Sculpture: Berlinde De Bruyckere Interview at ACCA, We are all Flesh 2012
Berlinde De Bruyckere in conversation at her exhibition 'We are all Flesh' at The Australian Centre for Contemporary Art. Berlinde explains her use of the ACCA spaces as you move through the galleries and encounter her new works 'We are all Flesh'. She reveals the influences behind each work and her methodologies, working with wax, horsehide, and other materials. We are all Flesh Australian Centre for Contemporary Art 2 June - 29 July 2012 http://www.accaonline.org.au Berlinde De Bruyckere uses wax, wood, wool, horse skin and hair to make haunting sculptures of humans, animals and trees in metamorphosis. We are all Flesh will include the rarely seen and iconic work 019 and two new commissions created specially for this exhibition. Based in her home town of Ghent, Berlinde De Bruyckere's studio is an old neo-Gothic Catholic school house. From here she creates her incredible sculptures - torsos morph into branches, trees are captured and displayed inside old museum cabinets and cast horses are crucified upside down in works that have been described as brutal, challenging, inspiring and both frightening and comforting. Heavily influenced by the old masters, De Bruyckere's early years at boarding school were spent hiding in the library, pouring over books on the history of catholic art. She went on to study at the Saint-Lucas Visual Arts School in Ghent, and was known in the early stages of her career for using old woolen blankets in her works, sometimes simply stacked on tables of beds, a response to news footage she had seen of blanket-swathed refugees in Rwanda. Her breakthrough work In Flanders Fields, five life-size splay-legged horses captured in the throes of death, was commissioned by the In Flanders Fields Museum, in the town of Ypres, the site of the legendary World War 1 battle. She was then invited to participate in the 2003 Venice Biennale, and the subsequent work, an equine form curled up on a table titled Black Horse, firmly established her on the international scene. She has since had solo exhibitions at Hauser & Wirth in Zurich and New York and in prestigious museums across Europe. The Pillow, 2010 We are all Flesh, 2010-2012 019, 2007 Inside Me III, 2012 Romeau "my deer" I, IV, V & III, 2012 Courtesy the artist, various private collections, Hauser & Wurth and Galleria Continua VIDEO PRODUCTION: Emma Sullivan

Danh Vo Interview: Art Should Estrange

Anish Kapoor in "London" - Season 10 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21

Berlinde De Bruyckere: City of Refuge III

Celebrities with Weird Talents You Have to See to Believe!

Most Ridiculous Worker Mistakes Caught on Camera

ASMR Best Triggers For Sleep Collection (No Talking) 3 Hours of Tapping & Scratching

Onschuld kan een hel zijn - Berlinde De Bruyckere

Robert Rauschenberg interview (1998)

Incredible Safari Moments Caught on Camera

Artists Don't Have To Believe In Themselves To Have Success - Brad Rushing

David Altmejd Interview: The Heart is a Werewolf

Berlinde De Bruyckere: In the Studio

Conversations: Anselm Kiefer and Rod Mengham | White Cube

Interview with Agnes Martin (1997)

„Die meisten Bilder sind nichts wert“ – Beltracchi über die Kunstwelt

Otto Dix – Controversial painter of the New Objectivity movement

Berlinde de Bruyckere, son exposition monumentale à Montpellier | Tracks | ARTE

CHAIR TIMES: Vitra Design Museum (Full Documentary)

2017 Nasher Prize Laureate Pierre Huyghe

