30.09.21 – 03.12.21, 08:00, 1m3: Marc Nagtzaam
1m3 is een kubieke meter gewijd aan de kunstenaarsboekencollectie van de Kunstenbibliotheek. Kunstenaar Marc Nagtzaam maakte deze selectie.
A Collection of Pages
A selection of notebooks; unfinished books; unreadable books; books as exhibitions; as single works; as incomplete pieces; books on repetition; on colour; books with thousands of pages from a personal archive; books based on a single work.
articleLees, kijk, luistereducationartistic activities Kunstenbibliotheek and Muziekbibliotheek officially recognised as heritage library
newsLees, kijk, luisterartistic activitiesSalomé Voegelinresearchers Listening session, live recording28.11.2024 in Kunstenbibliotheek
audioLees, kijk, luisterresearchMo'min Swaitat (Palestine Sound Archive)researcher Listening session, live recording05.12.24 in Kunstenbibliotheek
audioLees, kijk, luisterresearchAmit Dinesh Patel (Dushume)researcher Listening session, live recording30.01.25 in Kunstenbibliotheek
audioLees, kijk, luisterresearchJean Wattstudent curatorial studies A World Seen Through
articleLees, kijk, luistereducationartistic activitiesstudents landscape and garden architecture imaginary landscape
newsLees, kijk, luistereducation
Sampler, KunstenbibliotheekexpoAgendaArtistic activitiesSampler invites visitors to encounter student publications produced between 2000–2024, as both material objects and fragments of language, showing the intersections between fine art, graphic design, literature, and spatial installation.
Conceived as an exhibition at the Kunstenbibliotheek in Ghent, the project will be on view over the course of a year within the library’s spaces. Across walls, floors, and shelves, the titles of twenty-six works are set down as textual interventions, transforming the interior into a landscape of poetic fragments. This constellation is complemented by a broader selection of publications – a recent donation to the library which is presented in vitrines on the second floor.
To activate the archive of the publications, a magazine is published as a copy-
style facsimile, designed in collaboration with Aagje Vandriessche. The
project’s execution is based on a concept and a curation by Kasper Andreasen,
who also donated the books to the library. The publication Sampler is available
at the reception of the Kunstenbibliotheek.
With exhibited titles by Janek Bersz, Kato Bouckaert, Tim Bruggeman, Floor Crick, Lucie De Almeinda Cachinho, Bart De Baets, Joris De Rycke, Martijn den Ouden, Ankje Frouws, Julia Grame, Louis Hilson, Leon Jespers, Mara Joustra, Louise Moana Kolff, Lewie Landuyt, Steve Michiels, Willem Roose, Anne-Sofie Thomsen, Aagje Vandriessche, Jelena Vanoverbeek, Matthieu Vrijman, Bart Walraeve, Floor Wesseling, Felix Ysenbaert, as well as some anonymous authors and other student publications from the Kunstenbibliotheek.
Godshuizenlaan 2A
9000 Gent
Thu: 09:00 – 20:00
Fri: 09:00 – 16:00
Charlotte Frenay, KunstenbibliotheekexpoAgendaArtistic activitiesFugitive Pages began as a gesture anchored in Black History Month. As the artists’ book collection was explored, a rupture emerged: out of nearly two thousand books, only five could be identified as authored by African-descendant artists. What began as a necessity became a site of transformation. With the support of the Kunstenbibliotheek, 1M³ expands beyond the existing collection, welcoming books already present alongside new commissions intended to enter it, not as symbolic corrections, but as required gestures.
Guided by the thought of Fred Moten and Stefano Harney, this cubic metre operates as a site of fugitive planning: a space that inhabits the academy without fully belonging to it. Moving quietly through its gaps and constraints, it cultivates forms of study, care, and connection that resist, expand, and seek to do better, working within institutional power without seeking its recognition.
Within the space, these shelves function as a parallel network for learning, circulation, and knowledgemaking. The books are not silent; they carry weight, absence, and the promise of continuity. At the centre sits a measured void: a shelf holding exactly the number of books initially present, rendering a glass ceiling visible and making countable the invisible barriers that shape the limits of recognition, authorship, and institutional space.
Across the vitrine, voices converge – diasporic, African, American, British, Francophone – entering into dialogue. The book becomes a site of circulation, a place where histories meet without hierarchy.
Visitors are invited to leave traces: names, references, absences still felt within the institution. Each note gestures toward future acquisitions, toward presence yet to come.
This vitrine does not claim completeness. It insists on attention, on making absence felt, on building a library that listens, shifts, and grows in relation — a space of care, reflection, and collective possibility.
Charlotte Frenay
Charlotte Frenay is a Brussels-based researcher working on alternative archival practices. She holds a BA in Media and Communications from Goldsmiths, University of London, and later completed an MA in African Studies at Ghent University. She is currently enrolled in the postgraduate Curatorial Studies at KASK & Conservatorium for 2025–2026.
Tour de Sampler, KunstenbibliotheeklectureAgendaArtistic activitiesThe exhibition Sampler, curated by Kasper Andreasen, is currently on view at the Kunstenbibliotheek in Ghent. The exhibition explores the medium of the artist’s book through a broad selection of student publications, drawn from a recent donation to the library. On the upper floor, 75 publications are presented in three vitrines. In addition, the titles of 26 works appear on walls, floors, and shelves, transforming the space into a landscape of poetic fragments.
On two Tuesday mornings in March, Kasper Andreasen will give an informal tour of the exhibition. He will speak about the selected works and the development of the project, and will also discuss the accompanying publication Sampler, designed in collaboration with alumna Aagje Vandriessche.
Everyone is welcome — you can register via the link below.
Tour de Sampler, KunstenbibliotheeklectureAgendaArtistic activitiesThe exhibition Sampler, curated by Kasper Andreasen, is currently on view at the Kunstenbibliotheek in Ghent. The exhibition explores the medium of the artist’s book through a broad selection of student publications, drawn from a recent donation to the library. On the upper floor, 75 publications are presented in three vitrines. In addition, the titles of 26 works appear on walls, floors, and shelves, transforming the space into a landscape of poetic fragments.
On two Tuesday mornings in March, Kasper Andreasen will give an informal tour of the exhibition. He will speak about the selected works and the development of the project, and will also discuss the accompanying publication Sampler, designed in collaboration with alumna Aagje Vandriessche.
Everyone is welcome — you can register via the link below.
Book presentation Beyond Brutalism, Kunstenbibliotheekresearch presentationAgendaArtistic activitiesOnderzoekDrawing on more than a decade of research, Beyond Brutalism and the Postwar Architecture–Sculpture Network explores how artists and architects reimagined the relationship between sculpture, architecture and public space in the decades after the Second World War. Moving beyond Brutalism as a style, the book uncovers a network of collaborations, magazines, and experiments that sought to integrate art into everyday life; from sculptural buildings to artworks encountered in motion and in public space. During this presentation, Angelique Campens reflects on the making of the book and revisits the postwar ambition of a synthèse des arts, the idea that art, architecture, and lived experience can form a shared environment
Angelique Campens is an art and architecture historian, curator, and writer whose work reshapes how we understand the intersections of sculpture and architecture, monumental public sculpture and sculptural concrete. Campens previously published works on Juliaan Lampens, Jacques Moeschal and André Bloc. She holds a PhD in Art sciences at Ghent University, teaches at KASK & Conservatorium and serves as Review Editor for Public Art Dialogue.
The book will not be for sale on the event. More information on the publication here.
Godshuizenlaan 2A
9000 Gent
Reflecting Light, Kunstenbibliotheekresearch presentationAgendaArtistic activitiesOnderzoekHow can we make light a fully-fledged and equal contributor within contemporary dramaturgy? Reflecting Light is a research project by various lighting designers who are literally shining the spotlight on the use of light in the performing arts. With the support of KASK & Conservatorium and arts centre BUDA, they have been shaping a discourse on lighting design for four years now, and are trying to share this knowledge – formally and informally – through fanzines and residencies, among other things.
The project grouped lighting designers Emese Csornai, Ezra Veldhuis, Henri Emmanuel Doublier, Jan Fedinger, Jan Maertens and Tomi Humalisto - and collaborated with Bruno Pocheron, Estelle Gautier, Ingunn Fjellang Sæther, Leticia Skrycky, Maureen Beguin, Meri Ekola, Minna Tiikkainen, Pernille Plantener Holst and Materia Leve.
To conclude this part of the project, Reflecting Light uses the darkness of the longest nights to host two nights of lectures, presentations and installations on light and lighting design.
Reflecting Light, Kunstenbibliotheek
Several artists raise questions from within the collected Reflecting Light fanzines - in a programme with collective readings, talks, performative interventions, the presentation of a new platform and some installations. With a.o. Materia Leve, Judith Dhondt, Amelia Malfait Lakhtara & the lighting designers from Reflecting Light.
Geert Belpaeme is affiliated as an artistic researcher to KASK & Conservatorium, the school of arts of HOGENT and howest. The research project Reflecting Light was financed by the HOGENT Arts Research Fund.
Eline Adriaensen, KunstenbibliotheekexpoAgendaArtistic activitiesInspired by Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own, this 1M3 space transforms the notion of creative space into one of collective visibility. A bookshelf is personal yet a place of prestige, carrying cultural weight and authority. Within this space, women’s voices take their place in public view. Together, they remind us that both knowledge and space must be continuously reimagined and reclaimed. In the context of a bookshelf, fiction represents the imaginative dimension of knowledge, the realm of what could be. Over time, the bookshelf shifts and reshapes itself. What is visible and what is concealed remain in constant conversation. The shelf becomes a living archive of thought, curiosity, and care.
Eline Adriaensen is an architect based in Antwerp and Ghent. She holds a Master’s degree in Architecture from the University of Antwerp, complemented by an exchange program at the Umeå School of Architecture in Sweden.
At the moment, she is participating in the curatorial studies postgraduate programme at KASK & Conservatorium.
Jozef Kluyskensstraat 2,
9000 Gent
Tato Greve, KunstenbibliotheekeventexpoAgendaArtistic activitiesRetour displays drawings of train journeys between Belgium and the Netherlands, with hand-drawn typography and interiors that subtly highlight cultural differences. The centre page marks the border.
On Thursday 13 November 2025, at 19:00, the exhibition will open with a performance by Eva van Bemmelen & Maxim Preaux and the book presentation of Retour.
Thu: 09:00 – 20:00
Fri: 09:00 – 16:00
Bijloke Wonderland, KIOSK, KunstenbibliotheekeventAgendaArtistic activitiesFor the sixth year in a row, you are invited to Bijloke Wonderland, a summer cultural festival from Thursday 21 to Sunday 31 August at the bustling Bijloke site in Ghent. Expect tantalising sunrise concerts, free summer bar concerts, theatre, dance, visual arts & tours. Discover special locations on the Bijlokesite and get carried away by a programme for young and old. This year, for the first time, there will be a continuous programme for 11 consecutive days.
KASK & Conservatorium presents music and visual art by students on the open lawn of the Bijlokesite. Six diverse installations form a temporary landscape, culminating in a musical intervention. KIOSK serves up a performance. The Kunstenbibliotheek organises a zine festival and presents a selection from their zine collection.
The programme is presented by organisations at home on the Bijloke site: Muziekcentrum De Bijloke, LOD muziektheater, STAM, laGeste, Ontroerend Goed and KASK & Conservatorium (HOGENT-Howest).
ongoing
- Kunstenbibliotheek & Shif—t*, Summershelves #2
- Aagje Vandriessche, Capteren
- Vicente Fuenzalida Lafourcade, Floating Garden
- Jean Paul Simons, In de zomer van 2017 werkte Jean Paul Simons enkele maanden
- Michiel Vindevogel, Oculus
- Gill Slosse, Remaining Shadows
- Layla Morando, When Doves Cry
Thu 21.08.25
- Kunstenbibliotheek, Zine-festival, 15:00
Sat 23.08.25
- Leen Van Tichelen, Fanny Vandesande, Jonas Bruyneel & Esther Coorevits, GROUND ZERO /51.04536/3.71609
Sat 30.08.25
- SONduo, Zomermiddagdroom Konzert, 16:00
Sun 31.08.25
- SONduo, Zomermiddagdroom Konzert, 14:30
Zine-festival, KunstenbibliotheekexpoAgendaArtistic activitiesStudents from KASK & Conservatorium are organising a zine festival in collaboration with the Kunstenbibliotheek. At the same time, you can discover a presentation by artist collective Shif—t* in the cellarium.
Assembled by Louis Gahide, with zines by: Anna Van der Vurst, Riwan Kallel, Vero Denecker, Riet Van Lysebettens, Méraud Verschuere, Ling Madelein, Lena Moreels, Otis Monteny, Amber Goossens, Adriel Cantamessi, Margo van Damme, Julia Butter, Lex Monteny, Paulien Van Loo, Emma Durant, Marinela Demaj, Inès De Laender, Dominica De Rieck, Anne Dekeyser, Ines Claus, Arthur De Boever, Migena Demaj, Dominique De Groen, Carmen van der Straten, Nava Asgari, Layla Morando and Aagje Vandriessche.
The zine festival opens on the first day of Bijloke Wonderland, a cultural summer festival from Thursday 21 to Sunday 31 August at the vibrant Bijloke site in Ghent. View the full programme.
Summershelves #2, KunstenbibliotheekexpoAgendaArtistic activitiesSummershelves #2 is created by artist collective Shif—t* with a tender scenography and a selection of zines and books to linger with during Bijloke Wonderland.
We open on 21 August with a zine festival organised by Louis Gahide and a lovely reading circle in the specially designed care corners.
The book selection will be on display in the cellarium of the Kunstenbibliotheek from Monday to Thursday.
We close on 28 August from 6 p.m. with A Picnic°2, curated by Arno Huygens, Seppe-Hazel Laeremans and Marthe Huyse. The picnic blanket is a quilt, honouring those who inspire us — an afternoon that turns into an evening of stories, shared plates and good company.
i.s.m. Shif—t*
Thu: 9u00 – 20:00
28.08.25, 16:00 – 20:00, A Picnic°2
Booklaunch Ives Maes, Kunstenbibliotheekresearch presentationAgendaArtistic activitiesOnderzoekIves Maes will present his new book Ives Maes & David Campany in Conversation at the Kunstenbibliotheek on 08.05.25. Campany will be present online for a discussion, moderated by Isabel Van Bos. The talk will be followed by a reception at Kunstenbibliotheek.
Ives Maes & David Campany in Conversation
Ives Maes explores his doctoral research in the arts with David Campany, jury member of his PhD committee. Focussing on the intersection of architecture and photography, Maes has designed biodegradable refugee camps, photographed the remains of world’s fairs worldwide, and recaptured his homestead memories in photographic installations. His research postulates that architecture is inherently part of the photographic medium, initiated by the camera obscura pavilion. He proposes that world’s fairs came into being precisely because of the invention of a medium that could truthfully propagate them, and describes how this, in turn, affected architectural display strategies for photography. Campany has had a long career in curating and writing about photography exhibitions, with a focus on exhibition history, scale and design, temporality, and the role of both still and moving images within the exhibition context. Together, Maes and Campany discuss their own expanded practices and a multitude of historical examples such as the Crystal Palace at London’s Great Exhibition in 1851, Charlotte Perriand’s Agriculture Pavilion for the International Exposition of Art and Technology in Modern Life in 1937, the Pepsi-Cola Pavilion for the Japan World Exposition in 1970, and Simon Starling’s 2008 Plant Room for Kunstraum Dornbirn.
This publication was made possible with the support of the HOGENT Arts Research Fund and The Flemish Community, Department of Culture, Youth & Media.
Ives Maes is affiliated as an artistic researcher to KASK & Conservatorium, the school of arts of HOGENT and howest. The research project Forbidden Fruits Create Many Jams was financed by the HOGENT Arts Research Fund.
Godshuizenlaan 2A
9000 Gent
Book sale, KunstenbibliotheekAgendaArtistic activitiesSTAM and Kunstenbibliotheek are organising a book sale to benefit Gent Samen Solidair vzw. Go on a treasure hunt and discover books about Ghent, art, history and heritage at very reasonable prices. Be sure to drop by during the open day if you want to get your hands on a second-hand art book at a bargain price.
Godshuizenlaan 2
9000 Gent