Daan Gielis

Daan Gielis

€70.25

€85

Three colour screenprint
270g Metapaper Extrarough (Mohawk)
A2 / 42 x 59,4 cm / 16.5 x 23.4 inches

Signed Certificate of Authenticity

Sold as TIMED OPEN EDITION during WAVE 2
This print is available from 7 Dec 2020 until 19 Dec 2020 20PM CET
Production of the prints will start as soon as the timeframe closes, and we have an exact number how many prints are ordered. All prints will be produced with uttermost care and love, and we strive for the highest standard of quality. Prints will ship in the first half of January. If you select the option ‘pick up in the studio’, we will provide a timeframe and address, to minimise contact between people.

Price mentioned above includes VAT and excludes handling & shipping costs.
Save 21% for non EU customers.

Sorry, sold out!
Sale has ended

About the artist

6K4A6042_klein.jpg
 

Daan Gielis’ (°1988) work explores the conflicts and contradictions in the emotional, communicative and social systems that together make up the world as we know it: happiness and sadness coinciding, a frustration of desire that only triggers new desire, an underground culture that stays authentic while selling out… Each of these systems is riddled by contradiction. And yet, precisely because of those internal contradictions these systems thrive, contrasting feelings feed off of each other, setting in motion a never-ending cyclical process from which no escape seems possible. No wonder then that so many of us are emotionally conflicted about present reality, struggling to find consistency.

Gielis’ work often concentrates on what might be one of the most defining and influential systems: the human body. His artistic practice has, for one, been marked by the body’s resilience and more precisely by the question: how much can a body endure? Turning a personal experience around and looking outwards happened by means of exploring the paradox of embodiment and transience in digital society. Mama, je hoeft niet te huilen (2019) for example references both the artist’s mother - a professional floral arranger - as well as the generic emoji of a wilted rose. An easily accessible pictorial sign system, emoji have grafted themselves upon our everyday written communication. In fact, they have become an ubiquitous and inextricable part of our online conversations. And yet they tend to be incredibly vacuous, even gratuite. Like so, it embodies the paradox our social lives are caught up in: expressing a deeply personal story in an unforgivingly generic language.

@daangielis
www.daangielis.be

 

Ik ben op zoek gegaan naar alle afstervende, naar beneden hangende bloemen in de collectie. Dat gaat verder op een al bestaan werk van me, en ik vond het ook een mooie analogie met al de, moedwillig of niet, vergeten verhalen uit de geschiedenis. Een kort leven dat afgebeeld wordt op het punt dat het bijna afgelopen is.