Between May 8 and September 21, 2021, the Bruges Triennial will take place, which is held in the Belgian city that has the same name. Every three years, a series of artists and architects are summoned, for the latter to present their temporary proposals in the city.

The exhibition is linked to the environment, since as can be seen in the images, all the interventions are realized on elements of the city such as trees, buildings, etc.

The 2021 Bruges Triennial has as its theme this year 'Trauma', therefore it will be taken into account how artists react to this theme and how they capture it in the different streets of the city, as architects such as Selgascano did at the time.
 
Among the attendees, we find artists such as Amanda Browder, whose main work material is textiles. Nadia Kaabi-Linke, who designed a series of benches that shine peculiarly, however, the latter are unapproachable since they have a series of pins, and how these two artists, 13 more that will fill the city of Bruges with colour and dynamism during these days.
 

Description of project by Trienal de Brujas

From 8 May to 26 September 2021, Bruges once again becomes the host city for an exploration of contemporary art and architecture. During the third edition of Bruges Triennial, 13 artists and architects present new temporary installations in the historic centre of the World Heritage city. The theme of this third edition is TraumA which sees The Triennial shifting focus from the public space to some hidden dimensions of the city and its inhabitants.

Bruges Triennial is a thematic exhibition featuring creations by artists and architects in the public space. Bruges Triennial 2021 opts for a polyphonic discourse, with space for imagination, beauty, darkness, and participation.

The curatorial team, consisting of Till-Holger Borchert, Santiago De Waele, Michel Dewilde, and Els Wuyts, has selected 13 artists and architects with 3 Belgians among the who each in their way react to the theme of TraumA:

- Amanda Browder (US) creates large textile installations by working in collaboration with local Bruges residents, whom she involves from the very start of the project. With vibrant colours and playful patterns, the scale changes from what was first private (donating fabric as an individual, or assisting during the Sewing Days) to public and accessible artwork. Happy Coincidences is an installation that can be surprisingly overwhelming, set amidst the bricks of the bridge, across the span of the canal, and between the windows of the houses.

- Nadia Kaabi-Linke (TN/UA/DE) presents a circular installation of public benches that shine attractively but are rendered inaccessible by the sharp pins on their surface. The visitor cannot sit on the benches, or experience an encounter with others. The sculpture Inner Circle shimmers and catches the eye, but ultimately leaves a defensive circle and void in its centre. Kaabi-Linke takes inspiration from the egg-shaped city ground plan and its former ramparts, from family structures and ties, work situations and employment contexts, and from the exclusive clubs and privileged communities that often use a circular shape in their logo.

- Joanna Malinowska & C.T. Jasper (PL/US) bring attention to a forgotten monument with Who is Afraid of Natasha? Natasha is the nickname for a sculpture that stood for many years on a square in Gdynia, a city in Poland. After the end of the communist Soviet era, the statue was moved to a less visible spot in the city. The monument was originally erected as a personification of a regime that came to symbolize oppression: a beautiful woman in the countryside announcing a triumphant presence.
-Nadia Naveau (BE) places her gleaming masks bedecked with decorative and folkloric patterns in several niches along the waterfront of the Augustijnenrei. She thereby brings attention to this hidden piece of city architecture, which does not feature on the route of the tourist boats and is often overgrown by plants from the gardens behind. In Bruges, the mi=rored masks take on the function of imaginative signage, and perhaps also of a dreamy welcome.

- Nnenna Okore (US/NG/AU) stretches a fabric around the Poertoren in Bruges, inspired by the typical red-brick colour of the region and by the technique of lacemaking. And the World Keeps Turning, she creates a beacon that reminds the city of its past and takes up the challenge with the future. The starting point for her project was the question of the identity of Bruges.

- Henrique Oliveira (BR) bases his installation on the last historic remnant from the stone ramparts of Bruges, which is located at the Pottenmakersrei. The place forms the basis for an installation that starts from a specific element used in the construction sector of São Paulo. Plywood, consisting of glued layers of wood, is a cheap construction material and is often thrown away after use, in waste containers or onto the street. It makes the visitor reflect on how contemporary art shows itself in a historic city.

- Hans Op de Beeck (BE) is exhibiting Danse Macabre, a full-size (1:1) merry-go-round that operates in the environment of Bruges in a static, silent, and monumental way. The installation is monochromatically coloured in shades of grey, has a diameter of 12 metres and is about 4 metres high. The staged series of sculptures of horses and carriages appear to be fossilized. In his carousel, time freezes, and the mechanics have stopped is if the cheerfulness has been wiped out.

- Laura Splan (US) displays her work amidst the permanent collection of the former 13th-century hospital ter Potterie. During the spring of 2020, at the beginning of the COVID pandemic, Splan continued her practice related to care and disease. The textile patterns, digital animations and woven structures appear in the Museum Onze-Lieve-Vrouw ter Potterie as if they have always been there. At the same time, they evoke a peculiar feeling.

- Gijs Van Vaerenbergh (BE) translate a site-specific concept into a timeless aesthetic experience: Colonnade. The pavilion housing their installation is composed of a series of intertwining columns to create a maze-like space in which visitors can become lost. The colonnade is locate= in the north of the city, in the green area of the Baron Ruzette park. Colonnade is not a traditional pavilion, but a spatial construction without an interior.

- Adrián Villar Rojas (AR) is placing some unusual birds’ nests in and around the Porter’s Lodge. They form part of his work From the Series Brick Farm, an ongoing project that was previously shown at the Lahore Biennale.

- Héctor Zamora (MX) is showing work in the walled garden of Gezellehuis, where he is showcasing an intervention around a large, solitary tree, an Austrian pine. During an initial visit to the site, his eye fell on that particular tree because it reminded him of the ‘ceibo’, a tropical species of tree in the Amazon jungle. This tree has a sacred status and is surrounded by creepers.
 
In addition to a series of interventions in the city centre, Bruges Triennial 2021: TraumA also presents a group exhibition in which these themes are further represented. About 40 sculptures, photographs, drawings, paintings and videos connect the 'uncanny' character of the particular spaces of the Porter’s Lodge with dissonant voices, virtual storylines, and wonderful worlds. The group exhibition A Porous City in the Porter's Lodge includes work by Willem Boel, Joëlle Dubois, Daan Gielis, Geert Goiris, Ronald Ophuis, Sarah&Charles, Ana Torfs, and Anne-Mie Van Kerckhoven, among others. The final list of artists is yet to be announced.

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Main topic
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TraumA.
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Curators
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Till-Holger Borchert, Santiago De Waele, Michel Dewilde, and Els Wuyts.
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Dates
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Start date.- May 8, 2021. End date.- September 26, 2021.
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Location
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Bruges, Belgium.
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Photography
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Published on: April 11, 2021
Cite: "The city, the new canvas for artists. Bruges Triennial 2021" METALOCUS. Accessed
<https://www.metalocus.es/en/news/city-new-canvas-artists-bruges-triennial-2021> ISSN 1139-6415
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