PRESENTATION: Hans Op de Beeck-The Boatman and Other Stories
Hans Op de Beeck produces large installations, sculptures, films, drawings, paintings, photographs and texts. His work is a reflection on our complex society and the universal questions of meaning and mortality that resonate within it. He regards man as a being who stages the world around him in a tragi-comic way. Above all, Op de Beeck is keen to stimulate the viewers’ senses, and invite them to really experience the image. He seeks to create a form of visual fiction that delivers a moment of wonder and silence.
By Efi Michalarou
Photo: Galleria Continua Archive
Hans Op de Beeck in his solo exhibition “The Boatman and Other Stories” brings together previously unseen and recent sculptures that explore the still-life genre in a contemporary and anachronistic key. The exhibition mainly deals with human figures through which the artist wishes to offer a departure point for many possible stories: men and women of different social extractions and ages, and portraits with an abundance of details in relaxed positions or while they’re completing simple everyday actions. Visual artist, but also a theatrical director, playwright, scenographer and composer, Hans Op de Beeck moves between different languages and materials. For some years, aside from painting, sculpture, large installations, art films, and photography, he has developed a series of sculptures that depict human figures. Even though many women, men and children have posed in the artist’s studio over the last few years, these sculptures are not only portraits but imaginary figures and characters that, alone or in dialogue with a second person, tell a universal story in which eternity and actuality come together. The exhibition is populated by many of these figures, The “Boatman” (2020) is a life-sized sculpture of a man on a small rowing boat, pushing away from the river bank. Like “The Horseman” (2020), a sculpture currently installed in the Hermitage Museum in St. Petersberg, it represents a solitary nomad who’s constantly moving, a middle-aged man half-way through his life who has loaded, in a precarious and improvised way, each of his possessions onto a small boat: his dog, a hen, personal items and other essentials for survival that could be then sold or exchanged. “The Cliff” (2019) presents a couple of teenagers sat on a rock on the edge of a precipice. The open gaze of the girl is lost in the distance as if she were worried about something, while the attention of the boy is completely concentrated on her. “It’s a bittersweet image of the whims of young love intertwined with the marked innocence that comes from an impetuous perception of a world not yet lived, to which we are invited to return”, the artist explains. It captures the recurring concern Op de Beeck has for change, in which different phases of our lives are marked by the weight of waiting, before moving forward into a new phase; here, the coming of first love marks the passage to adulthood and the loss of innocence.
In the exhibition we also find the work “Dancer” (2019-2021), a bronze sculpture that transmits the melancholic yet light happiness of a Brazilian dancer in a moment of rest with her eyes closed, sat on an old seat while she smokes a cigarette; “Mum and Dad” depicts an old couple in their dressing gowns, tight in an embrace on the threshold of their home while they look outwards as if something was happening in the street; “The Conversation” (2019), depicts two men who chat, seeming surprisingly comfortable while they stand on a small, unstable, foldable ladder. Their briefcases are positioned on the floor, suggesting that both have either just returned from work or are about to go there. In 2015, Op de Beeck made a film with puppets, animated in real life by puppet masters dressed in black. With “Celeste (Smoking)” (2020), he takes up the concept of the representation of the human being as a doll. The doll is sculpted with its limbs connected by the typical doll joints. For the artist, the human doll contains a feeling of defencelessness and silent tragedy. In Celeste (smoking) we see a female character with the human, simple act of smoking a cigarette. The highly realistic and subjective details of Celeste’s face, hands, and feet contrast with the rest of the body that has a mechanical and more impersonal appearance of a manipulable puppet. “Girl asleep” (2021) is a life-size sculpture of the resting head of a sleeping girl. Dragonflies float above her, as if they represent the fairy-tale mood of a sweet dream. Sleep is a recurring subject in the artist’s work. He is intrigued by sleep as a zone of surrender and release, an unfathomable, enigmatic world. Beeck has steadily been working on an ongoing series of Wunderkammer sculptural display cases, crafted at his studio. Within these works, the most diverse sculptural interpretations of keepsake objects are brought together by a fictitious collector. In the tradition of the ‘Wunderkammer’ of the European Renaissance (cabinet of curiosities), the collections of curiosities in each cabinet seem anachronistic and of the most diverse origin. The display cases bridge the thin line between valuable and worthless, between specialness and banality and the importance of stories to bring a still object to life. They are display cases that seem to have been stripped of all their lustre and left behind as silent units. The exhibition “The Boatman and Other Stories” speaks about our growing pains, the search for identity, the difficulties, awkwardness and silences inherent to our existence, but also about our dreams and hopes for a better future and the search for inner peace and wonder.
Photo: Hans Op de Beeck, The Boatman, 2020, polyester, steel, wood, MDF, epoxy, glass fiber, polyamide, synthetic gypsum, coating, reed, glass, PA, rubber, bamboo, 180 x 400 x 400 cm / 70,86 x 157,48 x 157,48 in, © Hans Op de Beeck, Courtesy: the artist and GALLERIA CONTINUA, Photo: Ela Bialkowska, OKNO Studio
Info: Galleria Continua, Via del Castello 11, San Gimignano, Italy, Duration: 24/7/2021-6/1/2022, Days & Hours: Daily 10:00-13:00 & 14:00-19:00 by appointment only (book here), www.galleriacontinua.com