Art Brussels 2016, preview (3), Jacques Charlier, Benjamin Monti, Maurice Pirenne

Du côté des travaux sur papier :

Benjamin Monti

Benjamin Monti

Benjamin Monti
Sans titre (Cellule ciliée & caliciforme), de la série Histoires naturelles, 2015
Encre de chine sur dessin trouvé, 22,7 x 14,5 cm

Benjamin Monti

Benjamin Monti
Sans titre (coupe tangentielle du peuplier), de la série Histoires naturelles, 2015
Encre de chine sur dessin trouvé, 22,7 x 14,5 cm

Benjamin Monti

Benjamin Monti
Sans titre (Blatte, tube digestif), de la série Histoires naturelles, 2015
Encre de chine sur dessin trouvé, 22,7 x 14,5 cm

Benjamin Monti

Benjamin Monti
Sans titre (Ascaris mâle) de la série Histoires naturelles, 2015
Encre de chine sur dessin trouvé, 22,7 x 14,5 cm

Benjamin Monti

Benjamin Monti
Sans titre (Labiacée : Glécoma), de la série Histoires naturelles, 2015
Encre de chine sur dessin trouvé, 22,7 x 14,5 cm

Benjamin Monti

Benjamin Monti
Sans titre (Campanulacée : Campanula), de la série Histoires naturelles, 2015
Encre de chine sur dessin trouvé, 22,7 x 14,5 cm

Maurice Pirenne

Maurice Pirenne
Maison en construction, 1948
Pastel sur papier marouflé sur panneau,
17,5 x 25,5 cm (encadré 19,5 x 27,5 cm)
Signé et daté en haut à droite

Jacques Charlier

Jacques Charlier

Jacques Charlier

Jacques Charlier

Jacques Charlier

Jacques Charlier

Jacques Charlier
To be in the know or not (Ian Wilson), 1976
Encre de chine sur papier, ink on paper, (6) x 29 x 21 cm

Ian Wilson (°1940, South Africa) is one of the mythical figures of conceptual art. In 1968 he decided to take his ideas about visual abstraction into the invisible abstraction of language, along with a number of other artists such as Lawrence Wiener, Joseph Kosuth, Robert Barry and Art & Language. But Ian Wilson went furthest in the dematerialization of art. He wanted to speak instead of making things. He presented oral communication as an object and in doing so he liberated art from being bound to a specific place. Revolving around the question of knowledge, numerous Discussions have been held over the years in museums, galleries, or at the homes of private collectors in Europe and North America. Applying the Socratic method, Wilson opens a Discussion with a question about the possibility of knowledge. Participants deliver their own opinions through an informal process of response, debate, argumentation, or interjection. With direction from Wilson they spontaneously speculate about the nature of truth and the human condition while the work itself, juggling verbal paradox, steers clear of conclusive content. At the artist’s strict insistence, the discussions are never recorded or published. A hand-written or typed certificate signed by the artist documents the date and place of the event and may be acquired by an individual or an institution. (…) (Oscar van den Boogaard, 2002, galerie Jan Mot)

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