Nicolas Party opens fourth exhibition with Xavier Hufkens in Brussels
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, May 22, 2026


Nicolas Party opens fourth exhibition with Xavier Hufkens in Brussels
Nicolas Party, Spider Web, 2026 soft pastel on linen 100 × 150 cm. 39 3/8 × 59 in. Courtesy: the Artist and Xavier Hufkens, Brussels Photo: Adam Reich.



BRUSSELS.- In his fourth exhibition with Xavier Hufkens, entitled Toile d’araignée [spider web], Nicolas Party presents five distinct groups of works, each occupying a specific spatial and conceptual position within the galleries. Structured as a sequence of rooms rather than a linear narrative, the presentation unfolds through a series of visual and thematic correspondences. While certain motifs are familiar, others appear for the first time, marking new directions in the artist’s practice.

The opening gallery features an unprecedented ensemble of pastels based on images from the Belgian poet and novelist Georges Rodenbach’s Bruges-la-Morte (1892), a key Symbolist novel notable for incorporating photographs into the text. Through cropping and abstraction, Party shifts the focus from architectural representation towards reflection, with water occupying a central and transformational role: shapes dissolve, blur and become amorphous.

Bridges, by contrast, function as stable, structural elements that anchor the compositions. Both motifs carry symbolic weight. Reflection introduces the idea of the double — an image both present and altered — while the bridge suggests passage, connection, and transition. Together, these works establish a visual framework characterised by stillness, ambiguity, and a tension between form and dissolution. They also situate the exhibition within a broader cultural lineage. This extends from Rodenbach’s novel to later reinterpretations, including D’entre les morts [The Living and the Dead] by Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac (1954), which in turn formed the basis for Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo (1958). Across these works, themes of doubling, repetition, and the indeterminacy of identity come to the fore. This layered genealogy informs Toile d’araignée as a whole, in which images are held in suspension — vital yet inert, visible yet vanishing — suggesting a world in which forms are continuously constructed, dissolved and reimagined.

The notion of duality is further developed in two double portraits installed on separate floors. Introducing a human yet destabilising element into the predominantly architectural and landscape-based compositions, these images mirror the blurred boundaries between life and afterlife, and between memory and reality, as found in both Vertigo and Rodenbach’s novel. They also draw on visual echoes from Ingmar Bergman’s Persona (1966), in which the merging of two faces suggests a shared or unstable identity. The film’s protagonist poses the question: ”Is it possible to be one and the same person at the same time? I mean, two people? ”

A transitional space leads into a body of work depicting dead fish, a recent motif in the artist’s oeuvre. While these engage with the tradition of Dutch still life painting, they also depart from its conventional frameworks. The French term nature morte explicitly introduces the notion of death. Further reference points include the unsettling still lifes of Francisco de Goya, often understood in relation to the brutality of the Peninsular War, and the late work of Pierre-Auguste Renoir, who repeatedly returned to this motif during the First World War. Party presents the fish in indeterminate settings: removed from any recognisable environment, their bodies overlapping and clustering in ambiguous configurations. The subject hovers between materiality and symbolic resonance, resisting narrative resolution.

On the upper floor, a series centred on spider webs marks a further develop-ment. Depicted at daybreak, when dew renders its architecture visible, the web is shown at a precise moment of transition — just before it is disturbed or destroyed. As a structure produced through sustained labour, it exists only temporarily before being undone and rebuilt. This cyclical process reflects a broader concern with temporality and ephemerality. The spider web also functions as a metaphor for the artist’s practice, particularly in relation to pastel — a medium that is inherently fragile. These works thus foreground their own conditions of making, emphasising labour, duration and delicacy. The web can be understood as a form of inscription, recording a presence already in the process of disappearing.

A series of treescapes, presented in the lower gallery, introduces a compo-sitional shift. Unlike the Bruges paintings, which are defined by high horizons and compressed space, these works adopt a low perspective, allowing the sky to dominate the pictorial field. In contrast to the vivid, crisply delineated trees of earlier works, Party now turns to soft, hazy shades of green and gold. As a motif, the tree carries a long-standing symbolic association, functioning as an axis between earth and sky. Here, this verticality is expressed through a restrained visual language that emphasises stillness and openness.

As a whole, Toile d’araignée articulates an ongoing investigation into states of transition. Recurring motifs — reflections, bridges, fish, webs and trees — operate as points of passage, each engaging with the relationship between appearance and disappearance. Rather than presenting stable or resolved images, the works remain contingent, with forms continually shifting and redefined. In this way, the exhibition foregrounds the instability of the image and its capacity to hold multiple temporal and perceptual qualities. It proposes a space in which meaning is not fixed, but emerges through processes of repetition, transformation and transience, inviting close attention to the dynamics of visibility and erasure.

Nicolas Party (b. 1980, Lausanne, Switzerland) lives and works in New York. His work has been exhibited internationally including recent solo exhibitions at the Currier Museum of Art, Manchester, NH, USA (2025); Holburne Museum, Bath, England, UK (2025); Hoam Museum of Art, Yongin, South Korea (2024); The Warehouse, Dallas, TX, USA (2024); The Green Family Art Foundation, Dallas (2023); The Frick Collection, New York (2023); Museum Frieder Burda, Baden-Baden (2023), Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Montreal (2022); Le Con-sortium, Dijon (2021); MASI Lugano (2021); FLAG Art Foundation, New York (2019); M WOODS, Beijing (2018-2019); and Magritte Museum, Brussels (2018).










Today's News

May 22, 2026

Antony Gormley to open major solo exhibition at the Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp

An authenticated Table Grecque by Diego Giacometti, offered at auction for the first time

Nicolas Party opens fourth exhibition with Xavier Hufkens in Brussels

Christie's New York Impressionist and Modern Art Works on Paper and Day sales total: $63 million

teNeues announces American Amazon, a new book charting the US Southeast's endangered wetlands

New art exhibition explores the history of tricksters, outlaws and provocateurs

Sotheby's Modern Evening Auction reaches $304 million, led by Matisse, Picasso and Van Gogh

The Collection of Henry S. McNeil, Jr. and Marian's Richters & the 21st Century Evening sale total: $162,698,350

David Zwirner presents exhibition of Gerhard Richter's landscape and abstract paintings

Distinguished collections and rediscovered masterworks lead Heritage's June 5 Important European Art Auction

Christie's announces online auction of modern and contemporary Middle Eastern art

Artcurial launches Dialogues curatorial cycle with exhibition of porcelain by Liu Wenqi

Min Oh and Camille Norment explore the power of noise in Seoul exhibition

Studio Museum in Harlem acquires Karon Davis sculpture Sable Venus

Marc Selwyn Fine Art to present Joey Terrill solo exhibition

Contemporary Arts Museum Houston opens first major retrospective of conceptual artist Mary Ellen Carroll

Kumu Art Museum to open Kristi Kongi's most ambitious solo exhibition to date

MAXXI explores Saint Francis through the lens of contemporary art

TEFAF New York reports strong sales and high museum attendance at 10th anniversary fair

Asya Geisberg Gallery opens Basis, a solo show of porcelain sculptures by Gabriela Vainsencher

Serpentine launches online game on critical thinking by Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley

Frans Hals Museum combines groundbreaking video work by Sin Wai Kin with masterpieces from its own collection

Crystal Bridges expands craft holdings with major acquisitions across ceramics, glass, fiber, metal & more

Leila Heller Gallery opens solo exhibition by Kevork Mourad in Dubai




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, .

 



The OnlineCasinosSpelen editors have years of experience with everything related to online gambling providers and reliable online casinos Nederland. If you have any questions about casino bonuses and, please contact the team directly.


sports betting sites not on GamStop

Truck Accident Attorneys



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez


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