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Found Photos Reveal Untold Stories
30 Jan
Summary
- Found photography collection offers a seductive step into the past.
- Exhibition features secondhand furniture, including a 200-euro caravan.
- Artists explore themes of family, identity, and preservation.

Belgium's art scene is alive with a festival showcasing both local talent and international artists. At the Hangar Gallery, Lee Shulman's "The House" presents "The Anonymous Project," a collection of found photography that draws visitors into intimate, nostalgic scenes from everyday life. The exhibition's staging itself, utilizing secondhand furniture including a 1950s caravan, complements the theme of rediscovering the past.
Danilo Zocatelli's "Dear Father, I believe we found our peace" explores his complex relationship with his father in rural Brazil, culminating in a unique collaborative portrait project. Sylvie Bonnot's "The Kingdom of Mosquitoes" ventures into French Guiana, examining colonial memory and humanity's connection to nature through layered photographic artworks.
Across the city, the festival expands to 52 exhibitions. KlotzShows features Daniel and Geo Fuchs' "Secret Rooms," a stark look at former Stasi interrogation centers in Germany. At Geopolis, Oleksandr Glyadyelov's retrospective documents decades of Ukrainian life, from poverty and social transformation to war and hope, offering an unflinching historical record.




