematic language consisting of
sculptures, paintings, drawings, installations, photography, video work, animated
films, and short stories. The artist uses a plethora of different media, shifting from
one frame to another while using an economical and minimal visual language or
exaggerated designs. Hans op de Beeck’s film entitled “Sea of Tranquillity” will be
presented at Dirimart Garibaldi between May 10 – 27.
Introducing the world of contemporary art and cinema to the Turkish viewers through
the series entitled “Storytellers - Art And Cinema Today,” Dirimart Garibaldi now
presents “Sea of Tranquillity” by Hans op de Beeck - the multi-disciplinary artist who
tends to utilize several aesthetic forms simultaneously.
The Belgian artist’s latest works show a move towards miniaturization and diversity.
While the artist sets out from traditional techniques, his new works also present digital
animation. Op De Beeck strives to choose and utilize the most enunciative and effective
technique for each particular work. He frequently uses several aesthetic forms at the same
time. In his images he captures the tragicomic absurdity of our postmodern existence.
Op De Beeck shows the viewer non-existent but identifiable places, moments, and
characters that appear to have been taken from contemporary everyday life. His works
are irrefutably fictional as much as they are meticulously constructed and staged. Hans
op de Beeck leaves it to the viewer whether to take the work seriously, as a sort of parallel
reality, or to immediately put it into perspective as no more than a visual construct. His
works more often than not deal with fun situations as well as spaces of entertainment and
leisure - parties, feasts, parks, festivities, fairs, cafés, swimming pools, and gardens. The
artist challenges the twisted circumstances of these areas of recreation, stripping them
free of their elements of amusement and conviviality.
Stating that his artistic roots lie in sculpture and painting, Op De Beeck refrains from
defining himself as a film-maker, acknowledging his artistic standpoint with these
words: “When I use video, I use it in a different way than a film-maker would do. I have
another conception of time and I am not fighting that. I don’t want to be a film-maker. I
am not pretending to be one. To be honest, I don’t know much about film-making! I am
a visual artist.”
Op De Beeck’s architectural works are actually key to understanding his body of work. An
aesthetic recurrence in his works is the fastidious production of many objects and spaces.
In this manner, the artist’s main objective of sculptural construction is achieved.
In his film “Sea of Tranquillity”, Hans Op De Beeck juxtaposes various techniques
together once again, thus reflecting his desire to question the boundaries between
these different techniques. The main purpose of this film is to spawn familiarity in
the viewer, while simultaneously destroying his/her ability to remember and in turn
allow them to procure their own experiences.
The protagonist of the story is the fictional cruise liner, and the events taking place on
this cruise liner and the psychological plots of her characters can only by recognized
when one reads between the lines. At first glance the protagonist, namely the “Sea of
Tranquillity” cruise liner appears to be a military ship. In this manner, she seems to be
in constant need to avoid any disturbance from the outside world. The film actually is
a critique of the safe and superficial microcosms, which the upper classes constantly
strive to create wherever they roam around the world. These types of cruise liners
are prototype of the cultural model of consumption and leisure; similar to artificial
cities webbed with over-organized shopping malls and/or the overprotected luxury
estates. These areas are free of crime, and thus remote from the real course of daily life.
Everything is programmed, organized, and pre-planned. These are worlds of their own,
where the passengers cannot experience time. Centuries ago people would board these
ships to see faraway lands, whereas today they only set foot to be serviced, to wind
down, to stuff themselves, and to have their share of the gamble.
Hans Op De Beeck was born in Turnhout, Belgium in 1969.
The artist has worked with paintings before moving to new media. Over the past ten years, he has developed
his career through international exhibitions. His work consists of sculptures, installations, video work,
photography, animated films, drawings, paintings, and short stories. It is his quest for the most effective
way of presenting the concrete contents of each work that determines the medium that the artist ultimately
selects. The scale can vary from the size of a small watercolor to a large, three-dimensional installation of
300m2. The artist not only uses a very wide variety of media, but also deliberately employs a diversity of
aesthetic forms, ranging from an economical, minimalist visual language to overloaded, exaggerated designs,
always with the aim of articulating the content of the work as precisely as possible.
Hans Op De Beeck lives and works in Brussels.
His films include: 2009 Staging Silence / 2007 The Building / 2007 Drifting / 2006 The Stewarts Have a
Party / 2005 All Together Now … | 2004 Loss |2004 Places (Gardening 2) | 2003 My Brother’s Gardens
| 2003 Blender | 2001 Gardening | 2001 Border |1999 Coffee | 1999 Communication | 1999 Insert Coin –
for Love | 1999 Insert Coin – Highway Car |1998 Determination (4), 1998 Sub | 1996 Determination (1)
Image: Sea of Tranquillity, 2010 Full HD video 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Colour, sound
Courtesy Galleria Continua,
San Gimignano / Beijing / Le Moulin;
Galerie Krinzinger, Vienna;
Xavier Hufkens, Brussels; Marianne
Boesky Gallery, New York; Galerie
Ron Mandos, Rotterdam – Amsterdam
Opening: 10 May 2012, 6p.m.
Dirimart Garibaldi
İstiklal Caddesi, Odakule yanı
Deva Çıkmazı No: 2 Garibaldi Binası Kat 2 Beyoğlu
Visiting days and hours:
Tuesday–Saturday 11.00 am – 19.00pm