




Peter Buggenhout 
 Eerie
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| Editor(s) | Holger Kube Ventura  | 
| Author(s) | Ory Dessau, Christian Janecke, Holger Kube Ventura  | 
| Design | Andy Schmidt  | 
| Cover | Softcover with flaps, flush cut and open spine  | 
| Size | 20 x 27 cm  | 
| Pages | 160  | 
| Illustrations | 47 color, 6 b/w  | 
| Language(s) | English, German  | 
| ISBN | 978-3-947563-93-7  | 
An Autonomous Counterpart
The renowned sculptor Peter Buggenhout (b. 1963, Dendermonde, Belgium; lives and works in Ghent) describes his hybrid pieces as “abject things” that defy classification and even the label “work of art.” He aggregates and manipulates found and discarded objects as well as both technical and organic materials including pig blood, cow stomachs, and horsehair until he achieves a certain degree of abstraction. Buggenhout’s sculptures confront the beholder as creatures that are somehow “off,” exuding an eerie atmosphere by allowing something sinister to rise to the surface that, it appears, lurks just behind the façades of the physical world: vestiges of humanity, society’s sedimented refuse. The book presents a comprehensive survey of his growing oeuvre; it is the first publication to cover his most recent creations in marble.
Peter Buggenhout’s art has been featured at the Palais de Tokyo, Paris; the MoMA PS1, New York; the 2014 Taipei Biennial; and elsewhere.
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22€ Add to cart“The more slowly one approaches Staeglich’s works, the more they reveal.” Stephan Berg
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100 Windows
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Lars Breuer
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In The Love of the Gods, Breuer presents 104 C-prints of photographs for which he pointed the camera’s lens into the barrels of disused rifles, pistoles, revolvers, and cannons. The pictures were taken on the artist’s travels to Athens, Bangkok, Buenos Aires, Copenhagen, Leverkusen, Ingolstadt, Melbourne, New York, Oslo, and Phnom Penh, in museums, palaces, and public squares. Breuer’s conceptual and meticulously sober-minded approach yields almost abstract compositions showing nothing but the round muzzles and the dark interiors of the weapons on a deep-black ground. We see only a ring-shaped ornament until it dawns on us that it is part of a lethal implement. A cruel constant of human existence stares us in the face: humans behind these weapons were perpetrators, humans in front of these weapons were victims. Lars Breuer’s turn the spotlight on what the aura of the ornaments conceals: they have wrought death.
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Karsten Konrad
Room Service42€ Add to cartThe Visual Archeologist
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Each copy is hand-signed by the artist on the spine.
 





















