Reading between the Lines is part of ‘pit’, an artistic
trajectory with works by some ten artists in the region of
Borgloon-Heers (in the Flemish province of Limburg). ‘Pit’ will be the
first part of the exhibition project Z-OUT, an initiative in which Z33,
the contemporary art museum of the city of Hasselt, presents art in
public space.
On September 24th, Gijs Van Vaerenbergh will reveal a construction in
the rural landscape, by a cycle route, that’s based on the design of the
local church. This ‘church’ consists of 30 tons of steel and 2000
columns, and is built on a fundament of armed concrete. Through the use
of horizontal plates, the concept of the traditional church is
transformed into a transparent object of art.
Reading between the Lines can be read as a reflection on
architectural themes such as scale, the ground plan etc., but the
project also emphatically transcends the strictly architectural. After
all, the church does not have a well-defined function and focuses on
visual experience in itself (one could even consider it to be a line
drawing in space). At the same time, the construction demonstrates that
this experience is in effect a consequence of the design, since it
explicitly refers to the various stages in its conception: the design
drawing, the model… Apart from that, because the church does not fulfil
its classical function, it can be read as a heritage related reflection
on the present vacancy of churches in the area (and their potential
artistic reuse).