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Last days Salon Winssinger
Lucie Lanzini – Hilde Overbergh
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Opening hours: Fri 30, Sat 31 January & Sun February 1 from 2 to 6 PM
Location: Rue de l’Hôtel des Monnaies, 66 1060 Saint-Gilles (Brussels).
Several contemporary art galleries based in Brussels—including Irène Laub Gallery, Whitehouse Gallery and Michèle Schoonjans Gallery— are joining forces on the occasion of a new artistic event: Salon Winssinger, which will be held in an exceptional Art Nouveau house. This event is part of Brussels’s bustling cultural agenda, alongside the BrusselsPhoto festival, Ceramics Brussels and the prestigious BRAFA.
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Expo Le Botanique
Welcome to the opening Wednesday February 4, 6 – 9 PM
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As part of the bicentenary of photography, Émilie Terlinden takes over the Botanical Museum with a series of paintings and a reinterpretation of Daguerre’s Diorama.
With Timelapse, Émilie Terlinden explores the transformation of images. Cut, folded, fragmented and then recomposed before being painted, they move away from any immediate interpretation to become autonomous and ambiguous forms. Inspired by European painting as well as everyday images, her compositions invite the viewer to engage in a slow and sensory experience of the gaze.
The exhibition revolves around a monumental in situ painting, a reinterpretation of Daguerre’s diorama. It is a tribute to the origins of the moving image, marking 200 years of photography.
Inspired by early visual devices, the work unfolds on two sides and gradually reveals a scene by day and then by night through a continuous transition of light, making light and time materials in their own right.
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Exhibition in the gallery
Nancy Moreno, Ara Méndez Murillo, Mina Enowaki
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Period: January 17 – February 14
Opening hours: Thu, Fri, Sat 1 – 6 PM
Whitehouse Gallery unites three young female artists Ara Méndez Murillo (b. 1997, Córdoba, ES), Mina Enowaki (b. 1998, Annecy, FR) and Nancy Moreno (b. 1990, Montauban, FR) in a group exhibition. Although all three graduated from La Cambre in Brussels, their artistic practices diverge in striking and intriguing ways, rendering the dialogue between the works all the more dynamic.
Each artist is distinctly marked by her background, which resonates through both their artistic choices and working methods. Personal experiences and interests form the blueprints for their practices, shaping the recurring themes, media and styles. Even the more ‘daily affairs’ of their lives – like favorite colors, poems, or vacation spots – are important puzzle pieces for the narratives in their works, deepening both their individuality and personal meaning.
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