
30.05.26, 16:00, Quelques Corps Favorables, Book launch
Quelques Corps Favorables traces the serpentine contours of artistic researcher Benny Nemer’s long term entanglement with the postcard collection of photographer and writer Hervé Guibert, which were allegedly distributed among his friends after his 1991 death from AIDS.
The publication takes a cue from Guibert’s 1980 roman photo Suzanne et Louise, pairing a handwritten letter written with a vast series of black and white photographs to tell a story of generational rupture and bonds of queer kinship forged in the long shadow cast by the AIDS crisis.
The booklaunch coincides with the finissage of Nemer's exhibition at CONVENT on Saturday 30 May with a conversation between Benny Nemer, Paris-based photographer Hervé Bossy, and curator Jana Johanna Haeckel at 16:00.
Benny NemerexpoAgendaOnderzoekExhibition Opening on Saturday 25 April, from 2 to 6 p.m., with a conversation between Benny Nemer and Malmö-based curator Albin Hillervik at 4 p.m.
Opening hours exhibition: Friday and Sunday, from 1 to 5 p.m., or by appointment.
“Dear Hervé, I visited your library. Christine let me see it; she has kept your books in her home near the Parc Montsouris since you died. My friend Nathanaël, who translated your diaries into English, put us in contact. Perhaps you already know all about it."
Several Favourable Bodies traces the serpentine contours of Benny Nemer’s artistic research into a mysterious collection of picture postcards. The project was set in motion during an encounter with the library of the French photographer and writer Hervé Guibert, conserved in the Paris home of his executor since his 1991 death from AIDS. With the help of bouquets, audio letters, and a vast arrangement of postcards, Nemer tells a story of generational rupture and bonds of queer kinship forged in the long shadow cast by the AIDS crisis.
At the exhibition finissage on Saturday, 30 May, there will be a book launch of Benny Nemer's latest publication, Quelques Corps Favorables: Une carte postale à Hervé Guibert, with a conversation between Benny Nemer, Paris-based photographer Hervé Bossy, and curator Jana Johanna Haeckel at 4 p.m.
Several Favourable Bodies was made possible with the support of KASK & Conservatorium, the school of arts of HOGENT and Howest. It is part of Benny Nemer's research project Several Favourable Bodies: Hervé Guibert's Postcards as Agents of Queer Kinship, financed by the HOGENT Arts Research Fund.
Benny Nemer is a Montreal-born artist, diarist, and researcher based in Paris. He is the grandchild of Quebec potter Rosalie Namer (1925–2006), whose artistic kinship instilled in him an early aesthetic sensibility that included an appreciation of objects, a practice of epistolary writing, and a sympathy with flowers. His multidisciplinary practice often traces the affective contours of love and longing while facilitating bonds of kinship between his audience, figures from history, and himself, taking form through audio work, performance, participatory actions, epistolary writing, and flower arranging. Benny Nemer is currently a postdoctoral researcher at KASK & Conservatorium, where he is pursuing research into queer kinship, postcards as an artistic medium, and the archive of French author and photographer Hervé Guibert.
Tennisbaanstraat 74,
9000 Gent
or by appointment
Benny Nemerresearch presentationAgendaOnderzoekPostdoctoral Researcher at KASK & Conservatorium Benny Nemer presents his research at My Evidence: Creating LGBTQ+ Art and Archives, a conference at the Amsterdam Public Library October 3-4, 2024. The conference is organised by Perverse Collections, a pan-European research project led by researchers at Maastricht University (NL), Universidad de Murcia (ES) and University of St Andrews (UK). Nemer's presentation focuses on aesthetic strategies and ethical concerns when creating public-facing artworks that involve queer cultural material from domestic spaces rather than institutional archives. He discussed recent artistic activations of the libraries, homes, and gardens of queer cultural and intellectual figures in Amsterdam, London, and Montreal, as well as participatory, kinship-facilitating artistic gestures related to the dispersed postcard collection of French author and photographer Hervé Guibert (1955-1991). A core concern to this research is determining what archival material is shared with the greater public, what is for queer audiences only, and what remains entirely protected from view?
Benny NemerexpoAgendaArtistic activitiesEssential Reading is a project that aims to enlarge, diversify and enrich Kunstenbibliotheek’s book collection. Which books are, today, really indispensible for an art library? Guests of Essential Reading bring together and present in the library the books they consider most valuable in their life and work.
Benny Nemer
Benny Nemer is an artist, diarist, and researcher based in Paris. Born in Montreal in 1973, he is the grandson of Quebec potter Rosalie Namer (1925–2006), whose artistic kinship instilled in him an early aesthetic sensibility that included an appreciation of objects, a practice of epistolary writing and a sympathy with flowers. His artworks often trace the affective contours of love and longing while facilitating bonds of kinship between his audience, figures from history and himself.
Nemer completed a practice-led PhD at the Edinburgh College of Art in 2019, where he was part of Cruising the Seventies: Unearthing Pre-HIV/AIDS Queer Sexual Cultures, a pan-European research project led by art historians, cultural anthropologists, and artists.
He is currently a postdoctoral researcher at KASK & Conservatorium, where he is pursuing research into queer kinship in the spectre of AIDS, postcards as an artistic medium and the archive of French author and photographer Hervé Guibert. Nemer has exhibited internationally, and his work is in the permanent collections of the National Gallery of Canada (Ottawa), the Kunsthistorisches Museum (Vienna), the Ystads Konstmuseum (Ystad) and Thielska Galleriet (Stockholm).
Botanical Intimacies, Het PaviljoenexpoAgendaArtistic activitiesAs part of the Botanical Intimacies Masterclass with Benny Nemer, seven masterstudents from the fine arts programme created an installation in Het Paviljoen using plant matter donated from the Ghent University Botanical Gardens. The installation, co-created by Vincent van Asten, Nancy Larosa, Kadia Doumbouya, Shoaib Zaheer, Laura Anno, Jeandré Wauters, and Malte Möller, remains on display in the Het Pavijoen until Thursday, November 23. Participating students will open the doors of Het Paviljoen and briefly discuss their creation process on Thursday at 10:00.
23.11.2023, 10:00
Louis Pasteurlaan 2
9000 Gent
I Don’t Know Where Paradise Is, Kunstenbibliotheekresearch presentationAgendaArtistic activitiesOnderzoekJoin artist and KASK & Conservatorium postdoctoral researcher Benny Nemer for the launch of I Don’t Know Where Paradise Is, his first solo catalogue. Designed by Paris-based Clément Wibaut, the publication expands upon Nemer’s 2020 exhibition and eponymous audio work distilled from his research in the libraries of gay scholars in Amsterdam, London, Montreal, Paris and Vienna.
This beautiful and intimate book features lush photographs of the twenty-six floral arrangements created in response to the audio work, and essays by Heather Anderson, Ann Cvetkovich, Jennifer Evans, and John Potvin that situate Nemer’s work in broader, overlapping contexts.
At 18:30, friend, artistic researcher at KASK & Conservatorium, and graphic designer Paul Bailey will discuss the book project with Nemer. The publication will be available for purchase for € 20. An exhibition of flowers, photographs, and the accompanying audio work will remain on view in the Kunstenbibliotheek Cellarium until the flowers have faded.
Benny Nemer is affiliated as an artistic researcher to KASK & Conservatorium, the school of arts of HOGENT and howest. The research project Recollecting Favourable Bodies was financed by the HOGENT Arts Research Fund and is part of
the Archival Sensations Research Cluster.