At STAMplein square, a separate part of the museum with changing programmes, you
can visit the heritage project “The square kilometre”. Here you can learn all
about the Dampoort neighbourhood.
Historian in residence Tina de Gendt and researcher Thirza Vandenabeele delve
deep into the history of the area around the Gent-Dampoort railway station.
Contrary to Ledeberg, Rabot and Brugse Poort, which were the central topic of
the project “The square kilometre”, the Dampoort area is not what you could call
a “neighbourhood”. It is composed of parts of the districts Ham, Macharius,
Dendermondsesteenweg and Antwerpsesteenweg.
Prefer not to wait in line at the ticket booth? Want to be sure you can discover
the STAM when you want to? Then book your tickets online in advance and enjoy
your visit to the fullest.
Are you driving to Ghent? First check whether you may enter the city centre with
your vehicle. Clean vehicles may enter the city centre free of charge, polluting
vehicles have to pay. Is your vehicle allowed to enter, but do you not have a
Belgian or Dutch number plate? You will ALWAYS have to register!
*:・ A Glittering Ruin Sucked Upwards ੈ✩‧₊˚
02december 2022
-29januari 2023
Dr. De Schrijver, Ghent, East Flanders 9000, Belgium
Description
What if we worked to produce an exhibition not based on the sharing of space between artists, but rather, the allocation of time? The floorplan would merge with – or would be replaced by – a calendar. Each artist, each piece, and each event would be marked on it. Sometimes at different times, sometimes superimposing, and sometimes creating space between the moments when time is filled.Initially, the interface with the outside world would be a schedule showing how each participant decided to use their time. Behind this graphic, a seemingly rational way to divide time as a quantified “resource”, the actual exhibition space in a 1930s former cigarette factory in Molenbeek (Brussels) would play host to the spatial result of this experiment in reversibility.The apparent chaos, the heterogeneous occupation of the 1000m2 floor, and the formal arrangement of interventions, presentation rooms, to-be-activated zones, workspaces and storage areas would voluntarily remain dissonant, (dis)functional, and achieved in a plethora of different manners.A glittering ruin sucked upwards is an exhibition constructed within dialogue, through conversations and experiments, assessments and exchanges. A show being imagined, composed and produced with regular meetings held in a kitchen around a shared meal at its heart. The purpose-built kitchen stands at the centre of the exhibition space. It is mobile. But it will stay there for the entire duration of the exhibition. It is the beating heart, the breathing lung of the project. It is also a place where one can read, rest, or do nothing.This project acts as a response to our situation, echoing a multidimensional, (post)pandemic, exponential and disastrous crisis and the colossal waves of visible or invisible violence and destruction, precarity and uncertainty, rising individualism and intolerance, the hate and silence that it pervasively generates potentially at all times, everywhere. It is simultaneously dramatic and sad. It also stands as an invitation to self-organize, assemble, and act together.The intimacy that has been permissible between us, and the all-central freedom tackled here are so many ways of learning from one another. They also provide the means to create networks, alliances and circles, and experiment, generating new forms without being declarative or manifest. The project is like an evolving large semi-collective studio or heterogeneous landscape.Ultimately, we imagine our group exhibit as less of a sophisticated presentation than a project featuring each one of us who, akin to tectonic plates or landmasses, touch, and un-touch as we create a (metaphorical) seism together. While the factor of temporality remains relevant insofar as this project formally begins when we start to inhabit Gosset and “opens” when the first public program is launched, we regard our project as a process to a wider extent than as a usual laureates or graduation “show”.The format of something protracted, fluctuating, fluid and process-based makes sense as a response to the deeply ingrained sensation that we need time. We need time in the sense that time has been stolen from us for a long time. We need more time to deepen our understanding, perceptions, and our relationships. We need the “long” time, the time of immersion, meditation and organic growth. But we don’t only need more time. We also need – perhaps more importantly – another time. Another form of time.And we will not have enough time to plan… which somewhat epitomizes the identity of our show. Why not leave some of these aspects open for the time being and set up a structure – a sort of method and device – and engage in it as a sort of machine that would eventually generate connections and ideas of its own accord? A machine that would eventually let things percolate and come to life. We believe that this is where the sincerity lies in our process. But has this process already started? When will it end?A publication will be produced to pursue this conversation and translate it into another language, another dimension, while we are still occupied, dispersed, trying to combine the need to focus on production, composition, and space, and are desperately attempting to feel the urge to set more distance and open new perspectives, create connections and deeper exchange.(Excerpts from a collective text assembled by the participants)
Date info
2022-12-02: 18:00:00 - 23:59:00
2022-12-03: 12:00:00 - 18:00:00
2022-12-04: 12:00:00 - 18:00:00
2022-12-08: 14:00:00 - 18:00:00
2022-12-09: 14:00:00 - 18:00:00
2022-12-10: 12:00:00 - 18:00:00
2022-12-11: 12:00:00 - 18:00:00
2022-12-15: 14:00:00 - 18:00:00
2022-12-16: 14:00:00 - 18:00:00
2022-12-17: 12:00:00 - 18:00:00
2022-12-18: 12:00:00 - 18:00:00
2022-12-22: 14:00:00 - 18:00:00
2022-12-23: 14:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-05: 14:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-06: 14:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-07: 12:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-08: 12:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-12: 14:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-13: 14:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-14: 12:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-15: 12:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-19: 14:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-20: 14:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-21: 12:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-22: 12:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-26: 14:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-27: 14:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-28: 12:00:00 - 18:00:00
2023-01-29: 12:00:00 - 18:00:00