During the cultural city festival Antwerp Baroque 2018. Rubens Inspires, the M HKA, the Museum of Contemporary Art Antwerp, juxtaposes the spirit of the baroque masters with the vision of contemporary top artists. With the exhibition Sanguine/Bloedrood (Blood Red), curator Luc Tuymans aims to overwhelm the visitor by placing key works from the baroque of, among others, Francisco de Zurbarán and Caravaggio, in dialogue with works by classical contemporary masters, such as On Kawara and Edward Kienholz, as well as new works by contemporary stars such as Zhang Enli, Takashi Murakami, Michaël Borremans, Sigmar Polke and Tobias Rheberger. 

antwerpenbarok2018.be

Luc Tuymans

(c)image: M HKA
Niks, 2003
Print , 90 x 75 cm
silkscreen; ink on paper

In the winter of 2002-03, Luc Tuymans presented a series of ten paintings entitled Niks ('nothing' in Dutch) at Zeno X Gallery in Antwerp. The eponymous painting depicts a potted geranium in full bloom, rendered in a somber fog of greys, greens, and faded reds. Enormously popular in Flanders, geraniums are often found on windowsills in particularly prim and proper neighbourhoods. The use of the geranium as a public display of propriety - 'more Flemish than Flanders' - evokes in Tuymans a certain disdain, even horror, as evidenced by the irony of the title. 'Niks', however, does not suggest that the subject is trivial or that the painting is simply an exercise in rendering a banal, everyday object on a flat surface. Rather, the title suggests that the isolation an recontextualisation of a specific 'nothing' can generate multiple meanings.

In 2003 the silkscreen print Niks was realised with master printer Roger Vandaele, on a sheet slightly smaller than the original painting. This translation of mediums from canvas to works-on-paper involved a detailed analysis, yielding a result different in tone from the source. For this print Tuymans and Vandaele altered the ghostly palette of the painting, using a darker background an brighter reds and greens, dramatically increasing the overall contrast. This modification in turn changes the sense of light; the flower now seems to stand directly beneath the sun. Remarkably, Vandaele's printing of this image makes the composition feel even more painterly. The geranium, emptied of significance by its casual, serial use as a symbol of social security, is linked back into a network of meaning inherent in the long and important tradition of floral still-life painting in the Netherlands.

(Source: Manfred Sellink, Tommy Simoens - 'Luc Tuymans - Graphic Works 1989 - 2012', Ludion, 2012)