Memento by Wesley Meuris

Narrow slits provide entrances to this circular pavilion by Belgian artist Wesley Meuris outside the Flemish town of Borgloon.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Called Memento, the white structure has a smooth exterior and a tiled interior.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

The square tiles are in relief, creating different textures and shadows as the sun moves across the sky.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

The two slender gaps cast sundial-like shadows around the circle and allow the evening sun to stream in.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Situated on a slope, the pavilion looks out over the central graveyard in the medieval town of Borgloon.

Memento by Wesley Meuri

The project is one in a series of permanent structures for public spaces in the Haspengouw region, instigated by the Z33 gallery. Other completed projects include a doughnut-shaped pavilion and a see-through church.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Photography is by Kristof Vrancken.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Here’s some more information from Z33:


Memento is a sculpture at the Central Burial of Borgloon. The artwork of Wesley Meuris is an anchor point in the sloping landscape and invites visitors to step in.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

The architectural structure of the work provides a special experience of looking and dwelling. The steel built space can be interpreted in many ways by the visitor and challenges the imagination.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Whoever is in the room experiences the intimacy. This reflects the memory of its surroundings.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Initiated by De Nieuwe Opdrachtgevers.

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Official opening: May 4th, 2012

Memento by Wesley Meuris

On display: permanent from May 5th, 2012

Memento by Wesley Meuris

Location: Central Burial of Borgloon, Lambertusstraat, Borgloon

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Wesley Meuris
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Based on a Grid by Esther Stocker

Based on a Grid by Esther Stocker

Artist Esther Stocker has built a disjointed grid of black blocks across the floor, walls and ceiling of Z33 – House for Contemporary Art in Hasselt, Belgium.

Based on a Grid by Esther Stocker

The arrangement of the blocks suggests a grid that’s only half visible, leaving the viewer to mentally piece together the remaining elements.

Based on a Grid by Esther Stocker

‘Based on a Grid’ is part of Z33′s current exhibition ‘Mind the System, Find the Gap’, in which more than 30 international artists offer their interpretation on the idea of gaps in the system.

Based on a Grid by Esther Stocker

The exhibition continues until 30 September 2012.

Based on a Grid by Esther Stocker

See more stories about installations »

Based on a Grid by Esther Stocker

Here’s some more about the exhibition:


‘Based on a Grid’ , commission 2012 – Esther Stocker In ‘Based on a Grid’ (2012),

Esther Stocker creates a spatial system from a series of black painted wooden blocks in the entrance hall of the Z33 exhibition building. The visitor is drawn into the installation, as it were, and is challenged by the system, the grid that is there but not immediately visible. For Stocker, the system is implied as much by its gaps as it is by its contours. But do we want to look for the system or are we happy to lose ourselves in the chaos of scattered elements drifting apart? A decision which according to Jan Verwoert, contributing editor at Frieze Magazine and freelance author, depends on the position one takes or is willing to take with regards to ordering structures. He therefore concludes: “Using abstraction as a medium, [Esther Stocker] formulates a critical position with respect to the authority of ordering structures.”

‘Mind the System, Find the Gap’ is this year’s summer exhibition at Z33 – House for Contemporary Art. More than 30 international artists seek out the gaps in the system.

Our society is governed by all sorts of systems and structures that organise and steer life. No system, however, whether political, judicial, economical, socio-cultural or spatial, can comprise life in its entirety. Every system has gaps, leaks and ambiguities.

The artists in the exhibition Mind the System, Find the Gap seek out these gaps. They set forth from this intermediate position to unveil, circumvent or criticise ruling systems and structures.

‘Mind the System, Find the Gap’ does not proffer an overly simplified critique on the notion of systems and structuring principles, but aims to seek out its complexity.

For the past few years, strong thematic exhibitions on societal issues have been Z33’s trademark. It is Z33’s ambition to challenge the visitor to look at the day-to-day reality with a different set of eyes, as do the artists in ‘Mind the System, Find the Gap’.

June 3 – September 30 2012
Z33 – House for Contemporary Art
Zuivelmarkt 33
3500 Hasselt
Belgium

NET by For Use/Numen

Net by For Use/Numen

Visitors can clamber inside a stretchy web of netting installed by For Use/Numen at Belgian gallery Z33 this summer.

Net by For Use/Numen

The designers from Croatia and Austria suspended large nets from the walls and ceiling to creating a shifting landscape that’s distorted as people move around inside.

Net by For Use/Numen

For Use/Numen are best known for their Tape Installations, which use several kilometers of transparent sticky tape to create cocoons between the pilars of a host building or scaffolding. See our earlier story about their installation at DMY Berlin 2009 here.

Net by For Use/Numen

NET is on show at Z33 in Hasselt until 2 October 2011.

Net by For Use/Numen

See our stories about past exhibitions at Z33 »

Net by For Use/Numen

Photography is by Kristof Vrancken.

The following information is provided:


First Belgian exhibition by Austrian/Croatian design collective

From 3 July to 2 October Z33 – house for contemporary art shows the new installation ‘NET’ by the Austrian/Croation design collective Numen / For Use. They have created this new installation for their first exhibition in Belgium.

NET consists of flexible nets suspended from the walls and ceiling, which form a floating ‘landscape’. This landscape gives visitors the opportunity to climb in these nets or to explore the space. The installation refers to biomorphic architecture and urban dream images from previous decades.

Numen / For Use is the design collective of Sven Jonke, Christoph Katzler and Nikola Radeljkovic. As For Use they are active as product designers for major design companies, while they realize interiors, exhibitions and public spaces as Numen.

Z33

Z33 is a house for contemporary art based in Hasselt, Belgium. It is an unique laboratory and meeting place for experiment and innovation. Since its founding in 2002, Z33 produces and shows projects that reflect on societal and scientific evolutions. This is translated into concrete themes in which everyday things play a central role.


See also:

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Tape Installation by
For Use/Numen
Netscape by Konstantin
Grcic
Bench Between Pillars
by Ryuji Nakamura

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