Hans Op de Beeck (1969, Turnhout) is a Belgian visual artist[1] who lives and works in Brussels. For over twenty years he has exhibiting internationally.
Hans Op de Beeck has developed his career through international exhibitions over the past ten years. His work consists of sculptures, installations, video work, photography, animated films, drawings, watercolours and writing (short stories). It is his quest for the most effective way of presenting the concrete contents of each work that determines the medium that the artist ultimately selects. The scale can vary from the size of a small watercolour to a large, three-dimensional installation of 600m2.
The artist not only uses a very wide variety of media, but also deliberately employs a diversity of aesthetic forms, ranging from an economical, minimalist visual language to overloaded, exaggerated designs, always with the aim of articulating the content of the work as precisely as possible.
Hans Op de Beeck attended the Vrije Kunsten program at the Kunsthogeschool Sint-Lukas in Brussels. Afterwards he studied for a year at the Higher Institute of Fine Arts, and then for two years at the Rijksakademie (Amsterdam). In 2002–2003 he was artist in residence for one year at the MoMA PS1 in New York.
From 2001, when he became the winner of the Young Belgian Painting Prize, he became widely known for his artistic work in the form of large-scale installations, some of which can be seen in public places, such as Lily Pond (2017) in Tongeren or The Quiet View (2015) on the Herkenrode site in Hasselt, on the site of Abdij van Herkenrode. The work aims to evoke the silence that once prevailed in the church.[2]
Thematically, the work concentrates on our laborious and problematic relationship with time, space and each other. Op de Beeck shows the viewer non-existent, but identifiable places, moments and characters that appear to have been taken from contemporary everyday life, aiming thereby to capture in his images the tragicomic absurdity of our postmodern existence. Key themes are the disappearance of distances, the disembodiment of the individual and the abstraction of time that have resulted from globalisation and the changes to our living environment that developments in media, automation and technology have brought about.In several of Hans Op de Beecks's works time seems to freeze, as in The Amusement Park (2015), which shows a night scene in an indefinable suburb where an abandoned amusement park is set up. The soft, grey plaster of which the work is constructed seems to abstract the attractions in dark stone, like a kind of contemporary Pompei, covered with the dust of the layered, silent time. This theme of a stationary or manipulated time dimension can also be found in his films, such as Night Time (2015), in which watercolours come to life.
Although many of Hans Op de Beeck's works are very large in size, we still find the small, poetic detail in his oeuvre. In 2009, the artist presented a new video entitled Staging Silence, in which two pairs of anonymous hands continually transform a world on scale into a new image in front of the spectator's eyes. In doing so, you can follow how the artist repeatedly shapes a completely fictional, but still very recognisable, environment with the most everyday elements such as cotton wool, cardboard or sugar, which are as perishable as life itself. The deceptive self-evidence, with which the different scenes of the film are guided, is at odds with the fragile and uncertain form from which they arise. In a very subtle way, Hans Op de Beeck presents universal themes that are recognisable to everyone, young and old. In 2013 he created a sequel to this film, Staging Silence (2).Hans Op de Beeck sometimes calls his works "proposals" - they are irrefutably fictional, constructed and staged, leaving it up to the viewer whether to take the work seriously, as a sort of parallel reality, or immediately to put it into perspective, as no more than a visual construct. The artist also questions the difficult relationship between reality and representation, between what we see and what we want to believe, between what is and what we create for ourselves in order to make it easier to deal with our own insignificance and lack of identity. The visual output of that investigation often produces slumbering, insidious, melancholy and astonishing images.
In My Brother's Gardens is a 2003 film adapted from his own 2001 novella, based around the metaphor of formal Baroque gardens as a bastion against the unpredictability of life.[3]
Night Time is a 2015 animated film, monochromatic, full of shadows, with no text, based on a series of large black and white watercolours.[4]