Exhibition
7 March 2022–15 September 2022

'Wim Delvoye' by Wim Delvoye

Leila Heller Gallery

Starts 7 March 2022

Ends 15 September 2022

Venue Leila Heller Gallery

Warehouse 86/87

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A neo-conceptual artist, Wim Delvoye appropriates and diverts art-historical styles and motifs to sublimate trivial yet rather unconventional objects, thereby cleverly combining philosophical ideas, a fresh use of materials and a love for craftsmanship.

Starting in the early 1980s, his early works sure did not go unnoticed: painting heraldic emblems on ironing boards and shovels, Delft patterns on gas canisters, and placing stained-glass windows in soccer goalposts, his works presented themselves as hybrids, playing w0ith the opposition between high and low, between contemporary art and pop culture, combining both craft and concept and playing out seriousness against irony.

As of the 90s Delvoye radicalised the critical function of art, exploring the boundaries of commodity art, by tattooing live pigs and setting up his Cloaca-project: room-size built installations that simulate the human digestive system – this way thematising the uselessness of the artefact, and exploring the ambivalence of art and commerce

Constantly oscillating between antagonistic realms such as the sacred and the profane, or the local and the global, he sarcastically confronts the various myths that feed our contemporary society from religion, science, to capitalism.

With the body of Gothic works that evolved since the early 2000s Delvoye walks a thin line between exploring artistic styles of the past and monumentality – by highlighting the medieval Gothic, interpreting it with contemporary themes and industrial techniques, he is aiming to create a new form of contemporary architecture. The highly ornamental motifs and ornaments are not so much used as decorative quotations but as patterns of value and permanence in the modern era. His ever-growing Gothic Towers have been displayed during the 2009 Venice Biennial along the Canal Grande (Peggy Guggenheim Museum), Musée Rodin (Paris, 2010) Bozar (Brussels, 2010) and the Jing’An Sculpture Park in Shanghai (2012). Another twisted spiral version hung in the pyramid of the Louvre during Delvoye’s solo-show in 2012 which showed his taste for the ornamental persists in his investigation of historic spaces, combining history with modernity.

Wim Delvoye’s work has been on display at Documenta IX and the 1999 Venice Biennial.