
Generation Brussels 2021
Artists
Axel Korban
Estelle Saignes
Karolien Chromiak
Curators
Dagmar Dirkx & Zeynep Kubat
Installation Views
For 2021, we chose to collaborate with Belgian Curators Dagmar Dirkx and Zeynep Kubat.
They collaborated with the artists on a transdisciplinary exhibition, articulating different themes such as identity, gender, or our relationship to space and the environment, under the gaze of a new generation of Brussels artists.
Clémentine Coupau
Günbike Erdemir
Thiaba Diop Egutchi
Eléonore Joulin
Jean-Samuel N’Sengi
Ugo Woatzi
And yet Of an angry young tune –
If the world would shut up And recompose ourselves
Even for a while Perhaps
Perhaps Having deconstructed everything
We would start hearing We should be thinking about
The distant rhythm Putting everything back together
(Savages – ‘Shut up’- clip version)
How do you capture the spirit of a young generation of artists without falling prey to deadpan phrases like ‘new’, ‘fresh’ or ‘unprecedented’ as the only parameters to go by? While the word ‘avant-garde’ is gradually passing its expiry date, this group of young artists realize that it is not so much about a brand new story. They deconstruct familiar narratives and use forgotten practices, deliberately ignored heroes and lost histories as the building bricks for their new mythologies.
As we were all ‘grounded’ at home last year, these times have put a magnifying glass on the ways in which we arrange the spaces around us. “The space is alive and has something to say. It asks you to connect, to get grounded,” says artist Günbike Erdemir. We can no longer be careless with our living environment: instead, these artists invite us to take out our magnifying glass and get closer to the ground. Their works ask us to sit down, to touch and reconsider our surroundings. To listen, to question the given functions of the objects that inhabit these spaces.
The spaces we occupy also give shape to our rituals. Digital apps like Co-Star or Sleep Cycle enter our lives and tell us how to live. These instructions are worth analysing: where do they support the perpetuation of existing, and perhaps outdated, systems of control? The artists of Generation Brussels reformulate the rules of the game (and those of the art world) that are imposed on us. Some refer to the linguistic formulas of control and surveillance, while other artists create their own (visual) semantics to grasp control over their understanding of the society we have to live in.
Kae Tempest writes in On Connection: ‘The problem with reflection is that before looking in the mirror, we compose ourselves. (…) Before the furtive glance into the dark glass of a parked car or shop window, we have already made the face or taken the posture that we like to see.’ Just like Tempest, this group of artists realizes a mirror won’t do for constructing our identities. Instead, identities can be found in an old box with letters to our family, in a community of queer people that take care of each other, or in stories and artefacts of our ancestors. Gender, cultural and social background, class, sexual orientation, age, religion are all part of a beautiful and complex mirror palace. However, to come back to Tempest: ‘(…) beneath our direct lived experiences – beneath our unique cultures and identities – there is commonality, and I believe that this is something we can all access through creativity.’
Yet, no medium is infallible. Perfectionism in a singular craft makes room for art practices that grab a taste of various media. Photography meets textile, video ping-pongs with sculpture, painting is part of an installation, audio meets performance. Glitches are at all times embraced: they are precisely those interesting indications of a failing system that enable us to question the dominant technologies and systems. And perhaps the biggest system failure is that of a binary way of life, in which divisions such as ‘nature-culture’/’human-object’/man-woman/’artist-curator/’ stand in our way the most.
The transdisciplinary attitude of this group of artists is typical of the open, flexible attitude that they adopt towards the art world: the myth of the individual, brilliant artist may finally be shattered; connection and exchange are the keywords that should characterise the art world. Only together, in dialogue and togetherness, do we find the way to the healing of a broken, jaded world. Slowly, we are putting ourselves back together.
Dagmar Dirkx & Zeynep Kubat
























































































































