Rinus Van de Velde
The Story of Frederic, Conrad, Jim and Rinus

Rinus Van de Velde
The Story of Frederic, Conrad, Jim and Rinus

Tim Van Laere Gallery

Rinus Van de Velde, “It’s as if someone is observing us with a sense of overview we seem to lack, some-one who knows better than us what exactly it is we’re doing here”, writes the artist in his notebook…, 2013. Charcoal on canvas, framed, 220 x 410 cm. Courtesy Tim Van Laere Gallery, Antwerp.
September 2, 2013

5 September–19 October 2013

Tim Van Laere Gallery
Verlatstraat 23-25
2000 Antwerp
Belgium

T +32 3 257 14 17
F +32 3 257 14 25
info [​at​] timvanlaeregallery.com

www.timvanlaeregallery.com
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Tim Van Laere Gallery is pleased to present Rinus Van de Velde’s second solo exhibition at the gallery.

The work of Rinus Van de Velde (b. 1983 Leuven; lives and works in Antwerp) could be seen as an extensive attempt to engage existing images and stories in a mythologized (artist) biography that consists of drawings and narrative texts. Initially, he mainly sought inspiration for this in an archive of found images, which he used as source material for pencil and charcoal drawings on paper. For his recent, more monumental and ‘painterly’ charcoal drawings on canvas—see, for example, his solo exhibitions at Patrick Painter Inc (LA) and CAC Malaga—he primarily starts from self-shot, staged photographs that refer to diverse iconographical traditions: Old Masters paintings, classical portrait photography, and Hollywood films. 

This way of working yields stylized, often explicitly posed snapshots of a pseudoheroic story set in a parallel universe in which the artist is able to start a new life—a different artistic practice—over and over again. Behind this strategy lies a desire to step into the image, possibly even disappear into it. That is, by constantly staging his artistic practice, Van de Velde tries to undo the difference between life and work; or rather, he tries to live in his work—or more literally, his studio. There he—and in his slipstream the spectator—can, after all, move freely through an endless imaginary universe and identify with all possible alter egos (artists, evidently, but also other ‘heroes,’ like musicians, sportsmen, scientists). In continuously adding images as well as ‘imagoes’ to his visually strongly recognizable mythology, he keeps on postponing the choice for a monolithic artistic practice. Or, to put it differently, one could say that Van de Velde, by making drawings that have a strong own signature, paradoxically tries to become a ‘total artist’ that incorporates all possible artists.

For his second solo show at Tim Van Laere Gallery, Van de Velde built a full fledged set in his studio for the first time, where he took photos that served as the basis for his drawings. The accompanying text and quotes from that text that serve as captions on the drawings tell a fragmentary story about the adventures of the artist himself (who wears the mask of an abstract expressionist this time) and three friends: art dealer Jim V., philosopher Frederic Z. and writer Conrad M. The focus lies on their experience of the artificial and claustrophobic space they somehow ended up in, and in which they seem to play a role they don’t seem to grasp themselves.

The set—three shacks that are surrounded by endless woods—and the installation that resulted from it form a sultry prison devoid of an outside world, a mirror of the jammed customs and ideas of the characters, an allegorical construction that is always on the edge of collapsing. More than Van de Velde’s earlier works, the exhibition focuses on the act of staging itself, of storytelling by using props, poses, compositions. As such, Van de Velde’s fiction seems to seek connection to the ‘reality’ of his artistic practice. 
–Koen Sels

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September 2, 2013

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