11 04 ‘ 2022   museomag 
that we, humanity, are committing enormous exploita- 
tion of nature, without considering the consequences 
for our own survival. But above all, the indifference of 
nature and its silent overwhelming power made a huge 
impression on me. […] It was then that I realized I had 
a subject for a new series of photography. After the 
series Palm Springs, partly photographed outdoors, I 
felt the need to make a new start and to leave all “time 
travel” and decoration behind, with a subject that plays 
in the here and now and in which design by the human 
beings would not play any role. The indifferent power 
of nature, the human arrogance towards that same 
nature and the endless need for displacements, with 
the enormous consequences thereof, have become the 
theme for the series Im Wald.” 
Hans Op de Beeck, born in Turnhout, Belgium, and 
living in Brussels, works with almost all available artis- 
tic media. In his sculptures or expansive installations, 
his large-format watercolours or videos and animated 
films, he uses the staging strategies of theatre, film and 
architecture to create atmospherically dense, dream- 
like images that seem familiar and yet alien. Op de 
Beeck spent more than ten years working on a series 
of large, monochrome watercolours which he paints at 
night. The original works measure from 2.5 to 5 metres 
across and deal with both classical and contemporary 
themes. In many cases they are poetic scenes depic- 
ting mysterious night-time locations, sometimes popu- 
lated by anonymous people. As in his entire œuvre, 
the mood of the image is the prominent feature. This 
is also true for his sculptures, which are generally pre- 
sented in monochrome environments set in grey: a 
sleeping girl on a raft floating in the water, or a couple 
of young lovers sitting together on a cliff. Art and 
the everyday blur into one another; real-looking people 
and objects mutate into sculptures in a monochrome 
world where life seems to have come to a standstill. 
NEW COLLABORATIONS 
The idea for a collaboration with Erwin Olaf initially 
came up in Bruges, where I worked for several years as 
chief curator of the Memling Museum. I invited Erwin 
there to visit the exhibition William Kentridge: Smoke, 
Ashes, Fable (2017/2018), hoping to interest him in 
presenting a similar future project at the museum. 
Since I started working in Luxembourg shortly after- 
wards, the project didn’t happen. However, Olaf took 
the initiative to re-establish contact with me at the 
MNHA, an institution he knew well since he had shown 
a work there during a group presentation organised 
for EMOP in 2015, which was subsequently purchased 
TEMPORARY EXHIBITION 
by the museum. The renewed discussion and changed 
location led to fresh ideas. Erwin had just started 
photographing outside his studio for the first time 
and was working on the series Im Wald (2020) that 
reminded me of Steichen’s landscape photographs. 
At the same time, the monumental landscapes in 
watercolour by Hans Op de Beeck came to mind, 
which, however impressive, have not yet been shown 
extensively in public institutions. A new phase in 
Erwin Olaf’s photographic œuvre, Hans Op de Beeck’s 
relatively unknown watercolour drawings and recent 
sculptures, combined with a small group of landscape 
photographs by Steichen, seemed to offer exciting 
material for an exhibition. The idea appealed to Olaf 
and Op de Beeck, who had never met before, but 
admired each other’s work and Steichen’s photo- 
graphy. Their first ever collaboration will now take place 
in the Salle Wiltheim of the MNHA, from 16 December 
2022 until 11 June 2023. The exhibition will comprise 
some 37 photographs, large watercolours, sculptures, 
installations and videos by Olaf and Op de Beeck. 
They present surprising links with Steichen’s landscape 
photography while at the same time allowing us to re- 
visit the Luxembourgish photographer’s familiar œuvre 
with fresh eyes. 
Although very different, the three artists come to- 
gether like virtuoso musicians, creating a new harmony, 
a richly variegated presentation of imagery in black, 
white and grey tones that is strikingly unified and self- 
evident. As an enticing encore, Olaf and Op de Beeck 
have also agreed to serve as guest curators for another 
presentation at the MNHA: in the course of the coming 
weeks they will select 20 original photographs by 
Edward Steichen from the museum’s extensive holdings, 
to be displayed in our Steichen Cabinet in the first half 
of 2023. 
Ruud Priem 
Edward Steichen (1879-1973), Moonrise – Mamaroneck, New 
York, 1904. Photograph. Collection MNHA.