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Thursday, May 28, 2026 |
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| S.M.A.K. marks 40 years of Chambres d'Amis, the exhibition that took art into private homes |
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Daniel Buren, Le Décor et son Double, 1986, 2011. Langdurige bruikleen Collectie Vlaamse Gemeenschap. Photo: Dirk Pauwels.
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GHENT.- In 2026, S.M.A.K. celebrates the 40th anniversary of Chambres dAmis, the groundbreaking exhibition in which Jan Hoet took contemporary art beyond the museum walls. Fifty-one international artists showed their work in the living rooms, stair halls, or bedrooms of private homes across Ghent. From 30 May 2026 to 10 January 2027, S.M.A.K. reflects on the past and looks to the future by inviting three artists Heike Pallanca, Haim Steinbach and Susanne Kriemann who will each develop a contemporary reflection on Chambres dAmis within the museum walls.
What was Chambres dAmis?
Conceived in 1986, Chambres dAmis marked a decisive turning point in exhibition-making. Rather than presenting art within the neutral space of the museum, Jan Hoet dispersed it throughout the city, embedding artworks within private homes and everyday environments.
This gesture did not simply relocate art; it transformed it. The domestic setting introduced contingency, intimacy and unpredictability. Visitors encountered works one by one, in spaces shaped by lived experience rather than institutional display. The exhibition unfolded as a journey through the city an accumulation of encounters that blurred the boundaries between public and private, art and life.
The exhibition at S.M.A.K.
How do you display works originally conceived for specific, non-institutional settings? This question lies at the heart of Chambres dAmis turns 40.
In response to this question, S.M.A.K. invites three contemporary artists Heike Pallanca, Haim Steinbach and Susanne Kriemann to each design a museum gallery from within their own artistic practice, thereby creating a new in-situ environment. The three artists participated in Chambres dAmis (1986, Heike Pallanca) or in Over The Edges (2000, Haim Steinbach) and TRACK (2012, Susanne Kriemann), two other exhibitions in urban space organised by S.M.A.K.
Their interventions do not reconstruct the original exhibition, far from it, but rather create new proposals to look at these works again in a contemporary way, back within the walls of the museum. By rethinking display, context and spectatorship, they give the works from Chambres dAmis a contemporary resonance that echoes their original concept while speaking directly to todays visitors.
The exhibition is framed by an archival presentation that situates the historical importance of Chambres dAmis. At the centre of this archival display, S.M.A.K. reinstates the iconic work Le Décor et son Double by Daniel Buren, which was one of the most critical interventions towards the curatorial concept of Chambres dAmis. In 1986, Buren created a copy of the guest room of collectors Anton and Annick Herbert and placed it in the Museum of Contemporary Art in Ghent, then housed in the Museum of Fine Arts. In collaboration with the Herbert Foundation, visitors will have the opportunity to visit the original at the Herbert Foundation at regular times during the exhibition.
The artists
Heike Pallancas (°1952, Düsseldorf) work for Chambres dAmis (1986) remains one of the most conceptually precise articulations of the exhibitions ambitions. By staging a subtle displacement between representation and reality an empty room mirrored by a constructed situation elsewhere she challenged the viewers perception of what constitutes the real site of the artwork. Her practice continues to investigate perception, spatial ambiguity and the fragile boundary between lived and constructed experience.
Haim Steinbach (°1944, Rehovot, lives in New York City) is internationally recognised for his rigorous exploration of display and value. Since the late 1970s, his work has examined how objects acquire meaning through arrangement, context and cultural framing. By repositioning everyday objects within carefully calibrated structures, Steinbach reveals the systems that govern perception and taste. His contribution resonates strongly with the foundational questions of Chambres dAmis: how context produces meaning, and how the domestic space can function as a critical site of display.
Susanne Kriemanns (°1972, Erlangen) practice unfolds at the intersection of image, history and material processes. Her work investigates the latent narratives embedded in archives and infrastructures, often revealing what remains invisible or overlooked. In the context of Chambres dAmis turns 40, Kriemann reflects on the photographic archive of the exhibition, in a contemporary display that balances between nostalgia and expectation.
Curators
Philippe Van Cauteren and Thibaut Verhoeven
The archival presentations have been developed in close collaboration with Angela De Roover, Beth Lason and Luca-Ray Rogiers (Ghent University alumni), and Sofie Frederix (Ghent University).
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