
At the occasion of her third exhibition at Galerie Greta Meert, Catharina van Eetvelde invites French artist Stéphane Sautour. Both artists have been working together for over two years. They have a large workshop in Montreuil, which doubles as a meeting place for a surprising bunch: as well as the two artists, a seismologist, an anthropologist, two video makers, a composer and the odd visitor. Something is in the making there, something collective showing its face for the first time in the installations.* !
These strange installations explore fragile balances and gravity–sometimes balance and gravity at once. They look like a collection of accidents, or a dramatic mise en scene which deals with the ‘paradoxical sequence which occurs ‘against all logical expectations’ or if you prefer ‘inexorably with surprise’’ (Patricia Falguières). They are ‘marvels’ or mirabilia, so appreciated in the sixteenth century, using heterogeneous materials and procedures to make them hold together: ‘delicate links’, mouldings, swelling, crumbling, contagion, friction or spills.
‘CARBON(ROCK) to LATEX COLLOID(BAND) to METHYL METHACRYLATE(RESIN) to PROP-2-ENOYL, AEROSOL(COATED) to PAPER, INK (FOLDED) to PAPER, INK(FOLDED) - REPEATED - to COTTON(THREAD)’ is the title of one of the works. For Catharina and Stéphane, composition is a language in itself. Enumerating the components, saying what is happening without describing its content. Staying on the fringe of meaning. Just below the level of narrative.
This economy serves an argument. It takes us with the necessary caution into the zone peopled with incommensurables, opened up by the tragic and obsessing event, which occurred in Japan in March 2011. What happened then is still happening now. Ever since, undesirable particles have been floating in the air and the earth has echoed with what it can do.
Disruption. Trouble. A trouble agent: an agent whose motives are unknown. Who causes disruption in an initially homogeneous environment. Who makes ambiguity evident. !
Catharina and Stéphane’s installations respect this trouble. As we explore them, we do not go towards analysis or understanding. We enter into a field of disruption in which what is sought is the preservation and stabilisation of ambiguous states; precision in confusion. ‘Staying with the trouble’ (Donna Haraway): that means simply “learning to let yourself be affected by the dense tangle of malaises and hesitations that ‘terrestrial’ situations impose upon us’ (Isabelle Stengers).
*The seismologist is Alexandre Schubnel, the anthropologist, Sophie Houdart, the two video makers, Véréna Paravel and Lucien Castaing-Taylor and the composer, Ernst Karel. The collective was set up on the initiative of Marc Boissonnade, director of F93 (www.f93.fr).
Courtesy Galerie Greta Meert. Text: Sophie Houdart.


Over the past 30 years, Galerie Greta Meert established itself as one of Brussels’ leading contemporary art galleries. Founded in 1988 as Galerie Meert Rihoux, it was subsequently renamed after its founding director Greta Meert in 2006. Located in the center of Brussels, the gallery occupies a five-story Art Nouveau building designed by Louis Bral and renovated for the gallery by renowned Belgian architects Hilde Daem and Paul Robbrecht. Since 2012 three floors of the building are dedicated to exhibitions, making it possible to maintain an expanded exhibition schedule.

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