Against The Day. This first solo show of Luc Tuymans in Brussels presents, in world premiere, twenty new paintings which he created especially for Wiels. The works can be seen as the third and last part of a triptych that began with the series Les Revenants about the power of the Jesuit Order and continued with Forever.
This is the first solo exhibition of Luc Tuymans in Brussels. The artist will present, in world
premiere, twenty new paintings. The works are the third and last part of a triptych that began
with the series Les Revenants about the power of the Jesuit Order and continued with Forever.
The Management of Magic, about the Walt Disney phenomenon. In this new series, Tuymans
continues his work focusing on virtual reality, fantasies and illusions in images and concentrates
on virtual images and images without any sense of reality. Thus, Tuymans continues his research
on the illusion and manipulation of images and gives answers through his painting practice.
Most or practically all of Tuymans’ paintings are based upon already represented imagery,
ranging from drawings, photographs, found images, film-stills, Polaroid’s, etc. He calls his work
'authentic forgeries', convinced that original images do not exist and that every image is derived
from another. He uses family pictures and historical images as representations of social-political
taboos and a traumatic past.
The function of the close-up, the framing and other visual principles, which the artists
appropriated from cinema, is remarkable. Tuymans used to make films and the storyboard – like
drawings such as Lift (1980) demonstrate his cinematographic point of view. In Blacklight
(1994), a chair, a sofa, a standard lamp and a television set are crowded in the right corner of
the images, as if we are looking in through a swerving camera. The framing suggests a snapshot
of a passing movement and enlarges the sense of impending doom.
The image is never fragmented. The image is fragmentary as a whole. It finds itself somewhere
between spectator and image, in a claustrophobic place of non-communication, as an
accomplished fact, as the silent weight of deceit, memory and trauma before or after an event.
Through mimicry, the artist realises a reconstruction. The imagery permits different
interpretations and several layers of meaning, therefore it can only be perceived as ambiguous
and dubious.
Tuymans is one of the most respected painters of his generation. His work is largely included in
prominent international museums, e.g. the Museum Of Modern Art in New York and the
National Museum of Modern Art Georges Pompidou Centre Paris. He participated in important
exhibitions such as Documenta IX 1992. He had a solo exhibition in 2002 in Helsinki. In 2004,
Tate Modern London (UK) scheduled a great solo show of his paintings. This exhibition
travelled to the K21 Kunstsammlung Düsseldorf (GER). He participated in the Biennale di Sao
Paulo del Brasile in 2004. Several major solo exhibitions were planned in 2007, including a
retrospective at Haus der Kunst, München (D) and a show at Zeno X Gallery, Antwerp (BE). In
2008, Forever. The Management of Magic was organized at David Zwirner, New York, NY. In
2009, the exhibition Against The Day will be held at Wiels which will travel to Rooseum-
Moderna Museet in Stockholm (SV). In 2010, several American museums have invited Tuymans
to have a large solo exhibition at their institutes.
Commentary "Against the Day"
“I adopted the title Against the Day from a book by Thomas Pynchon (2006). Thomas Pynchon is
my favourite American author and one of the inventors of paranoia in American literature.”
There is an anonymization of the painting (Ed. The Game Warden, Fernand Khnopff, 1883, coll.
Stâdelmuseum Frankfurt a/M) which fascinated me to such an extent that I linked one of my own
most recent paintings to it: Against the Day. My painting was probably painted against an
entirely different ideational background – but then again there are affinities. And not simply
because there is also a tree. My tree, of course, is the one in my little city garden behind my own
house. Once I furnished a colleague with a cap, a blue jacket and a shovel with which he
shovelled the soil. He was completely engrossed in this work. His facial features can no longer
be recognized. One has an inkling of his face, one senses it, but it is ultimately not important
whether one figures out who it is or what this person is feeling. This person is part of the
hermetic scene – as in the Khnopff. Here the time of day is defined. It is a nocturne. It is a
painting not so very much concerned with nature. It is a painting that actually takes place off in a
corner, facing the viewer, showing the act of shovelling. In the foreground, the overexposed,
colourful image of a tree appears, depicting a kind of blur. The latter contrasts with the
unbelievably elaborate development of the rest of the depiction.
This painting also has something to do with a fascination, an aspect which, in turn relates back to
the conceivable cynicism of a man like Fernand Khnopff, who was a member of society’s upper
class and could therefore naturally take various liberties. The French, and above all the French
authors and intellectuals, considered Fernand Khnopff the only truly important Belgian artist
aside from Félicien Rops. Something that naturally flattered both of them. Khnopff’s favourite
time of the year – as he always said – was the autumn.
The painting Against the Day will serve as the title motif for an exhibition by the same name,
which I’m planning for next year (scheduled to open on 23 April 2009 at the Kunsthalle Wiels in
Brussels). I adopted the title Against the Day from a book by Thomas Pynchon (2006). Thomas
Pynchon is my favourite American author and one of the inventors of paranoia in American
literature. But there is also something else to which the painting makes reference: to the book Oil
by Upton Sinclair, which was adapted to the screen in 2007 by Paul Thomas Anderson: There
Will Be Blood. The film pursues the idea of minimalism, a certain banality. More specifically,
banality in the sense of reality – regardless of how the latter is actually shaped, whether it is
triggered artificially, through scenography, or not.
For me, already in reaction to my previous exhibitions, a certain idea developed – and this is
precisely what interests me about Khnopff: the evacuation of the utopia. The evacuation of the
utopia took place gradually over time and through history – actually like a form of pornography
though one which associated itself with a person on a mental level. The evacuation of the utopia
goes above and beyond the banality of this painting, which is a domesticated painting because it
is concerned with a specific territory such as, for example, the pictorial field. For me, a further
thought develops toward the idea of a virtual reality, in which already now one constructs people
in their entirety and then plays them back into a scene. Usually the latter is a computer image
and it is no longer clear whether the figure is real or not. This image has been created with a
perfection of the kind applied so many centuries ago by Van Eyck, now, however, with a
machine. This is how the Big Brother reality shows and horror broadcasts work, which – with
the aid of the forensic sciences – are robbed of the whole utopia through reassembly,
reconstruction.
Image: Against the day I , 2008. Oil on canvas 224 x 174 cm. Courtesy : David Zwirner, New York and Zeno X Gallery, Antwerp
Complementary Programme
During the exhibition, we organise lectures, screenings, performances, guided visits by personalities...
Press
Angie Vandycke Mail: angie.vandycke@wiels.org tel +32 (0)2 3400051
Micha Pycke - Elke Segers Assistant Press & Communication tel +32 (0)2 3400051
Press conference Tuesday April 21st 2 pm
Opening Wednesday April 22nd 6 pm – 9 pm
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