Interview:
Thank you again for doing this I know that the language barrier is not easy to overcome and I really appreciate you wanting to participate!
First, would you mind telling me about when you when and where you were born?
I was born on the November 27 1952, from an artist family of 4 generations painters and received an education in artistic happening.
So although you came from a family of painters did you go to art school?
After elementary school I had to make a choice. I studied Drawing and photoengraving from 1969 up until 1973. In 1974 I registered to the Royal Academy in Ghent which I had to leave later that year and went to work with the telephone company due to financial needs.
So what happened after the Royal Academy?
First, you must understand my background. I grew up in a very Christian rustic municipality, as a child of liberal parents I faced the antagonisms of our society, where the church ruled and my father gave me a free education. This was always done in the context of a peace movement which was propagated especially in the cold war period when the threat of nuclear weapons was real.
V-Growing up, other boys my age drowned themselves in football, cycle racing and went to the church on Sunday. I instead watched real horror on TV, taking place in the Belgian Congo and the Algerian fighting. During the time of the assassination of Kennedy and Nikita Chroesjtsjov (who tried to smack capitalism with its shoe through the table) a cold war began between the communist Eastern Bloc and the America’s discrimination worsened.
The so called “golden sixties” to you were the years in which I saw repression. “The small- holder which came to an end of its era.” The era in which for everything a technical solution could be found, where people went for the first time to the moon was also an era where colonialism took an end and the whole world cried for freedom. FREEDOM, the magical word of the late sixties. Flower Power, the hippie movement, the communes, the Provo and the enraged Mina's
In the 70’s….by then it was the time of the Vietnam war, I was a conscience-objector and believed strongly in “Make Love Not War” and “Give peace a Chance”. In 1979, I started a second-hand business. During this time a lot of art pieces were bought and sold.
In the 80’s… my participation in the “Peace Monument of our Fathers” with other artists who stood against nuclear weapons was a small creative contribution. During this time period a number of stores were built for hobby and old-timer clubs. Always with self made objects.
After the death my parents I registered again to the Academy for Fine Arts at Ghent, to for fill my forgotten passion. Since than I spent every free moment at my art. I am very interested in experimental art and I don’t stick to canvas.
So after all you have seen and been through what has art become to you?
Art is more than the sum of exhibitions and performances. It is a requirement of Human Rights for deeper emotions to give daylight and see them with his fellow man in that special way to share, with or without words. Images with sound, color or black & white. However, never just black and white. There must always have with it a gray scale, which gives color to the inner emotional that which distinguishes humans.
What is your favorite quote?
"At bottom every man knows well enough that he is a unique being, only once on this earth. And by no extraordinary chance will such a marvelously picturesque piece of diversity in unity as he is, ever be put together a second time." F. Nietzsche
So what have all these years taught you about art?
Art can help you to open your own source/self. This source is a treasure of fantasy, hidden creativity and energy. Art challenges you to be yourself, helps you to become separated from your rusted patterns and helps you to reload you’re self easily. Art is inner deepening. Art enlightens your soul!
In my experimental art, I look for answers on the surrounding culture. I start my search there where others stop, beyond the framework, with lines, colors and forms, from collages to three-dimensional objects. I examine the paths of the expression, reflect that what are no words for it … In this context the art work becomes experimental instruments, no finished museum pieces. I explore consciously the borders of creativity, sometimes playful, and I weave in my dream time thinking of the Australian Aboriginals, the oldest culture on our planet which uses rituals and music to recall creativity.
An artist, is a little bit of a type of wizard don’t you think? It started already at that blue hand print, somewhere in a prehistoric cave ..... I examine, evolve, transform and question… I do pursue restlessly the light of the inspiration!
What do you find the most to be most useful in creating your art?
A very useful instrument is a sketchbook. This is the factory where you notice your dreams and where the art pieces are born. Also, for me also the internet is an inexhaustible source of inspiration.