2014 eng from artaud to artnet kenny schachter [m st 36]

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Kenny Schachter

From Artaud to Artnet: Philippe Vandenberg's Beautiful Misery ''Art is a wound turned into light', as Braque said. The image I create is an attempt to come and fill the lack inherent in life.' 1 Vandenberg's kamikaze is a more beneficent art world suicide bomber packed with explosives embedded in canvas, densely laden with equal measures of celebration and despair. In the art and writing of Philippe Vandenberg there is a constant tension between the states of panic and pleasure, and a willingness, even desire, to travel to the sun, knowing one will see great things at the expense of extinguishing life. But it was only through art and poetry – looking, appreciating, making and writing – that Vandenberg found life (tolerable): 'some… canvases give me the courage, not only to go on painting, but also go to on living.' 2 For Vandenberg, painting was a waiting game; waiting for something to work, to collide, while consciously and conspicuously cultivating accidents. In pursuing this, he channelled pain, urgency and the unfulfilled desire inherent in the process. But the hope was as palpable as the revulsion; Vandenberg embraced and celebrated failure, and painted through a series of crises and existential dilemmas. Vandenberg painted to capture time, trying to depict a possibly futile attempt to freeze in amber a moment, a life, existence itself. He both failed and succeeded and didn't seem to have much choice in how it all unfolded; all the while he never stopped questioning (everything) throughout. Somewhat improbably, Vandenberg was particularly concerned with the longevity of his oeuvre, all the while subconsciously aware his limited time was of essence. 'That's one more obsession for the painter. Will the work last? Will a painting continue to be generous'? 3 Curious notion, that of the 'generosity' of a good painting, Vandenberg was under the impression that a good work of art continues to give something like a benevolent force of nature. 'I have a perverse relationship with self-destruction and even with destruction in general.' 4 This was a very personal struggle enacted on paper and canvas with words and paint – paint as acid thrown in our collective faces. Drugs and alcohol played a constant role, evidence of the inner and outer unrest that dogged Vandenberg with passing mention in 1

2 3 4

Philippe Vandenberg, ‚L’important c’est le kamikaze oeuvre 2000 – 2006’, published by On Line & Musee Arthur Rimbaud, 2006, p. 93 Ibid, p. 108 Ibid, p. 99 Ibid, p. 105


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