Folds in time. She works in marble, papier-mache', steel, lead, velvet and ceramics, giving a leading role to decoration and ornamentation and playing with the sensuality and directness of the materials. The exhibition takes place in parallel at Mu.ZEE.
In her work, Lili Dujourie (1941, Roeselare) combines the influence of such Flemish Primitive painters as Jan van Eyck with her personal artistic approach. She works in marble, papier-maché, steel, lead, velvet and ceramics, giving a leading role to decoration and ornamentation and playing with the sensuality and directness of the materials. Her sculptural interventions struggle between painting and sculpture, balance and gravity, abstract and figurative, and their physical presence and their surroundings.
In addition, Dujourie is also developing videos which are highly unique.
Her core themes are the relationship between nature and culture, the passing and the weight of time and her quest for an emotional understanding of space.
This exhibition will be on in parallel at both S.M.A.K. in Ghent and Mu.ZEE in Ostend. The two sections, one inland and one on the coast, cover Dujourie’s work from her debut in the 1960s until the present.
The exhibition gets an extra dimension: Lili Dujourie has chosen the MSK in Ghent to exhibit the very first work she made using velvet, 'Maagdendael' from 1982.
The exhibition will take place in parallel at S.M.A.K. (Ghent) and Mu.ZEE (Ostend). The two settings of this exhibition – one inland and one by the sea, - will show Dujourie’s oeuvre from her debut in the late sixties to today.
Press contact:
Mu.ZEE Communications department - Colette Castermans, Inge Busschaert +32 (0)59 564591 or via pers@muzee.be
Opening on Friday 5 June 2015 from 8 pm till 11 pm. Afterwards you can join us for a drink.
S.M.A.K.
Jan Hoetplein 1, 9000 Gent Belgium
from Tuesday till Sunday from 10 am till 18 pm Closed on Mondays.
Last admission and closing time cash-desk: 30 minutes before closing of the museum
Mu.ZEE
Romestraat 11 B-8400 Ostend
10.00 am to 6.00 pm
Closed Mondays, 25 December and 1 January