Flanders today may 29, 2013
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Smart city
Web weary
Blast from the past
The residents of Aarschot can proudly call their city Flanders’ most clever
The Flemish cocreator of the world’s first web page is disappointed with today’s internet 9
Erkenningsnummer P708816
#282
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business
w w w. f l a n d e r s t o d ay. e u
science & education
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news
f r e e n e w s w e e k ly
5
9
tourism
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arts
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agenda
A new label is dredging up and releasing old tunes from Belgium’s rich rock history 13
© Stefan Int Panis
The big picture
Flemish photographer Wim Tellier is back with another monumental installation, this time on the Scheldt Georgio Valentino
Wim Tellier’s latest project – a floating exhibition on the Scheldt river in Antwerp – is the culmination of three years of worldwide travels, innovative photography techniques and some staggering logistics
D
espite his 30-odd years, Wim Tellier remains a child at heart. He has the long hair, wide eyes, casual mien and, above all, the restless energy of adolescence. This impression is reinforced when I ask him about his favourite non-artistic pastime: go-kart racing. “The track demands
your full attention,” he explains between onomatopoeic “vroom”s and high-octane hand gestures. “It’s all so fast and so loud. You don’t have time to think about anything else.” This is, after all, a man who has a lot on his mind. The Flemish photographer has taken a precious lunch hour off to chat in a cafe in Bornem. He should be neck-deep in the final preparations for We Drift, an ambitious project which has consumed the past three years of his life and is set for its big reveal on 2 June. Originally conceived as a massive, floating exhibition of giant photos anchored in the harbour, the project has evolved into
a tide-swept procession of 1,000 rafts, each bearing a huge photographic collage. “All big art exhibitions are static,” Tellier says. “I realised I wanted to make one that was dynamic, one that moved with the rhythm of nature.” So the working title Bay of Plenty gave way to We Drift, and it was decided that the tidal river on which we drift would be the mighty Scheldt.
50 countries, one river The logistics of such an exhibition, which is one day only on 2 June, are staggering. To close off a stretch of river for even a brief period requires the permission of 19 local and ``continued on page 3