In 'Void' Foedinger's site-specific interventions exude a captivating physical presence: a sculpture in 'rebars', suggesting the shape of the steel reinforcements of a bridge pier. Kempenaers' show 'In Search of the Picturesque' presents an overview of the artist's photographic work of the past years.
The upcoming exhibition at KIOSK lets the monumental work of German artist Karsten Födinger
engage with the photographic output of Belgian artist Jan Kempenaers. These contrasting practices
both start from a landscape context – rural or urban – to subsequently translate them to autonomous
aesthetics of the image within a spatial or photographic exhibition frame. As such, it affects our
assumptions of recognizable landscape typologies.
Karsten Födinger’s massive sculptures and architectural installations take shape in proportion to the
exhibition space. His site-specific interventions exude a captivating physical presence. Both in their
construction and engineering and in the use of unpolished and functional materials, the sculptures
refer to the building sector and its basic industrial typologies.
For his show Void, Födinger realizes a new piece for KIOSK’s central dome room. Födinger constructs
a sculpture in ‘rebars’, suggesting the shape of the steel reinforcements of a bridge pier. Födinger
filters this element from reality and translates it to a personal, utopian creation process, which
precisely sets out from an imaginary functionality, offering up space for a subjective experience. As
hinted at by the show’s title, the sculpture not only functions through its self-evident materiality, but
just as much through the emptiness that comes with it. The work’s meaning is generated not so much
in its formal appearance as in the process of its physical realization.
As part of his PhD in the visual arts, Jan Kempenaers’ show In Search of the Picturesque presents
an overview of the artist’s photographic work of the past years. The body of work represents a
visual study of the eighteenth-century notion of the picturesque in the present-day landscape image
and its contemporary relevance. The particular picturesque mood evoked by Kempenaers in his
photographic oeuvre, strongly manifests itself in his recent ruins pictures and natural landscapes
such as inhospitable rock formations and thick forests; images that specifically engage with our
conceptualization of the nineteenth-century romantic landscape. Although much less explicitly, the
characteristics of the picturesque are also apparent in Kempenaers’ earlier works: these photographic
series show massive Yugoslav monuments in deserted natural landscapes, or panoramic urban and
industrial landscapes. Whether the pictures frame ‘unspoilt’ wildernesses, a politically charged
monument as a modern variant of the ‘romantic’ ruins, or an urban typology, they invariably employ a
recognizable, picturesque visual style to represent a specific undeniable contemporary reality.
Karsten Födinger (1978, Mönchengladbach, Germany) has presented solo exhibitions at Kunst Halle
St. Gallen (2012) and Palais de Tokyo Paris (2011). His work has been on display in group shows on
numerous occasions, including at Temporäre Kunsthalle Berlijn (2010) and Kunsthaus Baselland
Muttenz (2010). Karsten Födinger is represented by RaebervonStenglin in Zürich.
Jan Kempenaers (1968, Heist-op-den-Berg, Belgium) has recently exhibited solo at Be-Part Waregem
(2010), de Garage Mechelen (2010) and Middelheimmuseum Antwerp (2007). His work has been
part of numerous group shows, including some at M HKA Antwerp (2012), BOZAR Brussels (2011),
S.M.A.K. Ghent (2009) and MARTa Herford (2009).
image: Jan Kempenaers, "Rock #4", 2010
Press contact
Liene Aerts
e: liene.aerts@hogent.be
phone: +32 9 267 01 91
Press and professional preview: Friday 13 April 2012 by appointment: 14.00 – 20.00
Opening: Friday 13 April 2012 at 20.00
KIOSK
Louis Pasteurlaan 2 - 9000 Ghent
Tuesday – Friday: 14.00 – 18.00
Saturday – Sunday: 11.00 – 18.00
Closed on Mondays