Tag what?
Luc Tuymans, Flemish Village, 1995

This room contains paintings which explore the role of ritual and symbol in contemporary society. Several works here were shown in Tuymans’ solo exhibition ‘Heimat’, meaning ‘homeland’, held in Antwerp, Belgium in 1995. This exhibition drew on the iconography of Flemish nationalism, a movement which lobbies for Flemish independence from Belgium. But Tuymans, although Flemish himself, presents these symbols with detachment and irony. The emblem of lions on the flag of the Flemish nationalist movement are just visible in the limp folds of cloth in the near-abstract painting The Flag, 1995, and Flemish Village, 1995, is based on an existing oil painting of a typical Flemish village. The scene looks stiff and Tuymans has deliberately added yellowing and cracking to give a faked impression of authenticity. By doing this, Tuymans implies that national identity is also artificially constructed. These paintings draw attention to the emptiness of many contemporary symbols which, endlessly repeated and yet divorced from their original context, have become meaningless.

http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/tuymans/room09.htm

Luc Tuymans, Flemish Village, 1995

This room contains paintings which explore the role of ritual and symbol in contemporary society. Several works here were shown in Tuymans’ solo exhibition ‘Heimat’, meaning ‘homeland’, held in Antwerp, Belgium in 1995. This exhibition drew on the iconography of Flemish nationalism, a movement which lobbies for Flemish independence from Belgium. But Tuymans, although Flemish himself, presents these symbols with detachment and irony. The emblem of lions on the flag of the Flemish nationalist movement are just visible in the limp folds of cloth in the near-abstract painting The Flag, 1995, and Flemish Village, 1995, is based on an existing oil painting of a typical Flemish village. The scene looks stiff and Tuymans has deliberately added yellowing and cracking to give a faked impression of authenticity. By doing this, Tuymans implies that national identity is also artificially constructed. These paintings draw attention to the emptiness of many contemporary symbols which, endlessly repeated and yet divorced from their original context, have become meaningless.

http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/tuymans/room09.htm

hijaktaffairs:

ron van der ende
silver machine, 2007
bas-relief in reclaimed timbers

hijaktaffairs:

ron van der ende

silver machine, 2007

bas-relief in reclaimed timbers