Loading AI tools
Belgian artist (born 1964) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Berlinde De Bruyckere (born 1964) is a Belgian contemporary artist who works in sculpture and installation.[1] Her sculptures use body-like forms .[2] Her work is influenced by religious imagery, mythology, and the Flemish Renaissance.[3] Themes in her artwork display human experience, existence, and raw emotion.[4]
Berlinde De Bruyckere | |
---|---|
Born | 1964 Ghent, Belgium |
Nationality | Belgian |
Known for | Sculpture |
Berlinde De Bruyckere was born in Ghent, Belgium, in 1964.[5] Her dad worked as a butcher, which desensitized her to seeing corpses.[6] De Bruyckere's studio in Ghent was once a Catholic school, and what used to be the headmaster's home is where her family lives.[6] At the beginning of her artistic career, she had to convince her parents to let her go to the art academy, and in order to fund her studies, she gave drawing lessons.[7]
In her youth, Berlinde De Bruyckere was sent to Catholic boarding school which would later influence her artwork. She graduated from the LUCA School of Arts in Ghent in 1986, and did her residency at the In Flanders Field Museum.[3] In 2013, she visited a skin-trader workshop in Anderlecht, Belgium, which expanded her repertoire, and she began working with wax casts of animal hides.[1]
De Bruyckere uses a variety of mediums, such as animal skin, wood, metal, watercolor, and gouache.[5] Before working on the life-size sculptures for her exhibitions, De Brucyckere would make a scale model of the artwork rather than sketching it out.[8] Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, De Bruyckere would make large cast wax sculptures of human figures.[1] Specifically in the early 1990s many of her major works have featured structures involving blankets. Their use is symbolic both of warmth and shelter, and of the vulnerable circumstances such as wars that make people seek such shelter.[8] As De Bruyckere works on her piece, she pays attention to the details, such as the surfaces of her work, to express the meaning of her art.[9] Additionally, she tends to use props that connect with her story's artwork.[1]
Arcangelo I (2022-2023)[10] is part of De Bruyckere A Simple Prophecy exhibition. The sculpture is made out of bronze, lead, and chrome steel.[10] It was made during the COVID-19 pandemic and is a tribute to healthcare workers and how they had a major role during the pandemic as they were taking care of many patients during that time.[11] In her previous works, the body figures either do not have a head or their head is covered.[2] Arcangelo I is an example of this method. The angel's body is in a still position, covered with a cloth-like texture, making the face hidden from the viewer and their wings faintly extending.[10] The Angel is slightly hovered yet weighted down as it represents it being burden, by the weight it is carrying.[10] It's mysterious yet comforting and inviting to the viewer.[10] The cloth-like texture is an influence from De Bruyckere's past works, as she would use blankets as an element in her art as they symbolize intimacy and protection.[1] Furthermore, Bruyckere got inspiration from Christianity and how she connects it with blankets, as she believes religion should give comfort and hope.[11]
The K36 (The Black Horse) (2003)[12] is made from horse skin, wood, iron, and polyurethane foam.[13] It is a mutilated horse that has no facial futures, and its upper body and front legs are crouching down and touching the surface of the table that it is on top of. Horses have been a subject that Bruyckere has used repeatedly. It was first introduced in her exhibition In Flanders Fields.[14] When Bruyckere was doing her residency at the In Flanders Field Museum, she found photos of war horses that were dead on the battlefield, which inspired her to use horses as her subject.[3] At that time, when she discovered the photos, the horses became a metaphor for death.[9] When De Bruyckere uses horses, it becomes a whole different meaning as she puts them in different positions and changes their figures.[15] Bruyckere uses animals to share physical vulnerability with animals,[13] as horses are traditionally seen as strong and powerful.[3]
Lost V (2021-2022)[16] is a sculpture of a young horse laying on its side on the marble table and covered with a blanket. The material that was used for it was horse skin, marble, textile, iron, and epoxy.[14] Besides being influenced by her past exhibition of In Flanders Field of war horse, she was also influenced by Francisco de Zurbarán's Agnus Dei.[14] The sculpture gives the illusion that the body of the horse is either dead, alive, or between life and death, and the blanket around it is used as a self-protection.[14] Its a reminder of death and how humans feel about death and mortality.[9]
Bruyckere's artwork can be found in numerous public collections including The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin; Collezione Gori Fattoria di Cella, Pistoia: and La Fondation Antoine de Galbert, Paris.[3]
Bruyckere has been featured in several catalogue raisonnés including: Berlinde de Bruyckere (2014)[4], Cripplewood/ Kreupelhout (2013), We are All Flesh (2013), Berlinde de Bruyckere Romeu My Deer (2012), Berlinde De Bruyckere Pel/ Becoming the figure (2022), Berlinde De Bruckere The Embalmer (2015), and Berlinde De Bruyckere: Angel’s Throat (2021).
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.