As of 26 September 2009 the city of Hasselt will literally
be a canvas for the work of talented photographers. Large
photos (from a few meters high to façade-sized) will be
exhibited in different locations against façades,
monumental buildings, on squares, etc.
The project runs from 26 September to 26 December
2009.
SMILE is a creative project that hopes
to surprise a broad audience with powerful images that
briefly allow us to forget the daily grind, slow down our
busy pace of life or simply make us 'smile’.
With this project the city of Hasselt wants to step out of
museums and exhibit applied art in combination or
confrontation with and in public spaces. The same image
acquires a different feeling, a different meaning in public
spaces.
The project was developed with
talented regional, national and international
photographers:
Lieve Blancquaert, Fabienne Cresens, Oleg Dou, Frank
Gielen, Michiel Hendrickx, Jimmy Kets, Ellen Kooi, Erwin
Olaf, Birgit Stulens, Carlo Valkenborgh, Ruud van Empel,
Philippe Vangelooven, Levi van Veluw, Marc Vonstein, and
Kimiko Yoshida.
These photographers were selected by the creative agency
Mooz in consultation with the cultural department of the
city of Hasselt.
The works are located on
buildings in the city centre of Hasselt: in the commercial
centre, along the green boulevard and at approach roads.
Images from above:
Philippe
van Gelooven (Hasselt, 1969), The magnificent 9.
Oleg Dou (Moscow, 1983). Dou’s characters
lack any individuality. The face is dissected down to the
tiniest detail and subjected with the utmost precision to
surgical transformations. Anything that could be
reminiscent of flesh is deleted, rubbed out, smoothed
away. The transparency of the porcelain skin emphasises
the brittleness of pure and imperfect beings. Despite the
icy, empty looks, however, this young Russian artist’s
“mutants” meticulously retain their sensitivity and
humanity.
Michiel Hendryckx (Adinkerke, 1951): this picture
was taken in the little Greek village of Kechries, near the
mouth of the Corinth Canal. The photograph can also be
seen in the autumn in Antwerp’s FotoMuseum, as part of
the exhibition, 'Dolen -Onderweg in Europa'.
Lieve Blancquaert (Gent, 1963), Boris. Lieve
Blancquaert is chiefly known for her
portrait photography. For her, it’s an extra and sometimes
stronger form of communication. In this exhibition, she
shows a photograph of her little son, Boris. The picture has
both comic and sad elements. Two emotions that often go
hand in hand. For her, the magic of photography is always
in the dialogue between two people. The image is the
response and the emphasis of that encounter.
Jimmy Kets (Lier, 1979), Smileys. Kets is an
amused outsider. With a generous dose of humour and an
eye for detail, he shows us the little things that make us
human. Kets snaps unmercifully; his photographs are
bursting with colour, but far from disguise the reality. He
reveals the (unintentional) humour in human life, but also
often the emptiness of existence.
Frank Gielen (Genk, 1964), Laurence. A Belgian-
born international photographer with a highly individual
style.
You can best describe Frank’s work as photographing
‘people in advertising in a fashionable way’, or simply the
technical ingenuity of a studio photographer combined with
the creative eye of a fashion photographer. Frank carries
out assignments for numerous renowned advertising
agencies, fashion houses and global brands.
His philosophy is clear: An image must have a narrative
function, allowing the model to play a role, too. “The
challenge as a photographer is not only in producing a
technically good picture or staging a concept, but also in
inspiring and directing the people you work with”.
Erwin Olaf (Hilversum, 1959). Like the series,
Paradise The Club (2001), the series Paradise Portraits
(2001) is a critical comment on the party culture of the
1990s. They are images of heavy parties, with women
being indecently assaulted by scary clowns. For this series,
Erwin Olaf was not only inspired by his own experiences on
the party scene, but also by Rubens’ painting, The
Abduction of Hippodamia. In Paradise Portraits (2001) he
shows a series of close-ups of the faces of beautiful young
women and frightening clowns. Sublime in all their horror.
Ellen Kooi (Leeuwarden, 1962). Ellen Kooi’s
photographic work mainly features children and young
women. Many photographs show a prominent image of
individuals placed in an outdoor environment. In this way,
Ellen Kooi presents us with the often characteristic Dutch
landscapes, but also - and primarily - she shows us images
that could easily be interpreted as psychological portraits.
Each natural setting, represented centrally, appears to
express the internal life of the character.?The inside
becomes the outside and vice versa.?The strength of Kooi’s
artistic examination lies in her profoundly universal breath.
No matter how unusually the situation is portrayed, her
photographs seem to imperceptibly fit in with the
observer’s own story.
Smile: city as a canvas
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- Elena Sommariva
- 21 October 2009