Het Transcendente [The Transcendental]
Ensemble
Cross-overs between various levels of reality – dream, vision, utopia – fascinated many artists during the 1960s and ’70s. Their work reveals an uneasiness with the self-assured and universalist position of what we choose to call ‘the Essential’. Instead the artists of the Transcendental – many of whom belonged to the arte povera (‘poor art’) movement in Italy – created works open to interpretation and doubt and critique. These artists address issues that are relevant to humanity as a whole, but they often did so through individual, subjective, even idiosyncratic gestures. Their ideological identification was anti-authoritarian and deliberately open-ended.
Some of the works in this ensemble are shown in Antwerp, while others are exhibited in Eindhoven.
Items
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Zonder titel [Untitled]
René Heyvaert, Zonder titel [Untitled], 1974-1975. Drawing, paper, 42.1 x 33.1 cm.
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James Lee Byars, Antwerpe...
Jef Cornelis, James Lee Byars, Antwerpen 18 April - 7 Mei 1969, 1969. Video, single-channel video, b/w, sound, 00:32:30.
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Arcobaleno [Rainbow]
Luciano Fabro, Arcobaleno [Rainbow], 1980. Installation, acrylic, cotton wool, variable dimensions.
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I Quattro moli [The Four ...
Alighiero Boetti, I Quattro moli [The Four Piers], 1982. Drawing, pencil, ink, paper, canvas, 4 x (75.2 x 71.6 x 2.7 cm).
Actors
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Marcel Broodthaers
Marcel Broodthaers (1924, Brussels – 1976, Cologne) is one of the most intriguing artists of the twentieth century. Since his death many have
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René Heyvaert
René Heyvaert (1929-1984, Ghent, Belgium) studied architecture at the Ghent Saint Lucas Institute where his graduating project was a design f
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Jef Cornelis
Jef Cornelis (1941, Belgium, lives in Antwerp) worked for BRT, Belgian Radio and Television, from 1963 until 1998. He first made documentarie
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Guy Mees
Guy Mees (1935-2003) emerges as a painter in Antwerp in the late fifties, when post-war avant-garde art from the US was just beginning to fin
