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Newly-opened Nomadic Art Gallery in Belgium celebrates New Zealand's art scene
Left. Ahsin Ahsin, Light Lilac Series #1, 2021. Acrylic and spray paint on canvas, 60.5 x 50.8 cm. Photography by Elena Pavlyukova. Courtesy of The Nomadic Art Gallery. Right. Kim Pieters, Write, 2021. Mixed media on board, 60 x 60 cm.
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Newly-opened Nomadic Art Gallery in Belgium celebrates New Zealand's art scene

The gallery will showcase a series of exhibitions dedicated to promote contemporary New Zealand artists

by Nitija Immanuel
Published on : Oct 13, 2021

Inaugurating its very first gallery space in Leuven, Belgium, The Nomadic Art Gallery challenges traditional gallery models by setting forth a new format, alternating an in-situ immersion within an underrepresented art scene with a transitional gallery space in Europe shedding light onto that scene. Founded in 2020 by Arthur Buerms and long-time partner Gie, The Nomadic Art Gallery is a contemporary art gallery and public art and research project currently based in Leuven, Belgium. “A transitional non-space, undefined in time, The Nomadic Art Gallery is at the border between the public and the private, at once art project and gallery space, with the aim of setting forth the potential for new gallery models to emerge – each unique, reflecting art’s inherently flexible, dynamic and diverse nature – and its ability to endlessly manifest itself in various formats, in various spaces, to various audiences," say Arthur Buerms and Gie, founder of the gallery.

Building on a cyclical model rooted in the notion of nomadism, the initiative unfolds through two alternating phases. The first is an in-situ immersion within an underrepresented art scene, during which Arthur and Gie invest a mobile vehicle to conduct research in the given location, the latter ultimately becoming a public art project.

Opening on October 22, 2021, HOP HIP and Something Possible usher in a series of off- and online exhibitions dedicated to the gallery’s first focus on the New Zealand art scene set in dialogue with European artists, showcasing emerging and established local artists Philip Trusttum, Ahsin Ahsin, Marcus Hipa, and Kim Pieters.

HOP HIP | October 22 – November 19, 2021

Something Possible | October 22 – December 5, 2021

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Installation view of HOP HIP, The Nomadic Art Gallery. With works: Philip Trusttum, Gnomus, 2003. Acrylic on unstretched canvas, 251 x 233 cm. Photography by Elena Pavlyukova. Courtesy of The Nomadic Art Gallery. Dany Tulkens, Een vriend maken, 2020. Bronze, 76 x 47 x 56 cm. Photography by Elena Pavlyukova. Courtesy of The Nomadic Art Gallery.

The inauguration of The Nomadic Art Gallery’s new space is rooted in its story, one which cannot be separated from that of its founders. With a shared passion for exploring, and pushing, the boundaries of art, Arthur and Gie initiated The Nomadic Art Gallery on the notion that art evolves with its context – as do how, and by whom, it is perceived.

In early 2020, turning their attention towards a seldom presented New Zealand art scene and to how their project could contribute in shedding light onto it, in particular to Western audiences, they set off for New Zealand. Following a fortuitous encounter with Auckland-based art collector, trustee of New Zealand’s reputed Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi, and ongoing supporter of their project Kent Gardner, what started as a converted truck quickly turned into a mobile art gallery, in which the duo lived and exhibited for a year. The pro bono, crowdfunded curatorial project itself, based on its temporary life cycle, unfolded as 16 exhibitions across 7 locations, as Arthur and Gie travelled 36,000 kilometres across the country, involving over 200 local artists, in constant interaction with their expanding public.

In 2021, with a year of discoveries behind them, Arthur and Gie returned to Europe, where they proceeded to the second part of The Nomadic Art Gallery’s New Zealand chapter – the first of, what they had now understood, many cyclical focuses onto rarely discussed art scenes across the world.

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Left. Philip Trusttum, Baba Yaga’s Hut, 2003. Acrylic on unstretched canvas, 182 x 220 cm. Photography by Elena Pavlyukova. Courtesy of The Nomadic Art Gallery. Right. Marcus Hipa, Tanu, 2021. Marker and acrylic on cardboard (framed), 99.2 x 70.3 cm. Photography by Elena Pavlyukova. Courtesy of The Nomadic Art Gallery.

HOP HIP brings together New Zealand artists Philip Trusttum, Ahsin Ahsin, and Marcus Hipa in tandem with Belgian sculptor Dany Tulkens, as they explore the wavering tension between music and visual art. As visitors circulate the four different gallery spaces in the show, they visually listen in turn to Baroque, Russian classical folk, experimental noise, vaporwave – and hip-hop. As the artists jointly dissect the rhythmic cadence inherent to artworks in light of musical genres, the gallery grows into a hybrid entity, announcing the deterritorialization of cultural and physical space.

A prominent drive in its conception, critically acclaimed New Zealand figurative expressionist artist Philip Trusttum lies at the heart of the exhibition. Music plays a fundamental inspirational part in his work, in turn emanating from it in a sound-to-sight back-and-forth present throughout his Pictures at the Exhibition series (2001—2004) as in his ongoing Selfies and Masks series. Referencing a remarkable diversity of influences, from Medieval illuminated manuscripts and Japanese woodwork prints to comic book motifs and indigenous African huts, his brushstrokes, fired by music, result in a kaleidoscopic choreography of line, pattern, and luminous colours.

While Ahsin Ahsin and Marcus Hipa build on inspiration from jazz, hip-hop and vaporwave in their ability to elicit a sense of community, calling to cultural authenticity and the more political dimension of their work, Trusttum’s work most resonates in opposite, yet complementary, tempo to that of Dany Tulkens. The palpable sarcasm in Trusttum’s work is channelled to Tulkens’s seemingly dark sculptures, shedding to light a concealed light-heartedness which only the differing musicality in the works could extract. Addressing this exchange between the two artists, Arthur and Gie explain:

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Left. Ahsin Ahsin, Light Lilac Series #1, 2021. Acrylic and spray paint on canvas, 60.5 x 50.8 cm. Photography by Elena Pavlyukova. Courtesy of The Nomadic Art Gallery. Right. Kim Pieters, Write, 2021. Mixed media on board, 60 x 60 cm. Courtesy of The Nomadic Art Gallery.

“By offering a temporary snapshot onto a specific art scene at a given moment in time, The Nomadic Art Gallery acts a bridge between continents, a platform for New Zealand artists, in this first iteration, to share broadly the poorly known discourses that feed their creation – fragmented as they may be, all reclaiming their voice and identity on an international scale – all-the-while bringing to light new dimensions to seemingly understood European artists’ work,” says Buerms.

In parallel to HOP HIP, the gallery extends an extensive online survey of self-defined “adaptive” and “nonrepresentational” New Zealand artist Kim Pieters. Her paintings, drawings, photographs, and moving-image soundscapes reflect her continuing experimentation within the broad artistic field, seeking to reveal the extravisual, the minute in the sound, sight, and touch. The works call to an in-between zone, where something is possible, yet all is suspended, in time and in space – a conceptual thread throughout the work of this celebrated artist, discovered only later in her career.

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