Edith Dekyndt is no stranger to the mining landscapes of northern Europe. Born in Ypres, in Belgium, she studied in the Borinage area before settling in Tournai. During a 2009 exhibition at the Musée d’Art Contemporain du Grand-Hornu, located in a former coal quarry, she became interested in the large-scale industrialization of these ancient agricultural areas and its impact on the local environment and population. She found out that she had been chosen to participate in the Collection Pinault residency program as soon as it was established.
For Dekyndt, her time in Lens was an opportunity to experience life at a different pace, “to change her city-dweller’s habits, which soon become automatic” by experiencing a new “relationship to domestic life” and spending more time “inside, in the studio.” However, it was in the garden of the residency that she first began to work, burying fabric there, continuing a ritual initiated in Tournai then Berlin. The vast garden surrounding the former rectory allowed her to work on a larger scale than ever before, thus giving new meaning to this process: “I had to take advantage of the land, in this place where the ground itself has been so important, so valued, since it yielded the coal industry.”
For several years, she has been researching the notion of man’s “superiority” over animals, reading works of cognitive science, neuroscience, and philosophy (such as the writings of Vinciane Despret). For a long time, she sought out means with which to explore this question “ethically.” As luck would have it, her assistant discovered a crate filled with furs as he was packing up his apartment in preparation for a move. The apartment he was leaving was located across from Hermès’s tanneries, which they deduced must be the source of this “treasure.” Once mounted on planks of wood, the furs were partially covered with staples. Dekyndt’s violent gesture toward these “magnificent skins” was a conflicting experience, “a mixture of attraction and repulsion.” The artist compared this gesture to “what Plains Indians may have once done with animal skins.” Eskimos traditionally employed all kinds of furs as well as the guts of animals, for instance using the intestines of seals to make anoraks. Dekyndt “[adores] those kinds of objects.”
Her conviction that “architecture has an uncanny tendency to acquire too much power over people’s lives” ultimately led her to create works that are “more ephemeral and that change over time.”
For several years, she has been researching the notion of man’s “superiority” over animals, reading works of cognitive science, neuroscience, and philosophy (such as the writings of Vinciane Despret). For a long time, she sought out means with which to explore this question “ethically.” As luck would have it, her assistant discovered a crate filled with furs as he was packing up his apartment in preparation for a move. The apartment he was leaving was located across from Hermès’s tanneries, which they deduced must be the source of this “treasure.” Once mounted on planks of wood, the furs were partially covered with staples. Dekyndt’s violent gesture toward these “magnificent skins” was a conflicting experience, “a mixture of attraction and repulsion.” The artist compared this gesture to “what Plains Indians may have once done with animal skins.” Eskimos traditionally employed all kinds of furs as well as the guts of animals, for instance using the intestines of seals to make anoraks. Dekyndt “[adores] those kinds of objects.”
Dekyndt also presented paintings in fabric and resin that she had made for her exhibition “Mer sans Rivages” at Les Sables-d’Olonne, in partnership with Frac Pays de la Loire. This time, she removed the canvases’ chassis, so that they now seemed like animal or vegetable membranes.
The final series of works presented in Dekyndt’s Berlin show They Shoot Horses (Part Two) was inspired by the artist’s travels in Brazil, in particular by some embroidered weavings she purchased from inhabitants of Belo Horizonte. Their technique, passed down through generations since the region was colonized by the Portuguese, intrigued her, especially as she noticed that lace is “rather similar to the knot-tying techniques used on ships.” Dekyndt deconstructed these fabrics, mounting them on chassis then carefully removing all horizontal threads. These grid patterns remind her of the white and blue ceramics used by Lina Bo Bardi in her design for the Museum of Modern Art of São Paulo. During her travels, she also noticed that some iconic Brazilian monuments were falling into disrepair, such as the group of five buildings designed by Oscar Niemeyer and located around a man-made lake: “there’s a garden at the entrance, but the buildings are empty, no one visits them, no one even knows about them.” For Dekyndt, the action of unweaving is a metaphor for what is happening today in Brazil, “a contamination of modernism and its resulting decrepitude.”