Peter Weidenbaum

Peter Weidenbaum (born in Antwerp on 25 July 1968) is a Belgian artist. From a very early age onwards, he became acquainted with painting. He himself maintains that the confrontation with Jean Fouquet's painting "Madonna surrounded by seraphim's and cherubim's" at the Museum of Fine Arts (Antwerp) altered his view on reality. A different kind of reality became tangible at that instant.[1]

Weidenbaum's work cannot be defined as mere style elements or constants. It is rather an exploration into our culture of images and the materialization of thoughts within the context of art. We look with our brain. This is the starting point of his exploration into images; whether it shows itself in a sculpture, in an installation or painted on canvas. Weidenbaum's work is a reaction to the dictatorship of reality and a quest for the metaphysical.[2]

Education

In 1993, Weidenbaum enrols in The Royal Academy in Antwerp and at the behest of Walter Villain, studies Monumental Art. During his time there, he seeks inspiration from literature: Sartre, Goethe, Jung shape his thoughts. This leads to the series "Greetings from Faust" and a string of works around the poet Paul van Ostaijen. The German expressionists Max Beckmann and George Grosz have a major influence on the young artist, despite the generational difference. In 2014 the public broadcast service shows a two-series documentary concerning the 350th anniversary of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp (KASK). In "Stream of Talent", such diverse artists like Fred Bervoets, Jan Fabre, Luk Tuymans, Cindy Wright and Peter Weidenbaum reminisce about their time at the KASK.

Situating and work

In 1996, at the suggestion of artist Guillaume Bijl, Weidenbaum successfully applies for a training course at the Higher Institute for Fine Arts (HISK).[3] His investigations into images lead to a cross-pollination between cartoon films and sculptural work. In 1999 he receives an invitation from Stijn Huijts, director of the Civic Museum "Het Domein" in Sittard, The Netherlands. This results in his first museum exhibition with the installation "Somebody puts something in my dreams". During this period, Weidenbaum also produces a few "fake reality" short films in which his brother plays the lead role. After his HISK period, he works during three years on a series "Out of the Forest", a set of cryptic sculptures,[4] drawings and paintings. During this period, he strikes up a close contact with the philosopher Willem Elias, who remarks the following about the series: "Weidenbaum reflects about the world surrounding him. He takes us into the forest. No jolly walkabout but bewitched approaches confuse our sight." In his book "Aspects of Belgian art beyond ‘45",[5] he later cites Weidenbaum under the heading of "neosymbolism", a particular style in Flanders labelled as "the school of Antwerp" and of which Luc Tuymans is the most important representative. Elias mentions "recontextualisation" of reality and includes Weidenbaum in his book, besides the likes of Ronny Delrue and Koen van den Broek.[6]

Weidenbaum continues to reflect about the function of the artist and reaches the conclusion that an artist as merely a producer of work doesn’t make much sense if there is no social dimension connected with it. This is obviously due to the fact that the artist through his work illustrates a different vision on reality and because of this enriches the spectator’s experience.[7]

Exhibitions

With the exhibition "Daswald", Antwerp 2004 and the project "Lookout",[8] Tienen 2005, he emerges from creative isolation. The "Lookout" project involves the construction of a hunting pulpit with students from a technical college. The hunting pulpit is constructed to a very high standard and placed in a pedestrianized shopping street. This project is conducted in close collaboration with the writer, the curator, the artist, the students who help him build the hunting pulpit, the spectator. On the other hand, the different locations: the pedestrianized shopping street, the gallery and the museum. Weidenbaum interacts and tears them out of their context. The students constructing the hunting pulpit with him, become part of his artistic process. He extracts their activity out of the school structure and involves them in his creative activity. Curator Sven Vanderstichelen has this to say about the "lookout out of the box": "the ‘lookout’ project is not merely an installation, a video, a sketch or a painting. It’s a search for what Peter Weidenbaum so aptly names as ‘the inner forest’. The place where every interactive process between the outside world and the self is being interpreted."

In 2006, at the request of Het Beschrijf, Weidenbaum collaborates on an artistic project "Poëzie"[9] in the city of Brussels. Using the title ‘Passing by’, Peter Weidenbaum develops a multifaceted symbolism that corresponds to his artistic expression. He describes his intervention as an infiltration in the Montgomery district and creates a walking route where his paintings of recognizable city scenes are being shown in surprising locations. The painting of a dignitary in a night shop. A painting of an independent immigrant in the embassy. This provides food for thought for the inhabitants of the district. He publishes a newspaper[10] where the painted cityscapes are shown in combination with a poem by Agnieszka Kuciak, a Polish poet and different interviews with local habitants. This congruence of systems of signs is finalised with a sculpture on Montgomery Square. He designs a very high lifeguard chair in stainless steel on a concrete slab on which one may read a poem of Kuciak.[11] This is a symbolic gesture, where Weidenbaum invites the accidental passer-by to view the city from a bird’s eye view, to reflect, to take distance, to integrate a moment of peace.

Weidenbaum becomes very impressed with the work of the German artist Martin Kippenberger who will have a lasting influence on him through his controversial work.

Another remarkable Weidenbaum work is the artistic alter ego of the car. This damaged bronze vehicle, transformed by the artist into a sculptural aesthetic form is full of references. Transformed into an immobile piece of art, the euphoria of speed is put into question and only the metaphor remains. For some it is a status symbol, for others an extension of their own ego, which gives them the illusion of freedom and individuality. (Flor Bex,[12] Honorary Director MUHKA about "alter ego").

In 2006 Weidenbaum commences a series of paintings named "Out of the series Car Crash". This results in the monumental sculpture "Alter Ego"[13] in 2008.

It is at that time that the artist begins producing artistic integrations within the architecture of public buildings. ‘Green Velvet’ in the Children’s Psychiatric wing of the UZ Jette and ‘Landscape’ in Saint Agatha Berchem, in a children’s day car centre are both good examples of this. In both works, several universes are intermingled. An abstracted landscape is reconstructed in a public space. In a very urbanised environment, this becomes a landmark, an oasis for young residents.

Weidenbaum attaches particular importance to a society-oriented creative process. He tries to overcome a contemporary feeling such as alienation by means of pictures: a common reality whereby the object itself lowers the threshold. The permanent installation "Passing-By" at Montgomery in Brussels and his sculpture "Alter Ego" were created within this context.

Collections

Work by the artist is held in the public collections of Provincie Vlaams Brabant Sculptuur ‘Alter Ego’ / UZ Jette Integratie ‘Green Velvet / Brussels Hoofdstedelijk Gewest Sculptuur ‘Passing By’ Montgomery / Brusselse Hoofdstedelijke Regering Painting ‘Rotation’ / Vlaamse Gemeenschapscommissie (VGC), Painting ‘Reconcideration’ / Stedelijk museum het Domein Sittard Nederland, Sculptuur ‘Somebody puts something in my dreams’.

Articles

References

  1. 2016, Reflections of another mind, p. 4, de Bogaard, Sint Truiden, Belgium
  2. Frank Snyders, J. Swinnen, E. Van den Eynden, 1999, ‘Bouillon’, p, 64-70, HISK, Goff, Ghent, Belgium
  3. T. De Mette, 2015, ‘The Institute’ p. 498-499, HISK, Publishers Lannoo, Tielt, Belgium ISBN 9789401423991
  4. S. Vanderstichelen, 2014, Health: something of value, p.126-127, RIZIV, IN-depth, Antwerp, Belgium ISBN 9789090280684
  5. W; Elias, 2008, ‘Aspecten van de Belgische kunst deel II’, p. 150-151, 154, Snoeck, Ghent, Belgium, ISBN 978-90-5349-716-6
  6. S. Vanderstichelen, 2009, Fading, p. 138-139, Snoeck, Ghent, Belgium, ISBN 978-90-5349-742-5
  7. W. Elias, A. Kindekens, 2009, ‘Het zelfde en het andere’, p. 92-95, Unie Vrijzinige Verenigingen, ASP Editions, Brussels, Belgium, ISBN 978-90-5487-617-5
  8. S. Vanderstichelen, 2005, Lookout, Skin, Tienen, Belgium
  9. B. Neervoort, 2009, Cahier, p. 34-37, Het beschrijf, Vrijdag, Brussels, Belgium, ISBN 978 94 6001 026 2
  10. A. Vanderscheuren, 2006, Montgomery, Het beschrijf, Vers Brussel, Brussels, Belgium
  11. P; Smet, 2008, In Transit, 5 jaar visuele kunst in Brussel, p. 157,159, VGC, Brussels, Belgium, ISBN 9789075915006
  12. F. Bex, 2001, Kunst in Belgie na 1975, p. 360, 380, 383, 397, Mercatorfonds, Antwerp, Belgium, ISBN 90-6153-505-0
  13. J. De Nys, 2010, FAKE!, p. 128-131, Stedelijk museum, Aalst, Belgium
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