At Antwerp Art Weekend, collectors buy with their gut
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, November 14, 2024


At Antwerp Art Weekend, collectors buy with their gut
The collector Christophe Ysewyn at Hotel Pilar during Antwerp Art Weekend in Antwerp, Belgium, May 19, 2023. Above him is a piece from his collection “Late for Work,” 2021, by Floris Van Look. (Jussi Puikkonen/The New York Times)

by Scott Reyburn



ANTWERP.- “At art fairs, people look too quickly,” said Jason Poirier dit Caulier, founder and director of the Plus-One Gallery in Antwerp. He added: “Here, they take a bit more time. They almost want to touch.”

Poirier dit Caulier was standing in a branch of his dealership, in front of an ingeniously illusionistic painting by Belgian artist Ritsart Gobyn, 37, that attracted plenty of up-close admiration during Antwerp Art Weekend, an annual celebration of the city’s contemporary artists and gallerists that concluded Sunday.

Although Gobyn’s artwork looked like a bare canvas with strips of masking tape and fragments from art books stuck to it, it was, in fact, a highly detailed 2D painting in oils, on display with 26 similar works in “Prologue,” a solo exhibition that was part of the art weekend program.

The show proved a commercial hit. At least 25 of the oils, which give a contemporary twist to Northern Europe’s centuries-old tradition of trompe l’oeil (“trick the eye”) painting, found buyers at prices that ranged from 3,000 euros to 13,000 euros (about $3,250 to $14,000), according to the gallery.

“There are a lot of good young artists in Belgium. Our role is to promote them,” Poirier dit Caulier said.

Antwerp and other culture hubs (such as Barcelona, Spain; Zurich; Madrid; Mexico City; and London) are trying to emulate the success of Gallery Weekend Berlin by persuading lovers of contemporary art that following a trail of dealer exhibitions is a more relaxing and instructive alternative to the hurly-burly of a fair.

Thirty-nine commercial galleries participated in Antwerp’s ninth annual art weekend, including powerhouse names such as Axel Vervoordt and Zeno X. Yet, Antwerp doesn’t have a huge dealer base and far fewer artists live in the city, compared with Berlin. Belgium does have a reputation, however, for being the country with the world’s highest number of collectors per capita. (Not having to pay capital gains tax on art sales helps.)

“We have this incredible tradition of collecting that goes all the way back to Rubens and Breughel,” said Tim Van Laere, a former professional tennis player who has run his eponymous gallery in Antwerp since 1997. “We have collectors at so many different levels,” he said, adding that Belgians, unlike many collectors in other countries, like to make their own decisions rather than rely on expert advisers.

“They buy with their gut,” Van Laere said.

Rather than exhibiting an artist from his stable of internationally established names, Van Laere sprung a surprise at Antwerp Art Weekend by giving over his more than 10,000-square-foot gallery to panel paintings by Inès van den Kieboom, 92, a self-taught Belgian artist whose work he had recently discovered in a small antiques store.

Priced from 1,500 euros to 28,000 euros, van den Kieboom’s direct, smile-inducing portrayals of family members and friends in everyday activities, such as going to the beach, also proved popular. By Sunday, 54 of the 59 available works had been sold, about one-third to international clients, according to the gallery.

At the other end of the age spectrum, young Belgian artists Ben Sledsens (represented by Van Laere), 31, and Bendt Eyckermans (represented by neighboring gallerist Sofie Van de Velde), 29, are two of the hottest names in the international art market.

Sledsens and Eyckermans live in Antwerp and trained at the city’s Royal Academy of Fine Arts, which has nurtured many of Belgium’s brightest art and design stars. Both make figurative paintings with a dreamy, surreal edge. Both have more than 500 collectors waiting to buy their works, according to their dealers. Yet, none of their paintings were available on any participating gallery walls during art weekend.

“You have to know the gallery and be on the list,” said Christophe Ysewyn, 38, a collector and hotelier in Antwerp. Ysewyn said he was fortunate enough to have acquired a Sledsens painting at the beginning of the artist’s career. “I’ve been contacted many times by Asian collectors who want to buy my work,” he said.

Ysewyn’s collection and property have benefited from Antwerp’s renewed importance as an art center. Ever since the Renaissance, Brussels and Antwerp have been the country’s two main artistic centers. In the early 2000s, as the art market expanded, a number of international galleries set up Brussels branches. But the appeal of Brussels as an art-world destination was dented by terrorist attacks in 2016 and by the closure in 2019 of the Brussels edition of the highly regarded Independent Art Fair.

Since then, some Belgian gallerists, such as Office Baroque, have relocated from Brussels to Antwerp.

“The art scene used to be here, then it moved to Brussels, and now it’s coming back,” Ysewyn said.

But Antwerp’s art scene has its challenges. City Hall recently slashed funding for contemporary artists after spending 105 million euros on an 11-year refurbishment of the city’s tourist-attracting Royal Museum of Fine Arts. That institution boasts an outstanding collection of masterworks by Rubens, the Antwerp prodigy who became the most successful artist in early 17th century Europe.

“The art market hasn’t changed since the time of Rubens. Painting is the battleground,” said Luc Haenen, an Antwerp-based heart surgeon with a fondness for a Dries Van Noten suit. Haenen, one of Belgium’s typical under-the-radar contemporary art collectors, said he bought paintings by now-in-demand artists such as Issy Wood and Caroline Walker long before they became fashionable.

Haenen, who was born in Antwerp, said his city was a logical venue for the gallery-weekend format: “It isn’t too expensive, there are a lot of young people and there’s a vibrant gallery scene,” he said. “And we’re spoiled in our mobility,” he added, referring to Antwerp’s convenient travel links to European capitals.

But surely a lot must have changed in the 400 years since Rubens was Antwerp’s megastar artist? Or maybe not. Rubens had a pretty long waiting list, too.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

May 24, 2023

C. Parker Gallery Presents: Paul Nicklen & Cristina Mittermeier

The National Gallery of Art acquires painting by Mattia Preti

Greta Grossman suite to anchor Hindman biannual Modern Design auction

Exhibition at LaiSun Keane Gallery features works by Charles Yuen

The Raclin Murphy Museum of Art announces winner in the category of Outstanding Catalogues for 2022

Lark Mason Associates announces a 'Gem of a Sale' from the estate of Mary Yturria

Alexander Berggruen presents artist Hulda Guzmán's work in 'They Come from the Water'

David Zwirner to represent Joe Bradley

Carl & Marilynn Thoma Foundation and Art Vault announce 'Lust Severs' curated by Jennifer West

Thomas J. Price: Beyond Measure now on view at Hauser & Wirth

At Antwerp Art Weekend, collectors buy with their gut

Kenny Schachter announces characters for POP PRINCIPLE: THE ART GAME, a new NFT Project

Ireland Invites will showcase Irish visual art to the international biennale circuit

Shrine owned by Lord Glenconner leads Bonhams India Art sale in London

Tipu Sultan's sword makes 14 million at Bonhams

Gagosian announces the extension of landmark exhibition celebrating Richard Avedon's centenary

Shared Space: The New Era (1987-2010): Photographs from the Bank of America Collection

International artist Bruce Munro to debut "Field of Light" public artwork on Manhattan's East Side

Fiona Crisp's 'Weighting Time' showing across two venues

The Academy of Natural Sciences now showing Illuminating Birds: Drawing as a Way of Knowing

Water Cities Rotterdam by Kunlé Adeyemi open at Nieuwe Instituut

Audiences are coming back to orchestras after 'scary' sales last fall

'Time Shelter' wins International Booker Prize

Making Light: The Art of Comedy

Proposal Templates: Simplify and Streamline Your Business Proposals

TikTok: Transforming the Finance Sector One Video at a Time

Appealing to The Masses Is Also Important: Exploring Subjectivity In Art



What to know before going to Morocco

What to do in Morocco for 1 week

From Piggy Banks to Savings Account: Teaching Preschoolers the Value of Money

The Gift of Presence: How to Be a More Mindful and Engaged Parent




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful