sheepfilms
Sweet Seals For You, Always

No title available
Not today Justin

Kaledo Art
Mike Driver
we're not kids anymore.

Discoholic đȘ©
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
occasionally subtle

â
NASA
cherry valley forever
Today's Document

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
No title available
Xuebing Du

JVL
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Claire Keane

seen from Germany
seen from Indonesia

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from India

seen from United States

seen from Czechia
seen from Mexico

seen from Latvia

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from T1
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@tineguns
Perpetual Moment Of Pause
Lhgwr Gallery Den Haag, 2016
Part 3 of our selection of seven Belgian-based artists to keep your eyes on.
OSTRALEÂŽO16
in Dresden
1. Juli bis 25. September 2016
Trailer TEHOM
On the 23rd of June 2016, Bozar will host the second edition of âDe Donkere Kamerâ. Guests are amongst others French photographer NoĂ©mie Goudal, Arno Roncada, Bert Danckaert and Tine Guns. Stijn Meuris will launch a spoken column and three young promising photographers will pitch their new projects. Anna Luyten and Edie Peters will be presenting the evening which is part of âThe Summer of Photography 2016â.
TINE GUNS. LIKE JIGSAW PIECES
BY DIETER DEBRUYNE
© Tine Guns, A vertigo Kiss, 2014
Tell us about your approach to photography. How would you describe your personal research in general?
Tine Guns (TG):Â My personal research in general has a lot to do with creating art that has variable interpretations. I see my images as fragments with which I create stories or make associations. Â They are organic like a growing plant, or interchangeable like jigsaw pieces. I usually work towards exhibitions, this allows me to follow my current mood and let chance interfere. The combination of the images is as important to me as their relation to the exhibition space.
Itâs kind of funny, but before I created art through photography, people used to ask me what my work was about and not what my approach was towards the medium I used. Even if it mainly consisted of video and film, which also âstealsâ fragments of reality through a lens. What Iâm trying to say is that I have a feeling that photography still needs to prove itself as an art form. But it simply is, isnât it? Photography is a form of art, like any other medium. And I like to use different mediums to tell my story.
© Tine Guns, âWe all want to forget something, so we tell stories. Itâs easier that wayâ, 2014. Print on a roll of Japanese Kozo Paper
When I was in Art school this was the most normal thing to do. We had projects where painters worked together with graphic designers, photographers, video artists, and sculptors. Weâre the generation of âin-betweenâ artists. We create art in between mediums, in between techniques. Maybe that also corresponds with my approach to life and to art: being in the middle of things. For me life is too complex to capture in one single way. Or perhaps Iâm just too easily distracted and like to view things from different perspectives. Although, I have to admit, Iâm jealous of people who can commit themselves to one specific thing and true craftsmanship.
How did your research evolve in time? Starting from your first shots to your current work?
TG:Â Initially I started photographing because at a certain point photo cameras were the best to shoot videos. This had an influence on a lot of things. Many filmmakers started taking pictures and photographers started making videos. This was a very interesting period, actually. It reminds me of cinemaâs early days, during which the interference of these two mediums led to beautiful things.
Secondly, curator/photographer Peter Waterschoot asked me to join a photography group exhibition he organised. I really had some nice talks with him. Moreover, it triggered me to search for a means by which I could create a fluid type of art with still images.
Tell us about your latest project âAmoureux Solitaireâ
TG: I always loved artist books, so when I was searching for ways to edit photography, I started working with photo books. âAmoureux Solitaireâ inspired me to investigate the link between photography and cinema in a photography book. Now Iâm currently doing research into diverse sequencing methods for future works.
© Tine Guns, âAmoureux Solitaireâ
At the moment, Iâm working on my next exhibition in Netwerk Aalst about the use of masks and carnival strategies in protest culture. It deals with rituals and history. More specifically, itâs about repeating images, and hiding parts of them as well as changing their interpretation. The show will open in January. It will consist of a video installation and photographic work. Hopefully by the time of the finissage, I can show the avant-premiĂšre of my film âTo Each His Own Maskâ.
© Tine Guns, still from the video work âTo Each His Own Maskâ.Â
Is there any contemporary artist or photographer, even if young and emerging, who influenced you in some way?
TG: I always loved the films of David Lynch, Andrei Tarkovsky, Derek Jarman, Harmony Korine, and Jean-Luc Godard. I also find paintings very inspiring. Carravagio, Goya, and the Flemish Primitives are among my favourites. I like to look at them with an open mind. Intentionally, I want to forget the art history classes that discussed their symbolism. Rather, I make up new stories, as if they were pieces of a puzzle.
The first time I had an experience that came close to the âStendhal syndromeâ, was when I entered the Goya room at the Prado museum. I was really overwhelmed by the incredible intense and insane power of this room. I really needed a break after seeing Goyaâs black paintings. Too much going on inside my head. Bosch had too wait a little. I bought a biography of Goya in an attempt to understand, or grasp, the moment which led the artist to making these crazy mural paintings.
© Francisco Goya, âWitchesâ Flightâ, 1797-98. 43.5cm x 30.5cm, Museo del Prado, Madrid
My friend, Matthieu Ronsse, is the most interesting contemporary painter in my opinion. Another young photographer worth mentioning is my other friend and Tiff colleague, Thomas Vandenberghe. They both are very true to themselves and I like this kind of honesty. For me this is more inspiring than a plausible story or a strategy that works.
Also, at the Book Case Study in Den Haag, I had a chat with Nadine Stijns. I like the way she uses the exhibition space. Actually, Iâve seen a lot of refreshing work in this gallery.
Three books of photography that you recommend?
TG: I chose these 3 books because I think theyâre edited interestingly. 1. âVoyeurâ by Hans Peter Feldmann. 2. Number 2 actually contains two books, but since theyâre from the same publisher Akina Books, they are both my number 2: âLingerâ by Daisuke Yokota and âItalia O Italiaâ by Frederico Clavarino.
âLingerâ by Daisuke Yokota, published by Akina Books. LINGER is part of the TEIKAI trilogy. About the trilogy: the kanji writing of TEIKAI has many meanings. One of the them is âto lingerâ, to stay a bit longer. Another meaning is: to wander at midnight. When taken out of context thereâs no way to tell which is the intended meaning, starting from this ambiguity of language and word Daisuke Yokotaâs started working on the TEIKAI trilogy, currently a work in progress. Thereâs no way to know where this midnight wandering will lead. [Source Akina Books]
3. âPainting Photography Filmâ by LĂĄszlĂł Moholy-Nagy.
Bauhaus artist LĂĄszlĂł Moholy-Nagy wrote Painting Photography Film in 1925 as a polemic to supplant painting, an individualistic art form, with the creative use of new visual mediaâsuch as photography and filmâthat corresponded to the globally networked and mechanically powered modern world. Moholyâs book was reprinted in English in 1969, at a time when his terrific optimism had given way to widespread suspicion regarding public uses of media technology. Nevertheless, his address of painting through photography and film was revived in the Conceptual era to a remarkable degree, as the works in this section of the exhibition demonstrate with references that stretch from RenĂ© Magritte and Piet Mondrian to Lorenzo Lotto and Paolo Uccello. Such worksâeven those made on canvasâdid not extend or replace painting so much as they created analogies for painting in a new, post-medium domain. In Giulio Paoliniâs Young Man Watching Lorenzo Lotto, a photographic reproduction of Lottoâs portrait of a youth is to the original as Paolini is to the Renaissance master: a distanced and reflective observer. Other works that follow demonstrate similar relationships with the media of cinemaâ"This is not a film,â Marcel Broodthaers declared of his multimedia installation The Crow and the Fox, paraphrasing Magritteâand photography. [Source Art Institute of Chicago]
Can I add some bonus books?
â4x4âČ by Richard Prince. This book is the first artist book I bought and inspired me a lot.
© â4x4âČ by Richard Prince; first published in 1997 in Japan by Kornisha Press & Co., Ltd.
And finally, these 4 books because I recently ordered them in one package. When I opened the parcel, I loved the way their covers matched. And beside that, theyâre just 4 amazing books. âProphetâ by Geert Goiris, âThe Bungalowâ by Anouk Kruithof, âWill They Sing Like Raindrops Or Leave Me Thirstyâ by Max Pinckers, âPalimpsestâ by SĂ©bastien Capouet.
Is there any show youâve seen recently that you find inspiring?
TG: One of the best shows I saw recently, was âOf Spirits and Empty Spaceâ by Joachim Koester. I think he is an amazing artist. And also Pierre Huygheâs exhibition in Centre Pompidou.
How do you see the future of photography evolve in general? And where do you place yourself in this future?
TG: Letâs answer this question with another book.
© Book  âSchool Spiritâ by Pierre Huyghe & Douglas Coupland. Published by Les Press du RĂ©elÂ
© Tine Guns | urbanautica Belgium